Saturday, March 09, 2013

World stocks hit highest level since June 2008!!!!


World stocks hit highest level since June 2008

US jobs data is expected to point to a continuing pick up in the world's biggest economy.
World shares hit their highest level since June 2008 and the dollar touched a fresh 3-1/2-year high against the yen on Friday, ahead of U.S. jobs data expected to point to a continuing pick up in the world's biggest economy.China also gave markets a boost as official data showed February exports grew 21.8 percent versus a year ago, more than double the expected rise.
European shares, which have rebounded strongly this week after last week's Italian election and U.S. spending cuts-related wobble, opened up 0.5 percent. That put them on track for their biggest gains since the opening week of the year.In Asian trading Japan's Nikkei had hit a 4-1/2 year high and the 0.5, 0.6 and 0.5 opening rises by London's FTSE 100, Paris's CAC-40 and Frankfurt's DAX helped MSCI's world share index to its highest level since late June 2008."There appears to be a strong risk-on mood in the market at the moment," said Ken Wattret, co head of European market economics at BNP Paribas."The negativity from the Italian elections was shrugged off pretty quickly, the Fed has made it clear that its policy will remain accommodative. If we get a get a good set of payrolls numbers, that will further fuel that sentiment."
In the currency market, a sudden spike in tensions between North and South Korea added to the broader U.S. growth-led demand for the dollar.The euro eased 0.1 percent, but clung to the bulk of the gains made the previous day, after the European Central Bank wrong-footed investors who had positioned for a more clear-cut signal on rate cuts from its head Mario Draghi.Friday's U.S. payrolls report, due at 1330 GMT, is key to gauging the Federal Reserve's policy course as the Fed will keep its near-zero rate stance until the unemployment rate falls to 6.5 percent, as long as inflation does not threaten to top 2.5 percent.
With demand for low-risk assets cool ahead of the data, German Bund futures steadied at 142.87 as European trading gathered pace. They had fallen the previous day after the ECB's less dovish than expected tone."We saw yesterday after the initial (unemployment) claims in the U.S. and (ECB President Mario) Draghi's comments that not only Bunds but also Treasuries were under downward pressure so maybe there's already some positioning for a strong payrolls number," said Piet Lammens, a strategist at KBC.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/international/world-stocks-hit-highest-level-since-june-2008-113030800191_1.html

World Bank bars L&T ..FORGERY ISSUE...!!!!


World Bank bars L&T for six months over forgery by executive

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

India's billionaire wealth....


India's billionaire wealth much above country's fiscal deficit


Cadbury accused of using nonexistent factory to avoid Rs. 252 crore in taxes

5 Yr HIGHs.....DOW, DAX, FTSE, NIKKEI...ALL HIGHS...


US stocks skyrocket, Dow Jones crosses 14,200-pt level ......PTI: NEW YORK, MAR 05 2013, 22:45 IST

US stocks today surged to record high with the benchmark Dow index touching over 14,200 points in early trade as investor sentiment was primarily boosted by optimism over Chinese economy.The 30-share key Dow Jones Industrial Average shot up to 14,239.68 points in the first hour of trading. This is the highest-ever level scaled by the blue chip index and also for the first time since the 2008 financial meltdown.In October 2007, the index had closed at a high of 14,164.53 points and two days later, it had reached an intra day high of 14,198.10 points.Today, the benchmark was trading nearly one per cent or 111.86 points higher at 14,239.68 points.Investor sentiment was mainly bolstered by China's plans to increase spending, including nearly 11 per cent hike in defence expenditure.Two other indices -- S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite – gained as much as one per cent in early trade.
The broader S&P 500 jumped to 1,537.25 points while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite went up to 3,212.36 points.
http://www.financialexpress.com/news/dow-breaks-through-record-set-in-2007-s-p-at-5yr-high/1083533

FTSE 100 closes above 6,400 for the first time in five years REUTERS: LONDON, MAR 06 2013, 02:31 IST

Britain's blue chip shares surged on Tuesday to close above 6,400 for the first time in over five years helped by solid company reports and supportive central bank comments.
Financials and miners added the most points to the FTSE 100 , with results from heavyweight stocks in both sectors meeting or beating expectations despite tricky trading environments.
Miner Xstrata gained 7.2 percent after beating expectations in its final results before it merges with Glencore , which also gained 6.2 percent after posting results.
The banking sector, which also rises and falls with optimism over the economy, made gains led up by Standard Chartered .
The globally-focussed bank reported its tenth straight year of rising profit, and gained 3 percent following its results - a rare phenomenon this earnings season among UK banks.
The results also reflect well on global growth trends, which many FTSE 100 stocks, such as the miners, are also highly sensitive to.
"To an extent, (their results) are not just about Standard Chartered, it's a proxy for emerging market growth opportunities, which also look encouraging," Mike Ingram, market analyst at BGC Partners, said.
"Corporate earnings have actually done pretty well, even if the economy hasn't, so the bull case for equity markets is actually quite reasonable," Ingram added, saying that supportive monetary policy was also helping the gains.
The European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan are all expected to stick to ultra easy monetary policy at meetings this week, following on from reassurances by U.S. Federal Reserve..................................................................................................................................................................................http://www.financialexpress.com/news/ftse-100-closes-above-6400-for-the-first-time-in-five-years/1083785

Hugo Chavez,Dies....


Hugo Chavez, Venezuela’s Anti-U.S. Socialist Leader, Dies

Hugo Chavez, the self-declared socialist who transformed Venezuelan politics by channeling record oil revenue to the poor, nationalizing corporations and vilifying foes as U.S. imperialist puppets, has died. He was 58.
He died today at 4:25 p.m. at a military hospital in Caracas, Vice President Nicolas Maduro said on state television. On Dec. 10, 2012, Chavez arrived in Cuba to undergo his fourth cancer operation in 18 months the following day, two months after winning re-election in a campaign in which he told voters he was “totally free” of the disease. It was the last time he would be seen in public.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez salutes during a military parade to commemorate the 20th anniversary of his failed coup attempt, in Caracas on Feb. 4, 2012. Photographer: Juan Barreto/AFP/Getty Images
March 5 (Bloomberg) -- Robert Abad, a money manager who helps oversee $51 billion in emerging-market assets at Western Asset Management Co., talks about the death of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and its potential impact on Venezuela. Abad speaks with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television's "Bloomberg Rewind." (Source: Bloomberg)
Army Lieutenant Colonel Hugo Chavez speaks to reporters after being released from prison in Caracas, on March 26, 1994. Photographer: Bertrand Parres/AFP via Getty Images
President-elect Hugo Chavez speaks with reporters outside the White House in Washington on Jan. 27, 1999. Photographer: William Philpott/AFP/Getty Images
Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez gestures during the welcoming ceremony for his Bolivian counterpart Evo Morales at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on September 17, 2011. Photographer: Juan Barreto/AFP/Getty Images
Chavez addresses the UN General Assembly in 2006. He called U.S. President George W. Bush the devil and said the stage still smelled like sulfur a day after Bush spoke. Photographer: Stephen Chernin/Getty Images
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, left, and Cuban President Fidel Castro, right, speak to reporters in Barcelona City, Venezuela, on June 28, 2005. Photographer: Juan Carlos Hernandez/Bloomberg
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, right, and New York Stock Exchange Chairman Richard Grasso, center, wave to the gallery before the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange on June 10, 1999. Photographer: Henny Ray Abrams/AFP/Getty Images
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez walks with his daughter Rosa Virginia as he departs for Cuba to receive medical treatment, in Caracas, on March 23, 2012. Photographer: Leo Ramirez/AFP/Getty Images
President Hugo Chavez waves a Venezuelan flag while speaking to supporters after receiving news of his reelection in Caracas on October 7, 2012. Photographer: Juan Barreto/AFP/GettyImages
“We received the most difficult and tragic information that we can transmit to our people,” a sobbing Maduro said while flanked by Cabinet officials and Jorge Arreaza, Chavez’s son-in-law. “Comandante Chavez, we will assume your legacy, your project, your challenges. Wherever you are, comandante, on behalf of this people that you protected and loved we thank you.”
A former paratrooper who spent two years in jail after leading a failed 1992 coup, Chavez revolutionized and polarized Venezuelan politics. Taking inspiration from ex-Cuban President Fidel Castro, he built homes and medical clinics for the poor, nationalized more than 1,000 companies or their assets and built an anti-American alliance stretching from Iranto Nicaragua. He won re-election three times in 12 years.

‘Transformed Venezuela’

“There’s no doubt that Hugo Chavez transformed Venezuela,” said Robert Pastor, a former U.S. National Security Adviser forLatin America under President Jimmy Carter. “One can debate whether the policies he pursued actually helped the masses, but you cannot question the fact that the majority felt that he was a leader who cared about them.” Expressions of sympathy poured in from leaders around Latin America. Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff called Chavez’s death a loss for Latin America’s poor. Argentine PresidentCristina Fernandez de Kirchner announced she would travel to Caracas immediately. “He was a generous man to all the people in this continent who needed him,” a visibly emotional Rousseff said in Brasilia, where she marked Chavez’s death with a moment of silence.

Missed Ceremony

Chavez was unable to return to Caracas for a swearing-in ceremony to start his third six-year term on Jan. 10, 2013, after winning about 55 percent of the vote over Henrique Capriles Radonski in October. He traveled back to the capital Feb. 18, 2013, and was transferred to a military hospital, the government said.
Aside from photos the government published Feb. 15, 2013, of Chavez in his Havana hospital bed, Venezuelans hadn’t seen or heard from their president since he stepped off a plane in Cuba for his Dec. 11 operation. Chavez suffered a respiratory infection following the surgery that required the use of a tracheal tube and left him unable to speak, the government said. Under Venezuela’s constitution, an election must be held within 30 days. It’s unclear whether Vice President Nicolas Maduro or National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello will take over on an interim basis.
In a national address from Caracas on Dec. 8, 2012, Chavez said he suffered bouts of pain and was advised by his doctors to have surgery immediately. Preparing to return to Cuba, he called on Venezuelans to unite behind Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader who became foreign minister, as his successor.

Endorsing Successor

“There is risk in this process that you can’t deny,” a somber Chavez said during a late-night address from the presidential palace, flanked by Maduro and Cabello. “It’s my firm opinion, clear like a full moon, irrevocable, absolute, total, that in a scenario that would oblige new presidential elections that you should elect Nicolas Maduro.” Two days later Chavez returned to Cuba for more surgery. Previous treatments had also included chemotherapy and radiation. Like his mentor Castro, Chavez could captivate followers during six-hour improvised monologues during which he sang, toured socialist farming co-operatives, criticized ministers for inefficiency and told stories about his days as a tank battalion leader. The speeches infuriated detractors, who banged pots and pans in protest and accused him of installing communism.

UN Speech

One of his most memorable moments on the world stage came in 2006 when, during a speech to the United Nations General Assembly, Chavez said that the podium still smelled like sulfur one day after George W. Bush spoke there, calling the then-U.S. President the “devil.” “Yesterday, ladies and gentleman, from this rostrum, the president of the United States, the gentleman whom I refer to as the devil, came here, talking as if he owned the world,” Chavez said. Along with Castro, Chavez paid homage to the 19th-century liberator of Venezuela and most of the Andean region, Simon Bolivar, citing his writings and changing the name of the country to the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. He even exhumed the legendary general’s bones in an attempt to prove that he had been poisoned by Colombian oligarchs and didn’t die from natural causes as is historically documented. Chavez said that he wouldn’t rest until Bolivar’s dream of a Latin America united and independent from foreign powers was realized. He tapped the world’s largest oil reserves to provide about $7 billion annually in subsidized crude to Cuba and its Caribbean neighbors, more than three times what the U.S. spends in aid in the Western Hemisphere.

Small-Town Upbringing

Hugo Rafael Chavez Frias was born on July 28, 1954, to Hugo de los Reyes Chavez and Elena Frias de Chavez in the small western town of Sabaneta in Barinas state. The region is known for its cattle, cowboy culture and joropo harp music. Raised in a working-class family, Chavez was brought up largely by his grandmother and sold sweets on the street after school to supplement the household’s income. A baseball fan and amateur pitcher, he admired Nestor Isaias Chavez (no relation), a Venezuelan who pitched for the San Francisco Giants in the 1960s, and like Castro, wanted to play professional ball in the U.S. During a 1999 visit to New York, he threw out the first pitch at a Mets game at Shea Stadium. He also rang the closing bell on the New York Stock Exchange.

Coup Attempt

After entering a military academy in 1975, Chavez began reading socialist authors and spending time with people dedicated to changing the country’s political system, which he viewed as corrupt and impervious to growing social problems. He received a master’s degree in political science from Simon Bolivar University in 1990. Violent riots over a rise in gasoline and public transportation costs in 1989 that left hundreds dead prompted Chavez to lead a coup attempt in 1992. He was pushed into the public eye for the first time after surrendering and telling television reporters that his mission to take power had failed, “for now.” He was jailed for two years before being pardoned. Returning to national politics in 1998, he ended a 40-year, two-party political system by defeating a former Miss Universe, Irene Saenz, for the presidency with 56 percent of the vote. His coalition put education, health care and cheap access to basic foods at the forefront of its policies while Chavez made himself accessible to the country’s poorest citizens.

‘Two Faces’

In a prescient essay published before Chavez even took office, Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez described the “two faces” of the former coup leader he had interviewed: “One to whom good luck had given the opportunity to save his nation and the other an illusionist who could go down in history as just another despot,” he wrote in the Colombian magazine Cambio. In the years ahead, Chavez would rewrite the constitution, win re-election in 2000 and extend his term to six years from five years. He would later abolish term limits altogether in a 2009 referendum. Critics said that through his legislative changes and control of the media, Chavez had effectively become a dictator. His anti-U.S. sentiment and wish to regain control of the oil industry led Chavez to tour the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries early in his presidency to seek OPEC’s consensus on boosting the price of crude.

Economic Contraction

As prices for Venezuelan crude surged more than 10-fold, to about $126 a barrel in 2008 from less than $9 a barrel when he took office, Chavez began to pour money into social programs, helping to cut the poverty rate by half. He also froze gasoline and electricity tariffs. Chavez radicalized his agenda following a 2002 coup that removed him from power for 48 hours and after a two-month general strike later that year paralyzed oil production. He responded by firing more than 18,000 employees of Petroleos de Venezuela SA, the state oil company, and replacing its board. The strike caused the economy to shrink 27 percent in the first quarter of 2003 while unemployment rose to 20 percent. Chavez overhauled his economic policies after the strike by installing currency controls and price ceilings on basic goods such as corn meal, beef and milk. He started a nationalization drive that would give the state majority control of almost every industry, a move that sparked shortages of basic goods and inflation of more than 30 percent.

Defending Qaddafi

Chavez accused the U.S. of orchestrating and financing the attempted overthrow and sharpened his tone against what he called the “empire.” The U.S. rejected the charges, though White House spokesman Ari Fleischer initially blamed the unrest on Chavez and said -- incorrectly, as it turned out -- that Chavez had “resigned the presidency.” Sanctions that prohibited Chavez from buying military equipment from the U.S. prompted him to turn to Russia, China and Iran as commercial partners. He defended Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi as he fought a 2011 rebellion that would take his life and called his alliance with Iran “holy.” Chavez was re-elected in 2006, to a six-year term, with more than 60 percent of the vote. The following year he narrowly lost a referendum to solidify his socialist policies by changing the nation’s constitution. The political opposition -- which had sat out parliamentary elections in 2005, leaving Chavez with a near absolute majority in Congress -- gained ground in regional elections in 2008 and won the popular vote in congressional elections in 2010.

Cancer Diagnosis

Known for a work schedule that often involved 40 cups of coffee a day and cabinet meetings lasting past midnight, Chavez slowed down his furious pace in 2011 after a knee injury sidelined him from a regional tour.After visiting Brazil and Ecuador he was operated on in Cuba, where he said doctors discovered a pelvic abscess and later a cancerous tumor. Recovery kept him on the island for almost one month. Maduro said that Chavez’s body couldn’t withstand the frenetic pace of his presidency up to that point.“Chavez is a work machine,” Maduro said in a June 11, 2011, interview on the Telesur television network that Chavez created and financed. “For the last 12 years he’s sustained an intense agenda. With so much tension some part of his body had to give. Chavez forgets about rest.”Chavez would undergo three more operations in Cuba. Attending a Roman Catholic mass with his parents, Hugo and Elena, following radiation treatment in April 2012, Chavez wiped tears from his face and pleaded for his life. “I ask God to give me life, however painful,” said Chavez, who earlier in his presidency frequently clashed with Vatican officials over his support for socialism. “I can carry 100 crosses, your crown of thorns, but don’t take me yet. I still have things to do.” Chavez, who was divorced twice, had four children.To contact the reporters on this story: Charlie Devereux in Caracas atcdevereux3@bloomberg.net; Daniel Cancel in Buenos Aires at dcancel@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andre Soliani at asoliani@bloomberg.net.