Record bankruptcies pressure Brazil banks as recession bites
SAO PAULO, July 26 Brazil's harshest recessionin eight decades is prompting some of the nation's top banks toreclassify some 90 billion reais ($27 billion) in problematicdoubling in bankruptcy protection filings.Corporate loans, eroding profits as banks struggle with aLenders face a deluge of requests to renegotiate existingcorporate borrowers of cash. Some companies, like rig leaserloans and stretch out guarantees as the economic crisis deprivesSete Brasil Participações SA and phone carrier Oi SA, have beensole client Petróleo Brasileiro SA derailed plans toforced to seek court protection from creditors.
Overall classified loan exposure, which includes debts that are unrecoverable as well as those unlikely to be repaid, rose to a seven-year high of 0.92 percent by March, according to Monetary Authority of Singapore data.
Long-term returns for U.S. public pensions are expected to drop to the lowest levels ever recorded, portending deeper pain for states and cities as a $1 trillion funding gap widens.
Prominent labour activist Zhang Ziru, who has been involved in much of the labour unrest in China's south, had a dire warning for the Government. "If China's system doesn't improve and the Government fails to make political reforms, the grievances and grudges will grow until society explodes," he said.
A downturn in dining could be implying a U.S. recession as soon as early 2017, he said, since "restaurants have historically led the market lower during the three to six-month periods prior to the start of the prior three U.S. recessions," Westra adds.
Oil Majors Lost One Engine; Now the Second One Is Sputtering
BP says second-quarter refining margins drop to 6-year low Downstream business was key last year in cushioning cheap oil If Big Oil was a two-engine airplane, you could say it’s been flying on a single engine since energy prices crashed in 2014. Now, the second motor is sputtering. The major integrated oil companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp., Total SA and BP Plc, have relied on their so-called downstream businesses, which include refining crude into gasoline, oil trading and gas stations, to cushion the losses on their upstream units, which pump crude and natural gas. “The crash in oil prices in late 2014 brought refineries worldwide a pleasant surprise: booming margins,” said Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at consulting firm Energy Aspects Ltd. in London. “But now, the market is changing.” BP, the first major to report second-quarter results, showed the impact on Tuesday. The British company said its downstream […]