1:37 AM

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Global stocks fall, yen climbs on U.S. recovery fears Reuters

Addison Ray

LONDON Reuters World stocks fell on Tuesday in markets dominated by concerns the U.S. economy is sliding back into recession, prompting further flows into safe-haven assets.

The yen - a favorite for carry trades at times of economic stress - hovered back near 15-year high against the dollar after investors brushed off Japans attempt to weaken the currency, yields on benchmark German government bonds hit record highs and the Swiss franc soared against the euro and dollar.

Mounting U.S. economic concerns likely to keep investors away from riskier assets and push up the yen, keeping pressure on Japan to intervene directly in currency markets for the first time in more than six years. Crude prices, seen as a proxy for world economic growth, also came under pressure, and were down 6.6 percent so far in August and on track for their worst monthly losses since May.

World stocks measured by MSCI All-Country World Index .MIWD00000PUS lost 0.9 percent. The index was also headed toward its worst monthly performance in three months.

Tokyos Nikkei average .N225 shed 3.6 percent, its worst daily drop in three months, after the Bank of Japans move the day before to boost cheap loans to banks failed to curb the yens strength.

In Europe, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index dropped 1.1 percent and the Thomson Reuters Peripheral Eurozone Countries Index .TRXFLDPIPU fell 1.3 percent. "If you look at all the noise, all the volatility and all the nervousness, its clear that this market has one major fear at the moment and thats the double dip," said Philippe Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets in Brussels.

"And we are not going to have the answer to that one until the fourth quarter. There is more downside risk for equities over the next couple of weeks."

The VDAX-NEW volatility index .V1XI, Europes main barometer of investor anxiety, rose 3.4 percent. The higher the volatility index, the lower investors appetite for risk.

YEN NEAR 15-YR HIGH

The dollar was down 0.4 percent at 84.27 yen, not far from its 15-year low of 83.58 hit last week. The U.S. currency fell 2.5 percent against the Japanese currency this month after sliding 2.2 percent in July.

"Japans ministry of finance is sending signals that is willing to intervene but clearly people remember its struggle with intervention a few years ago," said Simon Derrick, head of currency research at Bank of New York Mellon.

"If they dont intervene when the yen is at 84, when will they do it? Once its goes to all time lows? I think their resolve of staying away from intervention will be tested."

Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda repeated on Tuesday that the government would take decisive action on currencies -- usually seen as code for intervention -- when necessary, but reaction in the market was limited. The yen has lost more than 9 percent versus the greenback so far this year.

The euro fell 0.5 percent against the yen to 106.65 yen, crawling toward a nine-year low of 105.44 yen hit last week.

The single currency also fell to an all-time low against the Swiss franc, which also hovered close to a seven-month high against the dollar.

Yields on benchmark 10-year German Bunds hit record lows at 2.085 percent, while those on 10-year U.S. Treasuries slipped 2 basis points to 2.5143 percent, hovering near 18-month low.

In the commodity market, oil lost 1.4 percent to trade below $74 a barrel, while copper dropped 0.9 percent but was still up 1.3 percent this month.

Additional reporting by Atul Prakash, Anirban Nag and William James in London; Editing by John Stonestreet



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1:35 AM

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Yen worries hit Japanese stocks

Addison Ray

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Japanese stocks have seen sharp falls in response to the Bank of Japans attempts to curb the rising yen.

In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 index fell more than 3.5%, hitting a fresh 16-month low.

On Monday, Japans central bank announced plans to boost low-interest lending, in an effort to bring down the value of the currency.

But the yen remains at 15-year highs and investors are concerned over the impact that could have on exporters.

A strong yen makes Japanese goods more expensive abroad, hitting exporters profits.

Electronics giant Sony was hit by the sell-off, losing 3.66% of its share price.

Tokenistic gesture

Car maker Toyota was down nearly 2.4%, while Toshiba lost 4.7%.

The Bank of Japan said it would boost cheap lending to commercial banks by 10 trillion yen $117bn; �75bn, in an attempt to ease pressure on the yen.

The Japanese government also said it would initiate a further 920 billion yen of stimulus measures.

But BBC Tokyo correspondent Roland Buerk said the move had been seen as a "tokenistic gesture" by investors.

"Government ministers here have been trying to talk down the yen," he said.

"They have said they will take decisive action, [but] the problem is that the limited action they have taken so far has looked anything but decisive."



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12:49 AM

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Foxconn shares fall 8% on results

Addison Ray

Shares in the iPhone manufacturer Foxconn International have fallen almost 8%, a day after the company reported heavy losses.

The Taiwanese firm, which makes handsets for names including Apple and Nokia, reported a net loss of $143m �93m for the first half of the year.

Foxconn blamed the "difficult" and "volatile" handset market, as well as higher costs for the loss.

Shares in the company were down 7.8% to HK$5.13.

At one stage, they fell as low as HK$4.98 - the lowest level since 22 July.

Foxconn said costs for buying new properties more than doubled to $169m.

It said it would prioritise moving into the increasingly popular and lucrative smartphone market.

Earlier this month, Foxconn said that it would hire more workers in China in order to cut employees overtime while maintaining production. The move followed a spate of suicides at its Chinese factories.

The company has also increased wages in China.



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12:46 AM

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Global stocks fall, yen climbs on U.S. recovery fears

Addison Ray

TAIPEI | Tue Aug 31, 2010 3:18am EDT

TAIPEI Reuters - Fears that policymakers around the world will be slow to support the flagging global recovery lifted the yen on Tuesday, weighed on Asian and European stocks and gave further fuel to a five-month rally in U.S. and Japanese government bonds.

Japans Nikkei stock index led declines in the region, tumbling 3.6 percent, as investors grew more concerned that officials were not going to halt the relentless rise in the yen, which has gained 11 percent since May.

Leading European stocks .FTEU3 fell 1.2 percent in early trade, while S&P 500 futures .SPX were down 1.5 percent, pointing to a weaker opening on Wall Street as investors braced for what is expected to be more gloomy economic U.S. data.

With governments, especially in fiscally weak advanced economies, wary of new stimulus spending to support their recoveries, safety has been the name of the game for investors in August.

Gold prices have risen around 5 percent this month, on track for the largest monthly gain since April, while the benchmark yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note dropped 39 basis points in August, its biggest drop since December 2008.

Investors ignored slightly stronger-than-expected U.S. consumption data overnight and focused on the August U.S. payrolls report due on Friday to see if private sector hiring held up despite expected layoffs in the public sector.

A disappointing payrolls figure for a third consecutive month along with poor readings of housing and manufacturing data will probably depress bond yields further and put upward pressure on the yen, which is near a 15-year high against the dollar.

"Though the U.S. spending data yesterday wasnt bad, its the indicators out later this week that are the really important ones, and predictions for these are really raising fears about the economic recovery," said Takashi Ushio, head of the investment strategy division at Marusan Securities in Tokyo.

U.S. housing, consumer and regional business data are all expected later in the day.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average .N225 suffered its worst single-day decline since June 7, led by a mix of technology and retailing stocks.

The Nikkei has tumbled more than 7 percent in August, set for the largest monthly decline since May, on worries that the global recovery may be stalling and as the surging yen threatened to curb exports, which have been driving Japans fragile recovery.

The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan fell 1.6 percent .MIAPJ0000PUS, with commodity-related shares the biggest drag on fears of weaker demand for raw materials.

The region has fared better than others, however, thanks to its relatively strong growth prospects. The Asia Pacific ex-Japan index is down 4 percent so far this year, compared with a 7 percent decline on the MSCI world equities index .MIWD00000PUS.

INDOMITABLE YEN

The yens four-month rise against the dollar is its longest string of gains since 2008. On Tuesday, the dollar was down 0.6 percent at 84.15 yen, near a 15-year low of 83.58 yen touched last week.

The Bank of Japan boosted a cheap loan scheme on Monday after an emergency meeting, but investors saw the move as a minimal, symbolic gesture that will do little to halt the yens climb.

Market players may now test the governments resolve to back its words with yen-selling intervention, analysts said, though few expect it to move any time soon unless the currencys gains accelerate.

Much of the currencys rise has been attributable to factors outside of Tokyos control: prolonged U.S. dollar weakness on fears it may be sliding back into recession, and a flight to so-called safe havens like the yen as investors shun riskier global assets.

Nevertheless, "if U.S. economic data due this week pushes the yen higher, Japan may indeed intervene," said Etsuko Yamashita, chief economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

The New Zealand dollar dropped 1.3 percent against the yen to 58.86 yen after a major finance company in New Zealand failed.

Government bonds rose as equity markets sagged.

The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield slipped to 2.53 percent from 2.55 percent late on Friday in New York. Investors have been buying longer-dated paper for the extra bit of yield, causing the yield advantage of 10-year notes over 2-year notes to shrink by 33 basis points in August.

After a sharp drop on Monday, Japanese government bond futures rose 0.28 point to 142.73.

However, supply concerns could haunt long-maturity paper after Japans Prime Minister Naoto Kan said the government could compile an extra budget if necessary, after the cabinet decided on Monday to compile economic steps using reserves from this fiscal years budget.

Additional reporting by Elaine Lies and Hideyuki Sano in TOKYO

Editing by Kim Coghill



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12:19 AM

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HP to pay $55m in US fraud case

Addison Ray

Computer giant Hewlett-Packard HP has agreed to pay $55m �35.5m to settle claims it paid kickbacks in relation to US government contracts.

HP was accused of paying other companies so they would recommend HP products to government buyers.

The governments chief procurement body, the GSA, entered into a contract with HP in 2002.

It is thought to be one of the largest such settlement figures achieved by the US Department of Justice.

The claims were first made in a lawsuit by two whistleblowers in 2004.

The settlement also resolves allegations that the 2002 contract over computer equipment and software was wrongly priced because HP provided incomplete information to the GSA.

A spokesman for the US Department of Justice said the the government would always take action against companies seeking "to taint the government procurement process with illegal kickbacks".

Contractors must deal fairly with the government when doing business with federal agencies," he added.

HP said the size of the payout would affect earnings on its shares.



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