SOFIA, May 17 (Reuters) - Bulgaria's prime minister has asked the Balkan country's top security agency to investigate rumours that First Investment Bank (FIBank) <FIB.BB> was facing financial problems, the government said on Saturday.
Sergei Stanishev reiterated that all banks that operate in the European Union newcomer were financially stable and wanted the agency to check whether the spread of rumours was a "scenario" plotted by competitors or had a political aim.
"The state agency will investigate the case which has caused panic among the Bulgarian citizens in the past days," Stanishev said in a statement. "The government will never allow citizens saving to suffer," he said.
On Friday, the central bank said FIBank and other banks were in "excellent condition", dismissing the rumours as unfounded. The move had calmed the bank's clients and decreased deposit withdrawals from Bulgaria's sixth largest lender.
The rumours have spread via several Bulgarian internet blogs in the past two weeks. Central Bank Governor Ivan Iskrov said on Friday that the spread of the rumours was a scenario aiming at damaging FIbank's credibility.
Bulgarians still keep bitter memories of a 1996/97 financial crisis that wiped out a third of the Balkan country's banks. The European Union newcomer has since introduced a currency board regime that pegs the national currency to the euro.
FIBank had assets worth of 4.07 billion levs ($3.22 billion) at end-March, when it posted a net profit of 15.07 million levs up from 10.1 million profit a year ago.
Bulgaria's 29 banks are mainly owned by big European lenders, many from Italy, Austria, Germany and Greece.
(Reporting by Angel Krasimirov; Editing by Ron Askew)
((angel.krasimirov@reuters.com; +359 887 988 196))
Keywords: FIBANK BULGARIA/
SOFIA, May 17 (Reuters) - Bulgaria's prime minister has asked the Balkan country's top security agency to investigate rumours that First Investment Bank (FIBank) <FIB.BB> was facing financial problems, the government said on Saturday.
Sergei Stanishev reiterated that all banks that operate in the European Union newcomer were financially stable and wanted the agency to check whether the spread of rumours was a "scenario" plotted by competitors or had a political aim.
"The state agency will investigate the case which has caused panic among the Bulgarian citizens in the past days," Stanishev said in a statement. "The government will never allow citizens saving to suffer," he said.
On Friday, the central bank said FIBank and other banks were in "excellent condition", dismissing the rumours as unfounded. The move had calmed the bank's clients and decreased deposit withdrawals from Bulgaria's sixth largest lender.
The rumours have spread via several Bulgarian internet blogs in the past two weeks. Central Bank Governor Ivan Iskrov said on Friday that the spread of the rumours was a scenario aiming at damaging FIbank's credibility.
Bulgarians still keep bitter memories of a 1996/97 financial crisis that wiped out a third of the Balkan country's banks. The European Union newcomer has since introduced a currency board regime that pegs the national currency to the euro.
FIBank had assets worth of 4.07 billion levs ($3.22 billion) at end-March, when it posted a net profit of 15.07 million levs up from 10.1 million profit a year ago.
Bulgaria's 29 banks are mainly owned by big European lenders, many from Italy, Austria, Germany and Greece.
(Reporting by Angel Krasimirov; Editing by Ron Askew)
((angel.krasimirov@reuters.com; +359 887 988 196))
Keywords: FIBANK BULGARIA/
The Times
BA FORCED TO CONSIDER '900 MILLION POUND FALL' IN PROFIT
British Airways <BAY.L> has been forced to consider a possible 900 million pound fall in profit as a result of the rising price of oil. Martin Broughton, the chairman, admitted on Friday that the board had discussed what the plan of action would be if the airline was in a "break-even position" by the end of this financial year, saying "the crude objective is not to get into a break-even situation but to stay profitable." The pessimistic comments alarmed investors. Nick van den Brul, aviation analyst at Exane BNP Paribas, said: "There is clearly a lot of bad news to come."
TAKEOVER BATTLE AT BRITISH ENERGY HOTS UP, 2 MORE APPROACHES
British Energy <BGY.L> is at the centre of an increasingly heated takeover battle as it emerged on Friday that the power company had received two more preliminary offers, one valuing it at almost 11 billion pounds. The company has received takeover or other approaches from EDF Energy <EDF.PA>, RWE <RWEG.DE>, Iberdrola <IBE.MC> and Suez <LYOE.PA>, the French industrial group. The company said it had been approached by "several parties wanting to make a full offer". The shares jumped 5.2 percent on news of the additional approaches, closing up 35.5 pence at 715.5 pence.
COMPUTACENTER SCREENS A GLOOMY QUARTER
Computacenter said it expected lower profits in the first half of the year due to slower trading in the UK and France. The company, which provides IT services to large companies, governments and investment banks, said like-for-like sales were down 1.5 percent in the first three months of 2008, while they fell 7.1 percent outside the UK, mainly as a result of weak sales in France. Mike Norris, the chief executive, said: "There's no doubt that if you have an economic downturn, IT spend will be hit."
The Daily Telegraph
QATARIS TOLD 100 MILLION POUNDS NEEDED FOR CARE HOME GROUP
The Qatari government-owned Four Seasons, one of the UK's biggest nursing home chains, has been told by bankers that a cash injection of more than 100 million pounds is necessary to stabilise the business. Royal Bank of Scotland <RBS.L> and Credit Suisse <CSGN.VX> are in fraught discussions with Paul Taylor, who heads Three Delta, the UK investment fund of the Qatari Investment Authority. Taylor has been trying to negotiate refinancing of Four Seasons' 1.3 billion pound debt, which must be completed before June to avoid a massive one-off interest payment. The banks have made refinancing conditional on the Qataris and Taylor pumping a minimum of 100 million pounds of fresh equity into the business.
SCOTS TV CHANNEL WOULD SHOW CLASSICS
The broadcaster SMG, which operates the ITV <ITV.L> franchise in Scotland, has put forward a proposal to the Scottish authorities for a new Scottish digital TV channel that would show BBC programmes and popular shows from its own archives. The plan was unveiled at the company's annual general meeting on Friday. Rob Woodward, the chief executive, said the channel would need 15 million pounds of public money.
MCKENNA CALLS TIME ON NEW BROKING ARM
Ingenious Securities, the stockbroking business of banker-to-the-stars Patrick McKenna, is being shut down. It is thought that all staff have lost their jobs, with one employee saying: "We have not been given a chance to show what we can do." McKenna, who recently paid himself between 75 and 100 million pounds in profits from the business, said: "The decision to close our securities business has not been an easy one."
The Independent
CENKOS FRUSTRATED AGAIN AS TALKS WITH ARDEN BREAK DOWN
Cenkos Securities <CNKS.L>, the broking house, has stumbled in its second takeover approach for Arden Partners <ARDN.L> after negotiations broke down. Cenkos said on Friday that discussions with Arden "have now ceased", just three months after a 1.6 billion pound bid for Close Brothers collapsed at the discussion stage. A source close to Arden said: "Cenkos were really keen to get a deal done and they got pretty close. Rivals came in and it was Arden's duty to the shareholders to evaluate them. It slowed the whole process down and Cenkos didn't want to hang around."
REGENT INNS SALES SLIDE 11 PERCENT AS SMOKING BAN HITS HOME
The smoking ban and falling consumer confidence were blamed for a sharp fall in sales at Regent Inns <REGI.L>, which operates the Walkabout pubs and Jongleurs comedy clubs. Like-for-like sales fell 11 percent in the period from 30 December 2007 to 14 May 2008. "This downturn in sales has principally arisen in Walkabout, while Jongleurs has continued to trade robustly," Regent said. The shares closed up five percent at 16.5 pence.
BLOOMSBURY SHARES RISE ON UPBEAT REPORT
Bloomsbury Publishing <BLPU.L>, the group that published the Harry Potter books, reported "encouraging" operating performance since the start of the year following good sales of Khaled Hosseini's books A Thousand Splendid Suns and The Kite Runner. "The group continues to make progress in all areas," the group said in a statement. "The measures that we are taking to reduce costs are already delivering positive results." The shares rose five percent, closing up seven pence at 154 pence.
The Times
BA FORCED TO CONSIDER '900 MILLION POUND FALL' IN PROFIT
British Airways <BAY.L> has been forced to consider a possible 900 million pound fall in profit as a result of the rising price of oil. Martin Broughton, the chairman, admitted on Friday that the board had discussed what the plan of action would be if the airline was in a "break-even position" by the end of this financial year, saying "the crude objective is not to get into a break-even situation but to stay profitable." The pessimistic comments alarmed investors. Nick van den Brul, aviation analyst at Exane BNP Paribas, said: "There is clearly a lot of bad news to come."
TAKEOVER BATTLE AT BRITISH ENERGY HOTS UP, 2 MORE APPROACHES
British Energy <BGY.L> is at the centre of an increasingly heated takeover battle as it emerged on Friday that the power company had received two more preliminary offers, one valuing it at almost 11 billion pounds. The company has received takeover or other approaches from EDF Energy <EDF.PA>, RWE <RWEG.DE>, Iberdrola <IBE.MC> and Suez <LYOE.PA>, the French industrial group. The company said it had been approached by "several parties wanting to make a full offer". The shares jumped 5.2 percent on news of the additional approaches, closing up 35.5 pence at 715.5 pence.
COMPUTACENTER SCREENS A GLOOMY QUARTER
Computacenter said it expected lower profits in the first half of the year due to slower trading in the UK and France. The company, which provides IT services to large companies, governments and investment banks, said like-for-like sales were down 1.5 percent in the first three months of 2008, while they fell 7.1 percent outside the UK, mainly as a result of weak sales in France. Mike Norris, the chief executive, said: "There's no doubt that if you have an economic downturn, IT spend will be hit."
The Daily Telegraph
QATARIS TOLD 100 MILLION POUNDS NEEDED FOR CARE HOME GROUP
The Qatari government-owned Four Seasons, one of the UK's biggest nursing home chains, has been told by bankers that a cash injection of more than 100 million pounds is necessary to stabilise the business. Royal Bank of Scotland <RBS.L> and Credit Suisse <CSGN.VX> are in fraught discussions with Paul Taylor, who heads Three Delta, the UK investment fund of the Qatari Investment Authority. Taylor has been trying to negotiate refinancing of Four Seasons' 1.3 billion pound debt, which must be completed before June to avoid a massive one-off interest payment. The banks have made refinancing conditional on the Qataris and Taylor pumping a minimum of 100 million pounds of fresh equity into the business.
SCOTS TV CHANNEL WOULD SHOW CLASSICS
The broadcaster SMG, which operates the ITV <ITV.L> franchise in Scotland, has put forward a proposal to the Scottish authorities for a new Scottish digital TV channel that would show BBC programmes and popular shows from its own archives. The plan was unveiled at the company's annual general meeting on Friday. Rob Woodward, the chief executive, said the channel would need 15 million pounds of public money.
MCKENNA CALLS TIME ON NEW BROKING ARM
Ingenious Securities, the stockbroking business of banker-to-the-stars Patrick McKenna, is being shut down. It is thought that all staff have lost their jobs, with one employee saying: "We have not been given a chance to show what we can do." McKenna, who recently paid himself between 75 and 100 million pounds in profits from the business, said: "The decision to close our securities business has not been an easy one."
The Independent
CENKOS FRUSTRATED AGAIN AS TALKS WITH ARDEN BREAK DOWN
Cenkos Securities <CNKS.L>, the broking house, has stumbled in its second takeover approach for Arden Partners <ARDN.L> after negotiations broke down. Cenkos said on Friday that discussions with Arden "have now ceased", just three months after a 1.6 billion pound bid for Close Brothers collapsed at the discussion stage. A source close to Arden said: "Cenkos were really keen to get a deal done and they got pretty close. Rivals came in and it was Arden's duty to the shareholders to evaluate them. It slowed the whole process down and Cenkos didn't want to hang around."
REGENT INNS SALES SLIDE 11 PERCENT AS SMOKING BAN HITS HOME
The smoking ban and falling consumer confidence were blamed for a sharp fall in sales at Regent Inns <REGI.L>, which operates the Walkabout pubs and Jongleurs comedy clubs. Like-for-like sales fell 11 percent in the period from 30 December 2007 to 14 May 2008. "This downturn in sales has principally arisen in Walkabout, while Jongleurs has continued to trade robustly," Regent said. The shares closed up five percent at 16.5 pence.
BLOOMSBURY SHARES RISE ON UPBEAT REPORT
Bloomsbury Publishing <BLPU.L>, the group that published the Harry Potter books, reported "encouraging" operating performance since the start of the year following good sales of Khaled Hosseini's books A Thousand Splendid Suns and The Kite Runner. "The group continues to make progress in all areas," the group said in a statement. "The measures that we are taking to reduce costs are already delivering positive results." The shares rose five percent, closing up seven pence at 154 pence.
U.S. Democratic presidential frontrunner Barack Obama fiercely
attacked President George W. Bush for suggesting Democrats would
like to appease terrorists.
Bush, speaking to the Israeli parliament, suggested a pledge
by the party's presidential front-runner Barack Obama to meet
Iran's leader was akin to appeasement of Nazi Germany.
Former candidate John Edwards said he would not be Obama's
vice presidential running mate.
Double-click on the code in brackets to see the latest
stories. If no story appears, click on the headline.
NEWS STORIES
> Obama attacks Bush over 'appeasement' remarks [ID:nN16392660]
> McCain says Obama, Clinton threaten gun rights [ID:nN16442787]
> Huckabee jokes to NRA of gun aimed at Obama [ID:nN15189542]
> McCain: U.S. can win Iraq war by 2013 [ID:nN15189542]
> Edwards rules out vice presidential run [ID:nN16401634]
> U.S. Republicans scramble in wake of defeats [ID:nN14542372]
> Steelworkers Union backs Obama for White House [ID:nN15288216]
> McCain's wife urged to release tax returns [ID:nN14546167]
> Three former U.S. SEC chairmen endorse Obama [ID:nN14485914]
> Obama compares US housing crisis to Depression [ID:nN13446999]
> Pastor who backed McCain apologizes for remarks [ID:nN13435889]
POLLS
> McCain runs strong despite low Bush ratings-poll[ID:nN12340098]
> Gas prices hurt but tax holiday no solution [ID:nN15510057]
> Obama damaged by Wright flap-USA Today/Gallup [ID:nN05368680]
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> Hard for Clinton to give up while still winning [ID:nN13443564]
> McCain urges UK-style sessions for US president [ID:nN15176157]
> U.S. Democrats win Mississippi special election [ID:nN13446767]
> Gas tax battle was a political gift to Obama [ID:nN08383175]
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> Reaction to Bush 'appeasement' remark [ID:nN15292434]
> Should president talk with foreign adversaries? [ID:nN15309170]
> Edwards endorses Obama in Democratic race [ID:nN14537562]
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> Scenarios in U.S. political race [ID:nN07526632]
> Democrats split in support for Clinton, Obama [ID:nN04297201]
> Should a president talk with foreign enemies [ID:nN15309170]
> Reaction to Bush appeasement remark [ID:nN15292434]
> Clinton's proposals to lift gasoline tax [ID:nN05383474]
> Profiles of U.S. presidential hopefuls [ID:nN22367925]
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(For more about the U.S. political campaign, visit Reuters "Tales
from the Trail: 2008" online at
http://blogs.reuters.com/trail08/)
((Compiled by World Desk Americas; +1 202 898 8457))
Keywords: USA POLITICS/TAKEALOOK
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