BEIJING (Reuters) ? China has no intention of “buying up” or “controlling” a debt-ridden Europe that it still has confidence in, and any help Beijing may offer will be for purely economic reasons, a top state-run newspaper said on Monday ahead of a China-EU summit.

While Chinese leaders have repeatedly expressed confidence in European nations, they have also refrained from making firm financial commitments, urging Europe first to take further steps on its own.

Premier Wen Jiabao, meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Beijing earlier this month, said China was considering increasing its participation in the rescue funds aimed at resolving the debt crisis, though he gave no explicit pledges.

In a suggestion of the tone China wishes to strike at its summit with senior EU officials on Tuesday, Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said in a front page commentary that China’s interests lay in selflessly helping Europe.

“China has no appetite or ability to ‘buy up Europe’ or ‘control Europe’ as some European commentators have said,” wrote Feng Zhongping, director of the Institute of European Studies at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations.

“China has from the beginning strongly supported the EU and the euro, in clear contrast to the ‘talking down’ of Europe in the international community,” Feng wrote in the piece, carried in the paper’s overseas edition.

China has promised not to link helping Europe in the debt crisis with issues such as the EU recognizing China as a market economy or the EU’s arms embargo on China, Feng added.

“This is the best example of China’s proactive stance on the EU,” he wrote.

Any Chinese economic assistance to resolve the debt problem, whether via the International Monetary Fund or the EU’s own systems, would be a purely economic decision, Feng said.

“There is thus no such thing as ‘the poor person saving the rich person’,” he added.

The Beijing summit, which was postponed from December, will bring together Premier Wen and President Hu Jintao with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy.

The European Stability Mechanism, a 500-billion-euro ($665 billion) permanent bailout fund due to become operational in July, is expected to replace the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), a temporary fund that has been used to bail out Ireland and Portugal and will help in the second Greek package.

The euro zone must agree and approve a 130-billion-euro ($170 billion) bailout package with Greece before February 15 to allow time for complex legal procedures involved in the bond swap to be completed in time for a March 20 bond redemption.

Failure to strike a deal risks pushing Athens into a chaotic debt default that could threaten its future in the euro zone and worsen the crisis.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Richard Pullin)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120213/bs_nm/us_china_europe

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Written on February 14th, 2012 , savor Tags: , ,

MELBOURNE (Reuters) ? Private equity fund TPG Capital has bought NZ$70 million ($53 million) of the debt of New Zealand media company MediaWorks from Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), according to a source familiar with the matter.

MediaWorks, like Nine Entertainment in Australia, was acquired by a private equity fund at the height of the buyouts boom using leveraged debt.

CBA’s NZ$70 million in MediaWorks was part of the leveraged buyout facilities that Australian private equity firm Ironbridge Capital used to buy MediaWorks for around NZ$800 million in 2007.

Both Nine and MediaWorks were subsequently hit by falling advertising revenues, have had their debt restructured and have seen original bank lenders selling their debt.

In recent weeks, banks, including CBA, have sold increasing amounts of Nine Entertainment debt to hedge funds, causing owner CVC Asia Pacific to cancel two restructuring proposals in less than a week.

TPG, which last year led the debt-for-equity recapitalization of ailing utility Alinta Energy, now holds around 20 percent of the senior loans of MediaWorks, according to the source.

Australian print publication AFR earlier reported the TPG acquisition of debt.

TPG declined comment. CBA was not immediately available for comment.

MediaWorks, which has free-to-air television channels and a radio network, previously went through a debt restructuring in 2010 which saw Goldman Sachs swap out its debt in the company for an equity stake, according to media reports at the time.

Original lenders to the NZ$555 million facilities backing the Ironbridge buyout in 2007 included Bank of Scotland International, the then ABN AMRO Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland, Bank of New Zealand, Rabobank and Westpac Banking Corp, according to Thomson Reuters LPC.

($1 = 1.328 New Zealand Dollars)

(Reporting by Sonali Paul and Stephen Aldred; Editing by Ken Wills)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enindustry/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/media_nm/us_tpg_mediaworks

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Written on December 18th, 2011 , savor Tags: , ,

BERLIN ? Germany kept alive hopes that the 17-nation euro currency can survive the sprawling debt crisis when lawmakers in Europe’s largest economy voted overwhelmingly on Thursday in favor of expanding the powers of the eurozone’s bailout fund.

The vote strengthened Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right coalition, which had struggled to win support from a bloc of rebellious members, and could bolster her ability to negotiate new European crisis measures.

While many investors and experts believe new steps will be required in Europe, such as letting Greece write off more of its debt pile, Germany’s approval of the fund’s new powers and scope was necessary to avoid a new bout of massive market turmoil.

“The support of the Bundestag is an important step for stabilizing the eurozone,” Michael Kemmer, head of Germany’s Bank Federation, told the news agency dapd. “With that, they have set a course that leads out of the debt crisis.”

The euro440 billion ($600 billion) fund will be able to buy government bonds and lend money to banks and governments before they are in a full-blown crisis, making Europe’s response to market jitters more rapid and pre-emptive.

Germany, which pays the lion’s share of European bailouts, became the 13th member of the eurozone to support the expansion of the rescue fund, the so-called European Financial Stability Facility, or EFSF. Cyprus and Estonia also passed the proposed expansion on Thursday.

Austria’s parliament is widely expected to pass the measure on Friday, the same day Germany’s upper house of parliament is set to finalize Thursday’s vote, while the Netherlands is expected to approve it in the first week of October.

The biggest remaining hurdle is the final country to vote ? Slovakia ? where the government will not have enough support to pass it if the leader of the junior coalition Freedom and Solidarity party follows through with threats to vote against the fund’s expansion. Its parliament is to vote later in October.

In Berlin, 523 lawmakers in parliament, the Bundestag, voted in favor of expanding German participation to guarantee loans of up to euro211 billion, compared with euro123 billion so far. Eighty-five voted against it and three abstained.

“It was a strong statement of Angela Merkel’s position. She has the backing and the support of the coalition and she is able to negotiate on the European level,” Peter Altmeier, the parliamentary whip for Merkel’s Christian Democrats, said after the tally was announced.

Markets appeared calmer even before Thursday’s votes, following weeks of turbulence triggered by uncertainty over Germany’s position on the fund. The euro also traded slightly higher.

“The overwhelming majority in the Bundestag is a good sign and will hopefully mark a step change in German commitment to bringing the spiraling crisis under control,” said Sony Kapoor of the Re-Define economic policy think tank.

The lingering problem, however, is that investors are resigned to the fact that Greece will have to default ? that is, impose tougher losses on its bondholders.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy will meet with Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou in Paris on Friday to discuss the debt crisis, the president’s office said.

Papandreou met Germany’s Merkel for similar talks Tuesday. Germany and France combined represent about half of the 17-nation eurozone’s economic output.

Greece was saved from default by an initial euro110 billion ($150 billion) bailout in May last year before the EFSF was established to help any other countries in trouble. A planned second rescue package for Greece this year includes a voluntary participation by private bondholders, who agreed to write off about 20 percent on their Greek debt holdings.

Many experts say those writedowns should be closer to 50 percent. The debate among European leaders now is whether to allow such a move under controlled conditions, providing help to banks that may take heavy losses on Greek bonds they hold.

Germany and the Netherlands are open to the option, with Merkel suggesting this week that Greece’s second bailout deal might have to be renegotiated. France and the European Central Bank, however, oppose the idea.

Greece’s international debt inspectors returned to Athens on Thursday to complete a review. Merkel has said that any new decisions would depend upon the results of the inspectors’ report, which is not due for days.

Forging consensus over new measures ? particularly something as delicate as imposing more severe losses on Greece’s creditors ? will likely be very difficult, however.

Indeed, the parliamentary debate on the EFSF in Berlin on Thursday was a feisty three-hour long affair, reflecting how high tensions in Merkel’s coalition were running over the idea of providing more backing to the eurozone’s weakest members.

Frank Schaeffler, a dissenter from the junior coalition partner, argued that bailout measures have worsened Greece’s economic situation.

“Despite all arguments, the first bailout did not make the situation for Greece better, but worse,” said Schaeffler, a Free Democrat. “Expanding the fund will make the situation even worse.”

Schaeffler and others had long expressed their concerns, and opposition leaders had said going in to the vote that if Merkel’s coalition had to rely on their votes, it would be a sign that her strife-prone and increasingly unpopular government is finished.

Yet after a night of intense lobbying, Merkel’s camp was able to secure a majority of 315 ? enough to have passed the measure even without support from the opposition parties.

“This shows the clear determination of the coalition on this issue,” Rainer Bruederle, the Free Democrats’ parliamentary leader. “We have made an important decision for Europe.”

Any future changes to the current fund will also require parliamentary approval and maintaining that determination will be crucial to making swift, effective decisions to combat the crisis.

In addition, the Bundestag will face another major vote early next year on the fund’s permanent replacement, the European Stability Mechanism, which is due to take effect in 2013. Schaeffler has already vowed to rally his party to reject the ESM.

Party leaders insist they are not worried by Schaeffler’s plans, but many analysts have noted Merkel will have to hold her majority together, or Thursday may have only been the first in a series of nail-biting parliamentary showdowns over shoring up the euro.

______

Geir Moulson and Tomislav Skaro in Berlin, and Menelaos Hadjicostis in Nicosia, Cyprus, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110929/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_financial_crisis

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Written on September 30th, 2011 , savor Tags: , ,

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