martedì 26 febbraio 2013

news LV

news LV


ANSA: Crisi: spread Btp-Bund apre a 286 punti

Posted: 24 Feb 2013 11:32 PM PST

Rendimento al

ANSA: Borsa: Asia bene con miniyen,Tokyo +2,4%

Posted: 24 Feb 2013 11:48 PM PST

Occhi sull'export, future Europa e Wall Street in rialzo

Aljazeera: Britain's senior Catholic cleric resigns

Posted: 25 Feb 2013 06:27 AM PST

Cardinal Keith O'Brien steps down but rejects claims by three priests and a former cleric of inappropriate behaviour.

Aljazeera: Qatari poet's sentence reduced to 15 years

Posted: 25 Feb 2013 11:29 AM PST

Poet jailed for life last year for encouraging overthrow of government has his sentence reduced by appeals court.

Financial Times: China to tighten shadow banking rules

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 01:13 AM PST

Credit flows system beyond traditional bank loans in China has increased fourfold in size since 2008, to about 40% of gross domestic product

Financial Times: Shell in talks to buy €1.5bn Repsol assets

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 03:13 AM PST

The Spanish oil group is close to selling off a collection of liquefied natural gas assets as it battles to maintain its investment-grade credit rating by cutting its debt

Aljazeera: Afghanistan braces for severe weather

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 05:31 AM PST

A winter storm brings deep snow and heavy rain to parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Financial Times: JPMorgan to cut 4,000 jobs

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 06:21 AM PST

Upbeat view comes amid confidence that the US bank will see record-breaking year, beating consensus analysts' expectations of $21bn in net income

Aljazeera: No end in sight for Colombia mine strike

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 07:06 AM PST

Workers at gigantic open-pit coal mine seek better wages and health benefits for victims of work-related illnesses.

Huffington Post: Scott Walker: Lawmakers Should Call Obama's 'Bluff' On Spending Cuts

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 08:04 AM PST

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) urged lawmakers to call President Barack Obama's "bluff" ahead of March 1, when a serious of automatic cuts take effect.

"[Lawmakers] should find an alternative, they should do their job, but why not empower the president and his administration?" Walker said during a Monday appearance on "Fox and Friends." "Give them the authority within their budgets to make those changes so they don't have to do some of the things they are talking about."

Walker hit Obama's "scare tactics" over the sequester, noting "there's always a better way" to deal with spending cuts.


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Huffington Post: Sleep-Deprivation Tips: How To Make Up For A Lack Of Sleep, Fast

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 08:05 AM PST

By Corrie Pikul

Just few minutes of doing this can buy you a couple of hours of alertness.

Here we are again: bleary-eyed and foggy-brained. We've heard the experts repeatedly warn against getting less than seven to eight hours of quality sleep a night, but you know what? Those experts don't have any advice for dealing with a crying baby, a raucous neighbor, a seriously aching back or a demanding boss who enforces impossible deadlines.


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More on OWN Healthy Mind & Body

Huffington Post: Ben Bernanke Urges Congress To Avoid Sharp Spending Cuts, Defends Stimulus

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 08:07 AM PST


By Pedro da Costa and Alister Bull
WASHINGTON, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke strongly defended the U.S. central bank's bond-buying stimulus before Congress on Tuesday, saying its benefits clearly exceed possible costs.
The Fed chairman also urged lawmakers to avoid sharp spending cuts set to go into effect on Friday, which he warned could combine with earlier tax increases to create a "significant headwind" for the economic recovery.
Bernanke said Fed policymakers are cognizant of potential risks from their extraordinary support for the economy, including the possibility the public loses confidence in the central bank's ability to unwind its stimulus smoothly or the potentially destabilizing effect of low rates on key markets.
But he added these did not seem material at the moment, adding the central bank has all the tools it needs to retreat from its monetary support in a timely fashion.
"To this point, we do not see the potential costs of the increased risk-taking in some financial markets as outweighing the benefits of promoting a stronger economic recovery and more rapid job creation," Bernanke said in remarks prepared for delivery to the Senate Banking Committee.
Minutes of the Fed's Jan. 29-30 policy meeting, released last week, showed that a number of officials felt the potential risks posed by buying bonds could warrant tapering or ending the program before hiring picks up. However, several others argued there was a danger in halting it prematurely.
Bernanke appeared to be in the latter camp, citing improvements in the housing and auto sectors and tracing them in part to the Fed's stimulus.
He also noted that inflation, one of the risks most often cited by critics of the central bank's so-called quantitative easing, remains projected to stay at or below the Fed's 2 percent target for the foreseeable future.
In response to the financial crisis and deep recession of 2007-2009, the Fed not only slashed official interest rates to effectively zero but also bought more than $2.5 trillion in mortgage and Treasury debt in an effort to push down long-term interest rates and spur investment.
The Fed is currently buying $85 billion in bonds each month and has said it plans to keep purchasing assets until it sees a substantial improvement in the outlook for the labor market.
In unusually direct remarks on fiscal policy, Bernanke warned that the near-term spending cuts know as the sequester, which are set to take hold later this week, threaten an already challenged economic expansion.
"The Congress and the administration should consider replacing the sharp, frontloaded spending cuts required by the sequestration, with policies that reduce the federal deficit more gradually in the near term but more substantially in the longer run," Bernanke said.
"A substantial portion of the recent progress in lowering the deficit has been concentrated in near-term budget changes, which, taken together, could create a significant headwind for the economic recovery," he said.
The U.S. economy braked sharply in the fourth quarter, but is generally forecast to grow around 2 percent or more this year. Unemployment has remained elevated, and registered 7.9 percent in January.
Bernanke said persistent joblessness was a scourge with potentially long-lasting effects for the United States.
"High unemployment has substantial costs, including not only the hardship faced by the unemployed and their families, but also the harm done to the vitality and productive potential of our economy as a whole," Bernanke said.


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Huffington Post: Double Ultrasound Bill In Indiana Changed To Require Just One Procedure

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 08:07 AM PST

Indiana state senators have dropped a requirement that would force women to undergo an ultrasound procedure both before and after having a medication-induced abortion, after the legislation attracted national criticism.

"I think that physicians know a little bit more about that particular area than legislators," state Sen. Ron Alting (R), who is the author of Monday's amendment to Senate Bill 371, told the Evansville Courier and Press.

The Senate Health and Provider Services Committee approved the legislation last week, sending it to the full chamber for a vote. It would impose heavy regulations on doctors and clinics that offer medication abortions.


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Financial Times: Brazil’s clown politician loses his smile

Posted: 26 Feb 2013 08:39 AM PST

Tiririca appears to have learnt the answer to his campaign question about what a congressman does – 'works a lot and produces little' – and has had enough

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