Daily Archives: April 29, 2015

Australian credit rating at risk: Goldman

index

Australia could be hit with a ‘negative outlook’ to its Standard & Poor’s AAA credit rating within months, due to “poor fiscal performance”, Goldman Sachs has said.

The investment bank warned such a move would have consequences, even before a downgrade, after S&P updated its methodology, according to the Financial Review.

While Australia’s debt burden remained favourable, falling commodity prices and terms of trade, weak economic growth, and political impasse had reduced the federal budget by $283 million over the past 30 months. A further $55 billion deterioration in the federal budget was likely, the bank said, according to the AFR.

Yesterday, ratings agency Moody’s told The Australian Business Review that Australia’s rating was not yet at risk of downgrade due to political impasse over budget measures.

But that could change if the impasse continued through an economic downturn, Moody’s said.

“If government deficits widen over the medium to long term, and government debt ratios also continue to rise, Australia’s fiscal position would become less robust than it is now.”

source:theaustralian.com.au

Price cuts drive Coles sales over $7bn

639345-coles-lifts-q3-sales-5-4-to-7-1b

Supermarket giant Coles lifted sales 5.4 per cent during the third quarter to $7.1 billion.

TAKING the knife to meat and vegetable prices has helped Coles lift quarterly food and liquor sales to $7.1 billion amid a fierce price war with Woolworths.

THE supermarket giant slashed prices on more than 150 products, including bread, cheese, sugar and rice, during the March quarter as part of its “everyday low prices” campaign.

And the cuts have paid off, with total sales up 5.4 per cent lift on the same time a year ago. Comparable sales, which strip out the effects of store openings and closures, rose 3.8 per cent but were slightly weaker than the four per cent lift in the previous three months.

Coles shaved one per cent off its food and liquor prices during the March quarter. Prices are down 0.8 per cent for the financial year to date. Parent company Wesfarmers dismissed fears that Coles’ cut-throat price war with Woolworths and Aldi could see profit margins squeezed to the maximum.

“We understand we are in a competitive market,” the conglomerate’s managing director John Durkan told reporters on Wednesday. “We’ll continue to invest in price. Our aim is to put ourselves in the strongest possible position against all competitors.”

Finance director Terry Bowen said Coles had concentrated on discounting products shoppers value the most, and those that have the most competition. “We have done a lot of work with our meat business in the quarter which we compete with thousands of thousands of independent butchers,” he said.

Rival Woolworths has previously said it’s ready to spend half a billion dollars on driving down its food and grocery prices. The impact discounting will have on the supermarket giants’ profit margins was of great concern for investors, Morningstar analyst Gareth James said.

“Exactly how Coles and Woolworths are going to protect their margins against a business model that has caused problems for large successful supermarkets overseas, like Tesco, remains to be seen,” he told AAP.

Wesfarmers’s home improvement chain Bunnings reported an impressive 12 per cent lift in total sales and comparable sales growth of 9.4 per cent.

Its Kmart business also lifted comparable sales by 6.3 per cent, while Officeworks recorded a nine per cent increase.

However, department store Target’s comparable sales slipped 3.2 per cent, while a drop in petrol prices led to a 16.6 per cent slide in Coles’ fuel sales.

OptionsXpress market analyst Ben Le Brun said Coles had performed well despite the intense price war. “It’s dealing with a lot of competition and some very heavy discounting, but continues to put out positive like-for-like sales numbers,” he said.

Wesfarmers shares dipped 15 cents to $43.00.

WESFARMERS’ DISCOUNTING PAYS OFF: * Total first quarter retail sales up to $13.1b, up 3.3pct * Coles food & liquor up 5.4pct to $7.1b * Coles convenience down 16.6pct to $1.6b * Home Improvement up 12pct to $2.3b * Office Supplies up 9.0pct to $485m * Kmart up 10.9pct to $937m * Target down 1.6pct to $663m

source:heraldsun.com.au

Australian Federal Police to face further questions on Bali Nine

bali_nine_shot_by_firing_squad_despite_international_opposition_1779994111

The Australian Federal Police will face a Senate hearing over the role it played in the arrests of the Bali Nine, amid fresh calls for answers about the events that ultimately led to the executions of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran.

Despite a number of reviews and a Federal Court ruling in favour of the AFP, the Senate will again investigate the Bali Nine case after South Australian independent Nick Xenophon said he would raise the issue in hearings set for next month.

The AFP today said it would have more to say on the matter, but was waiting out of respect for the families of Chan, 31, and Sukumaran, 34, who were shot by firing squad in Indonesia this morning.

“AFP Commissioner Andrew Colvin has publicly stated the AFP will make comment in relation to this matter,” the AFP told AAP in a statement.

“Now is not the time to discuss this matter out of respect for the grieving families.”

Mr Colvin, who was working under former commissioner Mick Keelty when the Bali Nine were arrested in Indonesia in 2005, last month said the AFP would not bear responsibility if Chan and Sukumaran, convicted for their roles in a plot to import 8.3kg of heroin from Bali to Australia, were executed.

“Put simply, do we have blood on our hands? No,” Mr Colvin said.

But Brisbane-based lawyer Bob Myers, a friend of the father of Bali Nine member Scott Rush, today insisted the AFP must bear responsibility.

“This is a black day for the AFP, a day they deliberately exposed nine Australians to the death penalty,” he said.

Mr Myers had reached out to the AFP in a bid to stop Rush leaving Australia for Bali.

Instead, the AFP sent a letter to counterparts in Indonesia on the same day Rush flew to Bali, providing details about the heroin smuggling plot, and advising Indonesian authorities to “take what action they deem appropriate”.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the involvement of the AFP had already been reviewed and the government was “satisfied that the changes that are in place were appropriate”.

“I don’t believe today is the time to look for recriminations,” Ms Bishop said.

Senator Xenophon, who has also written to Federal Parliament’s joint standing committee on foreign affairs to ask that the matter be examined, said it was legitimate the AFP face further scrutiny.

“This is not about recriminations, it’s about making sure this never, ever happens again,” Senator Xenophon said.

Federal MP Clive Palmer said he planned to introduce a private member’s bill that would make it an offence for any public official to disclose information that might lead to a person facing the death penalty.

Retired diplomat Bruce Haigh said the AFP’s relationship with counterparts in Indonesia should also be thoroughly investigated by an independent body.

source:tvnz.co.nz

Bali Nine: Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran executed by Indonesian firing squad

6101104-3x2-340x227

Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran have been executed by firing squad on the Indonesian prison island of Nusakambangan in the early hours of this morning.

They were killed along with six other death row prisoners on Nusakambangan prison island just before 3:30am AEST.

Mulya Lubis, a member of the pair’s legal team, tweeting: “I failed. I lost. I am sorry”.

Indonesian attorney-general Muhammad Prasetyo is expected to hold a press conference this morning to officially confirm the executions.

Another prisoner who was due to be executed this morning, Philippine woman Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, was spared, according to a text message from the attorney-general’s office.

Chan, 31, and Sukumaran, 34, members of the so-called Bali Nine, were sentenced to death in 2006 after being found guilty of attempting to smuggle more than eight kilograms of heroin into Australia.

They were refused clemency by Indonesian president Joko Widodo as part of a hardline stance on the death penalty for convicted drug criminals.

They were shot dead despite an emotional final plea for clemency from the Chan and Sukumaran families only hours before the execution.

There was also a last-ditch plea for mercy from the governments of Australia, France and the European Union, who jointly petitioned Indonesia to declare a moratorium on capital punishment.

“We fully respect the sovereignty of Indonesia. But we are against the death penalty in our country and abroad. The execution will not give deterrent effect to drug trafficking or stop the other from becoming victims will abuse drugs. To execute these prisoners now will not achieve anything,” they said in a statement.

Last night Michael Chan said both his brother and Sukumaran had been “dignified” ahead of the executions, which he said amounted to “cruel, undignified torture”.

Sukumaran’s brother, Chintu, said he had spoken with his brother about the death penalty.

“We did talk about the death penalty and he knows this is just a waste,” he said.

Attorney-general’s spokesman Tony Spontana said arrangements to hand over Chan and Sukumaran’s bodies to Australian officials had already been made.

“We have a request from the Australian Government, through the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, requesting that the two remains will be brought and transited in a morgue house in West Jakarta, and for the next day to be fly out back to Australia,” he said

“That can be granted, and we will escort the remains to the location.”

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop last night criticised Indonesia’s handling of the “ghastly” executions and warned there would be diplomatic repercussions if they went ahead.

“I don’t intend to focus on consequences, but of course should these executions proceed in the manner that I anticipate, of course there have to be consequences,” she said.

“I’m obviously deeply disturbed at some of the aspects of how this has been handled,” Ms Bishop told the ABC’s 7.30 program.

“I think the ghastly process that the family have been put through today just underscores how chaotic this has been.”

source:abc.net.au

Τσίπρας: Στο τραπέζι και το ενδεχόμενο δημοψηφίσματος

Τσίπρας: Στο τραπέζι και το ενδεχόμενο δημοψηφίσματος

Για τη διαπραγμάτευση με τους δανειστές ενημέρωσε το απόγευμα της Τρίτης την Πολιτική Γραμματεία και το προεδρείο της Κοινοβουλευτικής Ομάδας του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ ο πρωθυπουργός Αλέξης Τσίπρας.

Ο κ. Τσίπρας εμφανίστηκε αισιόδοξος πως στο τέλος θα υπάρξει συμφωνία και – όπως μετέδωσε το Mega – τόνισε: «Είμαστε σε μια πολύ κρίσιμη φάση των διαπραγματεύσεων. Στόχος είναι ο έντιμος συμβιβασμός στο πλαίσιο της λαϊκής εντολής που έχουμε λάβει».

Ο πρωθυπουργός επανέλαβε την πρόθεση της κυβέρνησης να προχωρήσει σε δημοψήφισμα σε περίπτωση που δεν υπάρξει λύση, αλλά τόνισε: «Θα τεθεί στην κρίση του ελληνικού λαού. Πιστεύω όμως πως δεν θα χρειαστεί να πάμε σε δημοψήφισμα».

Πληροφορίες ανέφεραν ότι από πλευράς Αριστερής Πλατφόρμας εκφράστηκαν επιφυλάξεις κατά πόσο θα μπορούσε να χαρακτηριστεί «έντιμος συμβιβασμός» μια συμφωνία που θα περιέχει σκληρά μέτρα και υπό αυτό το πρίσμα τονίστηκε ότι η επιλογή της ρήξης πρέπει να είναι στο τραπέζι.

Τα μέλη της ΠΓ επισήμαναν την ανάγκη περαιτέρω συζήτησης πάνω σε κείμενα προκειμένου να ενημερωθούν αναλυτικά τα μέλη της ΠΓ. Αναγκαστικά η συζήτηση διακόπηκε και θα συνεχιστεί μεθαύριο Πέμπτη, καθώς ο κ. Τσίπρας έπρεπε να αναχωρήσει για την Λευκωσία.

Στο επίκεντρο της σύσκεψης βρέθηκε το πολυνομοσχέδιο, η κατάρτιση του οποίου ολοκληρώνεται εντός της ημέρας και θα παρουσιαστεί την Πέμπτη στο υπουργικό συμβούλιο.

Νωρίτερα έγινε σύσκεψη του οικονομικού επιτελείου στο Μέγαρο Μαξίμου, υπό την προεδρία του Αλέξη Τσίπρα και με τη συμμετοχή του αντιπροέδρου της κυβέρνησης Γιάννη Δραγασάκη και του υπουργού Οικονομικών Γιάνη Βαρουφάκη.

Πηγή:in.gr

Ινδονησία: Εκτελέστηκαν οι οκτώ από τους εννέα για ναρκωτικά

Ινδονησία: Εκτελέστηκαν οι οκτώ από τους εννέα για ναρκωτικά

Mέρι Τζέιν Βελάσκο (στη φωτογραφία συγγενείς της που έφτασαν στη χώρα) δεν εκτελέστηκε

Στο εκτελεστικό απόσπασμα οδηγήθηκαν οι οκτώ από τους εννέα καταδικασθέντες για υπόθεση ναρκωτικών, όπως ανακοίνωσαν οι Αρχές της Ινδονησίας. Την τελευταία στιγμή αποφασίστηκε να δοθεί χάρη στην φιλιππινέζα, Μέρι Τζέιν Βελάσκο.

Στη Μανίλα δεκάδες άτομα είχαν συγκεντρωθεί έξω από την πρεσβεία της Ινδονησίας. Με το που έγινε γνωστή η απονομή χάρης στην Βελάσκο, ξέσπασαν σε χειροκροτήματα.

Για το θέμα υπήρξε επικοινωνία του προέδρου των Φιλιππίνων με τις Αρχές της Ινδονησίας. Η αστυνομία των Φιλιππίνων εντόπισε και συνέλαβε μια συνεργό της Βελάσκο.

Τώρα, η νεαρή φιλιππινέζα και μητέρα δύο παιδιών που γλίτωσε το εκτελεστικό απόσπασμα, καλείται να καταθέσει εις βάρος της.

Οι υπόλοιποι που οδηγήθηκαν στο απόσπασμα ήταν τέσσερις νιγηριανοί, δύο αυστραλοί, ένας ινδονήσιος και ένας βραζιλιάνος.

Υπό εξέταση βρίσκεται ακόμη η έφεση που έχει υποβάλει γάλλος υπήκοος.

Η εκτέλεση των καταδικασθέντων είχε καθυστερήσει αρκετές εβδομάδες εξαιτίας νομικών προσφυγών της τελευταίας στιγμής.

Τη Δευτέρα το Συνταγματικό Δικαστήριο της Ινδονησίας ενέκρινε αίτημα των δικηγόρων των δύο αυστραλών, αλλά η κυβέρνηση δήλωσε ότι οι εκτελέσεις δεν θα καθυστερούσαν περαιτέρω.

Ύστατη έκκληση να μην προχωρήσουν στις εκτελέσεις ως πρώτο βήμα προς την κατάργηση της θανατικής ποινής στη χώρα απηύθυνε ο γενικός γραμματέας του Συμβουλίου της Ευρώπης Θόρμπγιον Ζάγκλαντ.
Στη συνέχεια, τονίζει, οι αρχές της Ινδονησίας θα πρέπει να επεξεργασθούν και να εφαρμόσουν μορατόριουμ για την μη εφαρμογή της θανατικής ποινής στη χώρα μέχρι την πλήρη κατάργησή της.

Η χώρα έχει μια από τις σκληρότερες νομοθεσίες κατά των ναρκωτικών σε παγκόσμιο επίπεδο. Ωστόσο, από το 2013 ίσχυε μορατόριουμ στην εκτέλεση των θανατικών ποινών, γεγονός το οποίο διεκόπη απόψε.

Πηγή:in.gr

Athens police question father of missing girl

ani_amber

Police in Athens on Tuesday were questioning a young man believed to be the biological father of a 4-year-old Bulgarian girl who went missing in the area of Omonia, central Athens, on April 21.

Police sources said the man was a Bulgarian national without providing any further details.

The girl was reported missing by her 24-year-old mother, who testified that she had asked a 23-year-old friend to take care of the girl while she traveled to Sofia on an emergency visit.

According to the girl’s mother, her friend called her on April 21 and told her that the child had gone missing during a walk.

source:ekathimerini.com

Tsipras presses for May debt deal, threatens referendum

tsipras3

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said on Tuesday he was confident of an outline deal with international creditors within two weeks, after shaking up his negotiating team and sidelining his finance minister who has infuriated eurozone partners.

Tsipras threatened to call a referendum if lenders insist on demands deemed unacceptable by his leftist government, elected to scrap austerity. But the head of eurozone finance ministers said Greece needed loans urgently and did not have time for such a vote, which would be a costly and destabilizing distraction.

Athens is weeks away from running out of cash, and talks with EU and IMF lenders on more aid have been deadlocked over their demands for Greece to implement reforms, including pension cuts and labour market liberalisation.

In his first major television interview since being elected in January, Tsipras said he expected a deal with creditors by May 9, three days before a debt payment to the IMF of about 750 million euros ($815.5 million) falls due. He ruled out a default but stressed the priority was to pay wages and pensions.

Greek financial markets and the euro rallied on hopes that the relegation of Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, a Marxist academic prone to lecturing his eurozone peers, would improve prospects for an early deal to avoid a default that might lead to a Greek exit from the currency area.

Yet around half of investors expect Greece to leave the eurozone within the next 12 months, a survey published by German research group Sentix showed on Tuesday.

The European Commission said talks on a cash-for-reform deal were making progress but gave no details.

Pressed on options if no deal were found, Tsipras ruled out snap elections but said the government did not have the right to accept demands “outside our mandate,” and any deal that required such terms would have to be put to Greeks in a referendum.

“But I am certain we will not reach that point. Despite the difficulties, the possibilities to win in the negotiations are large. We should not give in to panic moves. Whoever gets scared in this game loses.”

Eurogroup chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem said the shakeup in the Greek negotiating team would not by itself break the impasse and Athens would need new loans quickly to stay afloat.

“Without further loans, Greece won’t make it, that’s the reality,” he told RTL Nieuws television in an interview. Asked about a possible referendum, he said: “It would cost money, it would create great political uncertainty, and I don’t think we have the time. And I don’t think the Greeks have time for it.”

Tsipras said Greece was in the final stretch of negotiations despite differences on key issues like labour reform, pension cuts and a proposed value-added tax hike on tourist islands.

He said asset sales would be part of the concessions offered, including two major items – the sale of Piraeus port and the leasing of 14 regional airports.

He also said Greece was hoping for a 3 billion to 5 billion euro pre-payment of future profits if it struck a deal with Russia on Turkish Stream, a gas pipeline project.

On Monday, Tsipras appointed Deputy Foreign Minister Euclid Tsakalotos – one of his close allies and a soft-spoken economist liked by officials representing creditors – to head a new group handling negotiations with Greece’s lenders.

He also put economist George Chouliarakis, a close aide to Deputy Prime Minister Yannis Dragasakis, in charge of talks with the so-called Brussels group of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

In an effort to show that Athens is serious about giving lenders access to data, a new team was also set up to support EU and IMF officials gathering information in the Greek capital.

The moves took the talks out of the hands of Varoufakis, but Tsipras defended him as a victim of character assassination.

“There is a negative climate but I believe that this part of the negotiating game,” Tsipras said. “Part of the negotiating game is to deconstruct the person who sits opposite you at the negotiation table.”

A senior European Central Bank policymaker, Bank of France governor Christian Noyer, said sidelining Varoufakis from the talks could be productive, but Athens still faced hard choices.

“He’s creating a number of tensions so that can certainly help the negotiations – but it doesn’t change the substance at all. The Greek government … must finally decide on serious reforms to put the economy back on track,” Noyer said.

In Brussels, a European Commission spokeswoman said the talks had gained pace since a confrontational meeting between Varoufakis and his euro zone peers in Riga last Friday.

Tsipras accused the previous conservative-led Greek government and unnamed forces in Europe of having laid a «trap» for his government when it took power.

“They derive pleasure from the prospect of a failure in the talks,” Tsipras said. «We received a country that was in a situation of financial asphyxiation.”

But he praised German Chancellor Angela Merkel – a frequent target of his criticism before he was elected – saying she was diligent and organised.

“She has the German culture of wanting – and I think this is good in our relationship – the other person to tell the truth, to not lie,» he said. «And that’s what I try to do; I don’t lie.”

In a symbolic move, parliament was due to vote later on Tuesday to reopen state broadcaster ERT, shut down nearly two years ago by the previous government which axed its more than 2,000 workers to satisfy the EU and IMF lenders.

The staff will be rehired – including a symphony orchestra – but Tsipras’ SYRIZA party has promised that ERT will be merged with a successor station and will not add to the state budget.

source:ekathimerini.com

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

kiosk_newsstand

It is so exhausting and unpleasant for average Greek citizens to keep hearing for weeks now that the country’s cash reserves will run out in two months, one month, next week, and especially when this is reported in a snide manner. It erodes what little courage they have left after five depressing years of austerity to hear that bankruptcy will come, is coming, has come: despite the fact that they suffered so much to avert it; despite tolerating unemployment or under-employment or a meager salary because they were told that this is how it should be; despite being blamed for their own suffering without any proof of culpability; despite seeing their incomes decline by half or more; despite seeing the health, welfare and education systems “reformed” into oblivion.

It is irrational – and degrading – for Greek citizens to keep hearing that the country’s ills are all their fault, from the start of the crisis to its first manifestations and through the progression of the drama all the way to the current quagmire. It is painful and insulting that Greeks are being treated like children (for political rather than economic reasons) by the troika or, as they are known now, “the institutions.” This treatment saps their remaining strength and threatens to crush them until they give up, consign their futures to fate, or push them in the opposite direction.

It is also irrational to albeit shaken Greek minds that they are being forced to continue, with little change, a course of treatment that has already been proved to be responsible for sky-high unemployment, frozen growth, the cancer of business closures and a rise in suicides, acknowledged by international organizations.

Sure, we can accept that respecting the citizens’ mandate, as it is expressed at the ballot box, is no longer a must in Europe. This is already apparent from the teams of technocrats in Italy and Brussels who, if not necessarily appointed by Brussels were certainly not elected by the people. It is apparent in the blunt manner of German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble who recently lamented the fact that Parliament stands in the way of reforms in France. But the problem is that Europe also doesn’t seem too bothered about the facts or numbers either.

It is unbearable for Greeks to watch the drama of the negotiations rendered (either simplistically or maliciously) as though it were a western, in which the others are Good and Greece is both the Bad and the Ugly. If this perception is actually reflective of the real situation, irrespective of whether it’s being played up a bit for the sake of the drama, then there is a very real fear that a union which solves its differences in High Noon style is no longer a union.

source:ekathimerini.com

Eurogroup’s Dijsselbloem says Greece will not make it without aid

Eurogroup President Dijsselbloem attends a news conference after a Eurogroup meeting in Brussels

The head of the Eurogroup said on Tuesday that a recent shakeup of Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ negotiating team would not by itself resolve the impasse between Greece and its creditors, and Athens would need new loans to stay afloat.

“Without further loans, Greece won’t make it, that’s the reality,” said Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutchman who heads the group of finance ministers of countries that use the euro.

Dijsselbloem said in a television interview it may be of some help that the Greeks have appointed a single contact person for negotiations, with Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis apparently sidelined.

But he said there had been little progress in negotiations over the past two months, and signalled he did not think a Greek referendum on a deal with creditors would be a good idea.

Tsipras has said he may submit an eventual deal to the Greek people for approval if its terms are contrary to the platform he campaigned on.

“It would cost money, it would create great political uncertainty, and I don’t think we have the time,” Dijsselbloem said. “And I don’t think the Greeks have the time for it.”

The Dutchman said it should not have come as a surprise to Greece’s government that the European Central Bank has not relaxed limits on how much Greek government debt its banks may use as collateral.

“The Greek government gambled that if it negotiated with us the ECB would open its cashier windows, relax its rules,” Dijsselbloem said.

But “there will be no easy access to the ECB’s windows until there’s a solid agreement with the Eurogroup,” he told RTL Nieuws. “That’s been made clear to them time and time again.

source:ekathimerini.com