Business
Latest stories
Tycoon Ho's Group Gets Nod for New Macau Casino

Macau gaming tycoon Stanley Ho's SJM Holdings has been given the greenlight to build a new five-star casino resort in the former Portuguese colony, the world's biggest gambling hub, the firm has said.

SJM, Macau's largest casino operator by gaming revenue, said in a statement issued late on Friday that the approval came after it won a government land grant for a 70,468-square-meter (17.4 acre) site on the Cotai Strip.

W140 Full Story
ECB: Eurozone Current Account Surplus Grows in August

The eurozone's current account surplus grew to 8.8 billion euros ($11.5 billion) in August from 8.1 billion euros the previous month, European Central Bank data showed on Friday.

The current account on the balance of payments, which includes imports and exports in both goods and services plus all other current transfers, is a closely tracked indicator of the ability of a country or area to pay its way in the world.

W140 Full Story
Moody's: Outlook Still Negative For German Banks

International credit rating agency Moody's said Friday that the outlook for Germany's banking system remains negative owing to intense competition, low interest rates and a weaker environment.

"The outlook for Germany's banking system remains negative," Moody's said in a new Banking System Outlook.

W140 Full Story
Lights Out as Egypt Plans to Pull Plug on All Night Shopping

Buying a pair of trousers at one in the morning has never been a problem in Cairo, but a new government proposal to slash trading hours could effectively pull the plug on the city that never sleeps.

Minister of Local Development Ahmed Zaki Badr has warned that the government is considering legislation that would see shops close at 10 pm and restaurants at midnight. "Tourist establishments" with a special license such as hotels and bars, would be exempt.

W140 Full Story
Newsweek Ending Print Edition, Job Cuts Expected

The U.S. news magazine Newsweek plans to end its print publication after 80 years and will shift to an all-digital format starting in early 2013. Job cuts are expected.

Newsweek's last U.S. print edition will be its Dec. 31 issue.

W140 Full Story
Greece Holds General Strike as EU Leaders Meet

Thousands of Greeks staged a general strike against a new wave of imminent austerity cuts on Thursday as EU leaders were to tackle the eurozone's ongoing economic crisis at a summit.

The fourth such strike of the year has paralyzed train and ferry traffic, disrupted flights and shut down public services as unions seek to send a message to the government that they will not tolerate a third straight year of cuts.

W140 Full Story
Crisis-Hit Spaniards Deposit Money in Switzerland

Crisis-hit savers in Spain are transferring their money to Switzerland for safety, the head of Geneva's 80-strong banking association said on Wednesday.

"The (Spanish) clients have deliberately chosen to place their money in Switzerland because they no longer have confidence in Spanish banks," Bernard Droux, president of Geneva Financial Center, told reporters.

W140 Full Story
U.N. Rapporteur: EU, U.S. Should Abandon Biofuels

The European Union and the United States should stop using biofuels as they are hampering food production, the U.N.'s special rapporteur for the right to food Olivier De Schutter told Agence France Presse on Wednesday.

"Europe has to do more than lower its targets for production of biofuels as it is planning. It has to have the political courage to abandon them and the United States should do the same," he said on the sidelines of talks in Rome.

W140 Full Story
Greeks Launch Two Days of Protest against New Austerity Cuts

Greeks opposing a new round of austerity cuts on Wednesday began a two-day round of strikes and protests timed to pressurize EU leaders ahead of a summit later this week.

Lawyers, notaries, pharmacists and doctors were told by their respective associations to walk off the job ahead of a full-blown general strike on Thursday called by the country's main unions.

W140 Full Story
Spain Avoids Junk-Bond Fate, Economic Agony Remains

Spain has won breathing space but nothing more, analysts said Wednesday, after it escaped feared downgrade of its debt to junk-bond status.

Even if Madrid secures a rescue in which the European Central Bank buys its bonds so as to lower borrowing costs, Spain will be left with deep-seated economic problems unresolved, economists said.

W140 Full Story