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Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Bachelet's pension reforms to cost state $1.5 billion per year: government

Economy


Chilean President Michelle Bachelet's proposal to hike the pension contribution rate by 5 percentage points will cost about $3.8 billion per year, with the state paying $1.5 billion, the government said on Wednesday.
Bachelet announced plans late on Tuesday to have employers pay for a gradual increase in the contribution rate to 15 percent within 10 years to boost payments for retirees and provide minimum pensions for those in need. Self-employed workers would also gradually be required to pay into the system.
"Each percentage point in the contribution rate equals about 0.3 percentage points of GDP, or $765 million," Valdes said at a news conference.
Because the state is one of the biggest employers in the country, the measure will increase the burden on the budget, Valdes said. "The fiscal cost is about 0.5 percent of GDP, about $1.5 billion."
Opponents of Chile's private pension system have staged protests in recent weeks to demand it be dismantled, saying it forces workers to give their earnings to for-profit funds that do not ensure a dignified old age for all Chileans.
Chile's private pension system was started in the 1980s during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. The six private pension funds, known as AFPs, manage some $160 billion in assets.
Bachelet's government promised to forge a "great social pact" with all stakeholders to build consensus for the proposed reforms, ahead of a pot-banging protest against the AFPs scheduled later on Wednesday.
Rodrigo Perez, president of the Association of Administrative Pension Funds of Chile, which represents AFPs, told reporters it looked forward to being part of the debate but warned that some proposed reforms could end up hurting pensions.
Bachelet proposed forcing the AFPs to pay back contributors after periods of losses, giving workers more say on their investment decisions and eliminating hidden fees.
The reforms must be passed by Congress, where there is broad support for boosting pensions.
Source by Reuters

Global negative-yielding debt slips to $11.4 trillion: Fitch

Stock market


The global amount of negative-yielding government bonds edged down to $11.4 trillion on Aug. 2 from two weeks ago as Japanese debt yields rose in reaction to more official stimulus announcements, Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday.
On July 15, there were about $11.5 trillion in sovereign bonds with negative yields in Japan and Europe, whose central banks adopted negative rate policies and have been purchasing bonds heavily in an effort to stimulate their sluggish economies.
Japanese government bonds accounted for more than half the negative-yielding debt with $7.2 trillion, down from $7.5 trillion two weeks earlier and $7.9 trillion on June 27, the rating agency said.
"This decrease in negative-yielding debt has been partially offset by a strengthening yen, keeping the Japanese total above $7 trillion," Fitch said in a statement.
The yen strengthened after the Bank of Japan disappointed traders by keeping its bond purchases steady on July 29, followed by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet approval of 13.5 trillion yen ($132 billion) in fiscal measures on Aug. 2.
From July 15 to Aug. 2, the yen gained nearly 4 percent against the dollar as disappointing U.S. economic data reduced investors' expectations of a possible U.S. rate increase by year-end, according to Reuters data.
In addition to local government bonds, $32 billion in Japanese corporate bonds carried negative yields on Aug. 2, which represented about 5 percent of that country's entire corporate bond sector, it said.
In Europe, the sum of negative-yielding sovereign debt edged up to $4.2 trillion from $4.0 trillion on July 15. German government bonds that mature out to 13 years were yielding less than zero, Fitch said.
Source by Reuters

Crude falls sharply as unexpected inventory build offsets OPEC forecasts

Commodities


Crude futures fell considerably on Wednesday extending slight losses from the previous session, as investors reacted to an unexpected build in U.S. crude inventories last week and a bullish forecast from OPEC on the potential for increased global demand growth for the remainder of 2016.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, WTI crude for September delivery traded between $42.51 and $43.48 a barrel before closing at $42.66, down 0.36 or 0.84% on the session. The front-month contract for U.S. crude still remains sharply below its level in early-June when it surged above $50 a barrel, amid a host of production slowdowns worldwide. On the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), brent crude for October delivery wavered between $44.80 and $45.73 a barrel, before settling at $44.87, down 0.52 or 1.15% on the day. Both the U.S. and international benchmarks of crude closed near session-lows, following a late sell-off before the close.
On Wednesday morning, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said in its Weekly Petroleum Status Report that U.S. commercial crude inventories increased by 1.1 million barrels for the week ending on August 5 from the previous week. At 523.6 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are at historically high levels for this time of year. Analysts initially anticipated a draw of 1.5 million barrels for the week, but adjusted their expectations following a 2.09 million increase from the American Petroleum Institute on Tuesday evening after the close of trading. The sizable build marked the largest from the API over the last three months. At the same time, stockpiles at the Cushing Oil Hub in Oklahoma surged by 1.16 million barrels for the week, also representing the largest weekly build since early-May. Cushing, the main delivery point for NYMEX oil, is the largest storage facility in the U.S. Given the current supply backdrop on U.S. markets, any inventory builds are viewed as bearish for crude prices as storage facilities nationwide remain near full capacity.
Notably, total motor gasoline inventories decreased by 2.8 million barrels last week while distillate fuel inventories increased by 2.0 million barrels on the week. Although gasoline stockpiles have declined by more than 6.0 million barrels over the last two weeks, inventories worldwide still hover near record-highs as refineries churn out product at a rapid pace due to historically low crude prices. Meanwhile, inventories in the PADD 1 region, which comprises the majority of the U.S. east coast, fell mildly by 0.4 million to 70.9 million barrels, remaining near their highest levels on record.
Elsewhere, OPEC said on Wednesday in its monthly report for August that it expects global oil demand growth in 2016 to average 1.22 million barrels per day, an increase of 30,000 bpd from the previous estimate. OPEC, the world's largest oil cartel, also left its 2017 forecast unchanged at 1.15 million bpd. Earlier this week, OPEC president Mohammed bin Saleh al-Sada attempted to calm markets by hinting that top producers from the 14-member organization could discuss options on the sidelines of an energy forum in Algeria in September aimed at stabilizing persistently low crude prices.
Although oil prices are up sharply from their levels in February when they touched down to 13-year lows, crude futures are still down more than 60% from their peak of $115 a barrel two summers ago. Months later, OPEC triggered an unforeseen shock with a strategic decision to maintain its production ceiling above 30 million barrels per day, helping flood markets with a glut of oversupply.
The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the strength of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, fell more than 0.50% to an intraday low of 95.38. The index has tumbled more than 1.5% since hitting four-month lows in late-July. Dollar-denominated commodities such as Crude become more expensive for foreign purchasers when the dollar appreciates.
Source by Investing.com

Delta cancels hundreds more flights, expects normal operations soon

Business


Delta Air Lines Inc (N:DAL) on Wednesday canceled more than 250 flights and upended thousands of travelers' plans for the third day in a row after a power outage hit its computer systems, though it forecast a return to normal operations later this afternoon.
Delta, the No. 2 U.S. airline by passenger traffic, said systems that allow customer service agents to process check-ins and dispatch aircraft are now functioning normally. Most of Wednesday's delays and cancellations are the result of flight crews being displaced or running up against maximum allowed work hours, it said.
As of 12:30 p.m. EDT, Delta said it had canceled 278 flights on the day, adding to the more than 1,600 cancellations since Monday. Another 1,950 flights departed on Wednesday, with 75 percent of them within 30 minutes of their scheduled times, the airline said.
"We're in the final hours of bouncing back from the disruption," Bill Lentsch, Delta's senior vice president for airport customer service and airline operations, said in an online posting.
The travel havoc at one of the world's largest carriers has brought into focus the vulnerability of airlines' technology infrastructure. Experts say mergers - and sometimes insufficient investment in back-end technology - have left airlines with a hodgepodge of systems.
What is more, a drive by companies to automate operations, from mobile boarding passes to check-in kiosks, means the impact of any single glitch will multiply.
Delta said problems arose when critical systems did not switch over to a backup source following a power surge and outage on Monday.
The airline is still investigating the cause, Chief Executive Ed Bastian said in an online video post, adding that the company has invested "hundreds of millions of dollars" in infrastructure upgrades and backup systems.
"I'm sorry we let you down. We'll do everything that we can to make certain this does not happen again," Bastian said in the video.
"There have been no indications of a hack," Delta spokesman Trebor Banstetter added in an emailed statement.
Shares were down 1.5 percent at $36.40 in mid-afternoon trading.
PASSENGERS FRUSTRATED
Frustrated fliers like Camille Davies-Mandel of Maplewood, New Jersey still faced multihour waits at airport lines on Wednesday.
"I have two kids with me, looking forward to getting to their cousins so they can seek out (characters) in Pokemon Go," she said in a telephone interview after waiting three hours to check in at Newark Liberty International Airport. She was unable to download a boarding pass online and missed her flight.
Davies-Mandel said she appreciated Delta's outreach on social media and messages from management, but she added "when you get on the phone and you deal with their customer service, that's a whole different experience," noting two calls took her four and a half hours.
Delta said it contacted some of its most frequent fliers who would be stuck in the disruption and offered them seats on its Delta Private Jets subsidiary to finish their journey.
Analysts expect passenger refunds, overtime hours for workers and other costs will reduce Delta's profit this quarter. Daniel McKenzie, an analyst with the Buckingham Research Group said in a research note that earnings per share may be 5 percent to 10 percent lower, or 10 to 15 cents per share, lower than his
than his prior estimate.
"Delta still remains the best operation in the industry by a wide margin," McKenzie said, noting that the airline had canceled far fewer flights than rivals in recent years.
Other carriers have also suffered from technology issues.
Southwest Airlines Co (N:LUV) forecast on Wednesday a further drop in a key profitability metric for the quarter due to delays and cancellations of more than 2,000 flights after an outage hit its computer systems in July.
Source by Reuters

Argentina foreign investment quest a work in progress

Investing


Argentina is making strides in opening up its economy to foreign investment after years of hostility to free enterprise but still has a way to go to catch up to some of its market friendlier neighbors, investors say.
Foreign investment is crucial to President Mauricio Macri's efforts to remake Argentina's economy along less statist and more entrepreneurial lines and rekindle growth, especially as many domestic companies have hesitated to deploy their cash despite expressions of support for his agenda.
Macri told a Reuters Summit event on Argentina this week that progress is being made, pointing to multinationals that he said were kicking off capital spending plans after economic uncertainty during the presidency of Cristina Fernandez.
"Those who export value-added services have begun to recruit thousands of young people," he said in an interview at the Casa Rosada presidential palace, citing the local units of German companies like Siemens (DE:SIEGn) and SAP (DE:SAPG). "They recognize the enormous talent that exists in Argentina."
There is no question that Macri's moves to cut a deal with holdout bondholders from the country's 2002 default, ditch capital controls, let the peso float and even depoliticize the government's infamously unreliable economic statistics agency, have won applause from many investors and attracted a tide of short-term foreign inflows.
"The government is being very friendly (with foreign investors)," said Eduardo Costantini, chief executive of developer Consultatio (BA:CON) told the Reuters Summit, pointing to an embrace of capital markets and a visit by the International Monetary Fund in July.
He credited the Macri regime with "a shift toward opening various sectors, including energy where they're putting an emphasis on private investment and also public works projects, where they they're fostering foreign companies' inclusion."
In one victory for Macri, BP (L:BP) unit Pan American Energy LLC last month said it planned to invest $1.4 billion in exploring and producing Argentina's conventional and unconventional energy reserves.
The American Chamber of Commerce in Argentina also said earlier this year that U.S. firms would invest $2.3 billion in the country over the next 18 months, including more than $100 million each from General Motors Co (N:GM), AES Corp (N:AES) and Ford Motor Co(N:F).
Nevertheless, years of anti-market rhetoric and policies have left a wide gap between Argentina's capital markets and those of neighbors like Brazil, itself known as a bastion of state-controlled companies and banks that sometimes crowd out free enterprise.
Argentina's benchmark Merval index (MERV) comprises only 15 stocks, lagging the wider composition of indexes in smaller Peru and Colombia, which have 32 and 25 companies on their key indexes, respectively.
Helping more Argentine companies go public will be a key goal of Ernesto Allaria, head of Argentina's new ByMA stock market, a merger of the better-known Merval and smaller Bolsa de Comercio.
"That's where we're focusing our energies - in satisfying demand for IPOs to fund new economic projects," Allaria said in an email exchange with Reuters.
He noted that while Argentina's gross domestic product is roughly a quarter of Brazil's, the notional value of stocks traded daily is just $20 million, a one-hundredth of its giant northern neighbor's $2 billion per day.
Finance Minister Alfonso Prat-Gay told the Reuters Summit on Wednesday that the government plans to send a bill to Congress in the coming weeks to modify capital markets.
He declined to give details of the reform. But press reports have said it could facilitate foreign investment and reduce the scope for state interference in private companies in which the government acquired minority stakes through a state pension reform carried out almost a decade ago.
Eduardo Eurnekian, one of Argentina's wealthiest men and a big investor in energy and infrastructure, said in an interview that when he floats a controlling stake in his Aeropuertos Argentina 2000 airports operator, he will do so in New York, not local markets "because I think that will bring great advantages and capital support."
He added that while foreign investors were taking a fresh look at Argentina, many were also eager to see further progress on competitiveness and other economic shortcomings from high taxes and interest rates to weak links in infrastructure.
"Foreign investors are aware of these weaknesses," he said. "They know that it's interesting and positive to bet on Argentina as long as decisions are made that tackle those economic obstacles that make it uncompetitive."
Source by Reuters

Caledonia Investments to pay $480,000 to settle U.S. antitrust charges

Business


Caledonia Investments PLC (L:CLDN) has agreed to pay $480,000 to resolve charges that it failed to report to antitrust enforcers share purchases that it made in 2014, the Federal Trade Commission said on Wednesday.
Caledonia, an investment trust company which is based in London, handled 2008 purchases of shares of Texas-based Bristow Group Inc by properly reporting them, and did not need to report later purchases.
But in 2014, Caledonia acquired 3,650 additional voting shares in Bristow, which provides industrial aviation services, but failed to notify antitrust authorities.
Caledonia did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
The FTC noted in its press release that the company said that the failure to report the purchase was inadvertent. The commission said it still pursued the matter because Caledonia had failed to notify authorities about a 1996 stock purchase.
Source by Reuters

U.S. government posts $113 billion deficit in July

Economic Indicators


The U.S. government posted a $113 billion budget deficit in July, a 24 percent drop from the same month last year, the Treasury Department said on Wednesday.
The government had a deficit of $149 billion in July 2015, according to Treasury's monthly budget statement.
Analysts polled by Reuters had expected a $113 billion deficit for last month.
When accounting for calendar adjustments, July would have shown a $101 billion deficit compared with an adjusted $107 billion deficit in the same month in 2015.
The fiscal year-to-date deficit was $514 billion through July, up 10 percent from a $466 billion deficit at the same time last year.
On an adjusted basis, the fiscal year-to-date gap was $505 billion last month. That compared with $423 billion at the same time last year.
Receipts last month totaled $210 billion, a 7 percent decrease from July 2015, while outlays stood at $323 billion, a 14 percent fall from the same month a year ago.
Source by Reuters

Oil reverses gains on surprise U.S. crude build

Commodities


Oil prices were largely unchanged on Wednesday, giving up earlier gains after the U.S. government reported a surprise crude stockpile build.
Crude inventories rose 1.1 million barrels in the week ended Aug. 5, compared with analysts' expectations for a decrease of 1.0 million barrels, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said. [EIA/S]
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures CLc1 fell 5 cents to $42.75 per barrel by 10:50 a.m. EDT (1450 GMT).
U.S. gasoline futures RBc1 rose nearly 1 percent, extending gains, after the EIA also reported a larger-than-expected gasoline drawdown of 2.8 million barrel, but last reversed gains and was trading at down nearly 1 percent.
Brent crude futures LCOc1 rose by 2 cents to $45 per barrel.
"We do feel that any further strength in the spot price will be met with selling," said Tariq Zahir, trader in crude oil spreads at Tyche Capital Advisors in New York.
"At this time of year, we should be drawing down in crude inventories and we are still building."
Source by Reuters

Ferraris and fine wines lure investors hit by rate ructions

Business


Alternative investments such as a Ferrari (NYSE:RACE) 335 S Scaglietti, a rare blue diamond or a case of Romanee-Conti Grand Cru wine from Burgundy are going mainstream as investors grapple with ultra-low interest rates and volatile stocks.
Spooked by the end of a 30-year bond bull run and bouts of money printing which have pushed stock values out of kilter with economic reality, high-profile investors are turning to fine wines, classic cars and jewels, research and index data show.
Even legendary bond investor and ex-Pimco boss Bill Gross said last week he now favored real assets like land and gold over more traditional investment classes.
This growing interest saw rare coins, collectible jewelry and classic cars join fine wine among the top performers in the year to end-March, the latest Knight Frank Luxury Investment Index (KFLII) showed.
And fine wine saw its largest positive monthly movement since 2010 in July with the Liv-ex Fine Wine Investables index, which tracks around 200 Bordeaux red wines from 24 leading producers, up by 4.5 percent. It is up 13.8 percent so far this year, compared with 6.9 percent for the S&P 500 and 8.9 percent for the FTSE 100.
"As a physical asset, fine wine tends to perform well in periods of uncertainty...and is also not linked to the prices of other assets in most circumstances," said Andrew della Casa, Founding Director of The Wine Investment Fund.
Since its launch in 1988, the fine wine index has shown returns of around 10.5 percent per year, although falls between 2011 and 2014 have pushed the index below its long-term trend return level, creating an attractive entry point for first-time investors, della Casa said.
CARS ON A ROLL
While the KLFII index rose just 5 percent over the year to the end of March, the lowest annual increase since the first quarter of 2010, returns on classic cars jumped 17 percent, coins generated 6 percent while jewelry delivered 4 percent.
But over a five-year period, cars, coins and jewelry returned 161 percent, 73 percent and 63 percent respectively, eclipsing Britain's FTSE-100 stock index, which was up 15 percent since the start of 2011.
Investor interest in classic cars helped the HAGI Top Index rise more than 500 percent in 10 years, encouraging many to restore a rusting chassis to its former glory.
While that has led to some dampening in demand in the year to date - the index is up 2.2 percent since January - HAGI's Dietrich Hatlapa said lower interest rates and monetary policy easing would support demand.
"People are taking the time to find the best examples. The spread between mediocre cars and very good cars has really opened up quite significantly... and for those, record prices are still being paid."
Specialist funds offering a stake in rare diamonds, meanwhile, have continued to catch the eye of investors seeking ways to hedge against currency, stock and bond market risk, with the Sciens Coloured Diamond Fund II up by about 5 percent in the second quarter of 2016.
FASHION VICTIMS
For all the mainstream interest in investments once regarded as the preserve of the ultra-rich, they lack liquidity and market depth.
The three main U.S. car auctions in 2015 saw vehicles worth a total of between $1 and $1.5 billion sold. While there are hundreds of smaller auctions globally and many cars sold off-market, this is still a long way from the trillions traded daily in stocks and bonds.
And with future demand tough to call, Andrew Shirley, author of the Knight Frank Wealth Report, strikes a note of caution.
"You should still only be buying the investments of passion that you will enjoy owning and will give you pleasure even if their value goes down – there is certainly no guarantee that values will continue to rise.
"There is an argument that such investments add diversity to portfolios, provide a hedge against inflation, and unlike equity-based investments, offer a degree of tangibility but like gold they tend not to generate any income and can also be illiquid, and subject to changes in taste and fashion."
Gold, another so-called safe haven from top-of-the cycle bonds and expensive stocks, is also enjoying a purple patch, BlackRock research shows.
With returns up 23.2 percent in the year to July 29, gold has returned almost twice as much as higher-risk emerging market dollar bonds and non-U.S. Developed market bonds, and almost five times a 3.1 percent return on U.S. large caps, it said.
Analysts at Unigestion describe the gold price rise as a "classic" market response to stress triggered by Britain's shock decision to quit the European Union and fears of negative rates but it was difficult to predict how long these circumstances supporting a rush into gold might last.
Source by Reuters

New Tunisian premier tries to break economic reform curse

Economy


Tunisia has gone through five prime ministers in as many years since its revolution, each pushing a widely-praised transition to democracy. None, though, has made much progress in building the economic stability and opportunity that young Tunisians demand.
Now the sixth post-uprising premier, French-educated technocrat Youssef Chahed, is making bold promises even before he has taken office to tackle Tunisia's problems.
But a looming budget crisis and debt repayments, coupled with political inertia, may prevent the 40-year-old premier-designate from escaping the fate of his predecessors.
Since the 2011 overthrow of autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia has achieved free elections, a new constitution and a spirit of compromise between secular and Islamist parties - in contrast to the repression, chaos or war that has afflicted other countries which also had "Arab Spring" revolts.
The flip side is that popular protests, labor union resistance and political squabbling have held back plans to overhaul heavy state spending including on a huge body of public workers, and to implement banking and investment laws.
After the last premier lost a parliamentary confidence vote over the economy and security, President Beji Caid Essebsi called last week for Chahed to lead a national unity government capable of advancing economic reforms demanded by lenders including the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.
"We are in times that require exceptional decisions and sacrifices," Chahed told reporters, saying his focus would be tackling corruption and terrorism, promoting economic growth and clearing up public finances. "I want to talk frankly with the Tunisian people about the reality of the country's financial situation."
Many Tunisians ask whether Chahed, an agricultural specialist and Essebsi ally, can muster the political capital to push through change. Some opponents dismiss him as an Essebsi puppet, chosen for his loyalty to the president rather than his ability to deliver. He is now negotiating to form his cabinet.
"Chahed has been handed a poisoned chalice, the financial situation is pretty catastrophic. He is going to find the coffers empty and lots of demands," said Jamel Arfaoui, a local analyst and newspaper columnist. "He is facing potential protests at the same time as the need for reforms."
The change of premier comes at a difficult time. Three major attacks by Islamist militants have badly hit tourism bookings, forcing job cuts in an industry that accounts for 8 percent of the economy. Unemployment is already at 15 percent, with the rate far higher for young people in a country where more than half the population is under 29.
Months of on-off protests and sit-ins by jobless youths have also disrupted production and exports of the state-run phosphate industry, another major revenue earner. Essebsi estimated losses at $2 billion from sector disruptions over five years.
Under the 2016 budget, the public deficit is supposed to fall to 3.9 percent of gross domestic product from 4.4 percent in 2015. But that assumes the economy will grow 2.5 percent whereas the actual rate in the first quarter was only 1 percent year-on-year, weakening tax revenue.
Next year will be tougher still for the public finances. Around $3 billion is due in debt service payments and the state will struggle just to come up with the roughly $450 million it needs every month to pay its employees.
At 13.5 percent of the GDP, Tunisia's public sector wage bill is proportionately one of the highest in the world.
"Revenues forecast for 2017 will not be enough to cover the one billion dinars each month for 700,000 public sector employees," Central Bank Governor Chedli Ayari said last week. "We are going to need more foreign financing in this difficult context and with the fall off in tourism and phosphate revenues."
SOCIAL PRESSURES, POLITICAL WILL
A senior member of Essebsi's Nidaa Tounes party, Chahed will easily secure approval for his new cabinet in parliament, where Nidaa Tounes and Islamist party Ennahda in the ruling coalition control a majority.
But outside parliament, he must navigate relations with the unions and the social unrest that has scuppered past government attempts to push through the kind of financial sacrifices and austerity reforms he is promising.
The IMF has approved a $2.88 billion four-year loan program for Tunisia. However, release of much of this is subject to reviews of the government's progress on economic and financial reforms.
Tunisia has been under pressure for some time from its international lenders to implement measures on the public deficit, investment and the financial sector.
Mehdi Jomaa, a technocrat prime minister managed to secure temporary fiscal reforms in 2014 to boost revenues. The last premier, Habib Essid, got a law to protect the central bank from political meddling through parliament, although only after protracted negotiations within the ruling coalition.
Deeper reforms have stalled, often because successive governments have lacked the political capital or will to stand up to popular pressures against public spending reductions or austerity measures.
An attempt to increase vehicle tax triggered violent protests in 2014, forcing the government to step back. A tax on border traffic also provoked rioting last year, leading to another government retreat.
Now doctors and lawyers are threatening strikes over increased audits on their billing to help combat tax evasion, while the powerful UGTT union is resisting reforms to raise the retirement age and reduce state pension payments.
Twice this year the government and the UGTT reached deals increasing public wage salaries, adding pressure to the state finances.
A new investment code law, aimed at increasing incentives for foreign investors and reducing bureaucracy, has been parked in parliament for three years after two revisions.
Social pressure over jobs already exploded into mass protests in southern and central regions at the start of the year, a reminder of the conditions that helped to inspire the Tunisian revolution and later Arab Spring uprisings.
"The Chahed government wants to chip away at freedoms to push through painful measures in his economic plan," said Hamma Hammai, leader of the Popular Front opposition party. "But the government will fail because it is not proposing anything new, just the same as Essid."
Source by Reuters

Israel stocks lower at close of trade; TA 25 down 0.78%

Stock market


Israel stocks were lower after the close on Wednesday, as losses in the BiomedTechnology and Oil & Gas sectors led shares lower.
At the close in Tel Aviv, the TA 25 declined 0.78%.
The best performers of the session on the TA 25 were ICL Israel Chemicals Ltd (TA:ICL), which rose 3.96% or 60 points to trade at 1575 at the close. Meanwhile, Israel Corp(TA:ILCO) added 3.34% or 2110 points to end at 65300 and Melisron (TA:MLSR) was up 1.94% or 330 points to 17320 in late trade.
The worst performers of the session were Perrigo (TA:PRGO), which fell 9.90% or 3550 points to trade at 32300 at the close. OPKO Health Inc (TA:OPK) declined 2.15% or 84 points to end at 3826 and Teva (TA:TEVA) was down 1.08% or 220 points to 20180.
Rising stocks outnumbered declining ones on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange by 215 to 127 and 96 ended unchanged.
Shares in Perrigo (TA:PRGO) fell to 3-years lows; losing 9.90% or 3550 to 32300. Shares in Melisron (TA:MLSR) rose to all time highs; up 1.94% or 330 to 17320.
Crude oil for September delivery was down 0.14% or 0.06 to $42.71 a barrel. Elsewhere in commodities trading, Brent oil for delivery in October rose 0.07% or 0.03 to hit $45.01 a barrel, while the December Gold contract rose 0.26% or 3.45 to trade at $1350.15 a troy ounce.
USD/ILS was down 0.22% to 3.8148, while EUR/ILS rose 0.20% to 4.2588.
The US Dollar Index was down 0.44% at 95.64.
Source by Investing.com