Rupert Murdoch's big backer sounds News Corp warning

News Corporation's second-biggest shareholder says phone-hacking scandal is damaging company's name

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the second biggest shareholder in Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, has revealed his frustration with the fallout from the News of the World phone-hacking scandal and admitted that it is harming the reputation of the company overall, not just its publishing interests.

Alwaleed is a nephew of Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, and, according to Forbes magazine, is the 29th wealthiest person in the world, with a fortune of $18bn (£11bn). He owns large stakes in Citigroup, Apple, Canary Wharf and London's Savoy hotel as well as 7% of the voting shares in News Corp, which on Wednesday announces its results for the three months to the end of March. Analysts expect profits to rise around 19% from the same quarter last year.

Alwaleed said that although News Corp was "very diversified," with interests covering books, magazines, newspapers, television and film, the phone-hacking scandal was having a company-wide effect. "I really hope that this is behind us because really it is not helping the name of the company," he said. "We hope that this page is folded and put behind us because really it is not something to be proud of."

News Corp investors have voiced concerns about the phone-hacking scandal since it erupted last year and, at the company's AGM in October, several shareholders, including powerful pension fund CalPERS, called for the appointment of an independent chairman. Murdoch currently holds the position of chairman alongside that of chief executive. Alwaleed is one of Murdoch's staunchest supporters and had never before spoken publicly about the wider impact of the scandal.

His most public previous involvement was to suggest the resignation of Rebekah Brooks as chief executive of News Corp's UK newspaper division, News International. Brooks was editor of the News of the World when its journalists hacked the phone of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler and in July last year Alwaleed told the BBC's Newsnight: "If the indications are for her [Brooks's] involvement in this matter is explicit, for sure she has to go, you bet she has to go … Ethics to me is very important." Brooks resigned the following day.

News Corp holds a significant stake in Alwaleed's Saudi Arabian film, TV and music business Rotana Media Group and he said: "We have a strategic alliance with Rupert Murdoch for sure and I have been with him for the last 15 or 20 years. My backing of Rupert Murdoch is definitely unwavering."

Alwaleed said that although the scandal had had an impact on News Corp's reputation, its financial results had not been damaged. "The share price is really separating from what is happening in the UK," he said. "We see the price is hovering around $20 and the results are very good."

News Corp shrugged off the hacking scandal in its second-quarter results as net income increased 65%, despite it having to pay $87m during the period as a result of the ongoing investigations that led to the closure of the News of the World. Net income rose to $1.06bn for the quarter, compared with $642m a year before, driven by growth in its cable networks and movie studio divisions.

Alwaleed expects this trend to continue despite the ongoing scandal and he said: "I believe that once this page is flipped over, News Corp can withstand the heat of what is happening there."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/may/08/murdoch-big-backer-news-corp

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Dexys – review

Playhouse, Whitley Bay

"We formed because we were tired of unemotional, insincere music. We believe soul is honest and our music is honest," declared Kevin Rowland of Dexys Midnight Runners in 1980. Thirty-two years on, while his contemporaries lucratively mine their greatest hits, a rejigged Dexys have waited to get their first album in 27 years just right, and use their return to the stage to unveil One Day I'm Going To Soar in full.

Frontman Rowland's confidence in the songs is not unjustified. Recognisably Dexys, they also offer another new soul vision: darker, narrative-driven confessionals mingle with fiddle-led euphoria. Minutes in, people begin to clap along to songs that haven't yet been released.

Playing in a sleepy seaside town, Dexys have pulled out all the stops to produce an event, from their dapper Cotton Club look (already being copied by segments of their crowd) to coaxing "Big" Jim Paterson, a key member of the group first time around, to get his trombone out of the loft after years of not playing.

The album is loosely a concept about the inability to love. She Got a Wiggle finds Rowland addressing an idealised screen beauty; there are whoops of delight as singer Madeleine Hyland then struts out on stage, taking the role of the wiggling girl. The orchestrated soul-baring barnstormer I'm Thinking of You and the cheekily alienated Nowhere Is Home ("take your Irish stereotype and shove it up your arse!") find Rowland's fire burning with a fierce sense of renewal.

Dexys offer small but crucial pieces of theatricality throughout: Rowland's wonderfully comical in-song banter with Hyland and Pete Williams; the beautifully lonely It's OK, John Joe being sung to an empty chair.

With the audience roaring, Dexys finally acknowledge the past, with marathon, riotous new arrangements of classics Come On Eileen and This Is What She's Like that are met with a shout of: "Kevin, you're a genius!"

Read an exclusive interview with Dexys in Friday's Film and Music section.

Rating: 5/5


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/may/08/dexys-review

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Eurozone crisis live:

• Shares on the Greek stock market fall by nearly 8%
• Euro tumbles after election results in Greece and France
Mediterranean bond yields, credit default swaps rise
• Head of EFSF says Greek euro exit would be 'catastrophe'

This blog has ended. Live coverage of the fallout from the French and Greek elections continues here

9.14am: Good morning and welcome to our eurozone live blog, which on this public holiday in the UK promises to provide lots of twists and turns following the elections in France and Greece.

The prospects of a fight against austerity measures in Europe after the election of François Hollande – the first Socialist president in France for nearly 20 years – and an inconclusive election in Greece have already rattled markets in early trade.

The Greek stock market fell 7.7% in early trading to 636.7 while the banking index was off 19%. In France, the CAC 40 index dropped 1.7%. The euro fell as far as $1.2955, its lowest since 25 January.

There were also early signs of a flight to safe havens. German government bond futures reached a record high of 142.40 in early trade while the yields on 10-year German bonds – which move inversely to price – were 2 basis points lower at 1.56%. The record low of 1.549% is within sight.

Overnight, Japan's Nikkei 225 index lost nearly 3%, to reach its lowest close in nearly three months of 9,127.39. Hong Kong's Hang Seng slid 2.4% to 20,583.14.

London stock markets are closed today which is likely to ensure that trading volumes across the eurozone are unusually thin.

Gary Jenkins of Swordfish Reasearch was quick with his take on the elections this morning.

The election of the new French president Mr Hollande may well be a seminal event in the history of the eurozone and over the next few days/weeks and possibly months we will see whether he sticks to his intentions to renegotiate the fiscal compact and promote a growth agenda or whether the reality of the situation and the German position results in him moderating his policies. Whilst many people have suggested that a Hollande victory is "priced in" to the markets that remains to be seen and it is his relationship with Merkel that may well determine the future of the eurozone.

9.24am: Mohamed El Erian, chief executive of bond fund giant Pimco, was quick to give his view on the national elections in France and Greece, and regional elections in Germany.

Writing on the CNBC guest blog last night, he said:

The common message from the electorate is undeniable, reminiscent of a famous line in the 1976 movie Network: "I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this anymore!"

The first thing that Sunday's elections scream out is anti-incumbency. French president Sarkozy joined the growing list of leaders that have been thrown out of office by disgruntled citizens. In Greece, exit polls suggest that the combination of the two usually dominant parties failed to secure even 50% of the votes. And in Germany, the ruling coalition seems to have experienced another setback.

The elections also show that an unusually large number of Europeans are opting for fringe parties, some of which are yet to define their vision beyond the need to dismantle the past. In Germany, exit polls imply that the Pirate party may have secured 8% of the vote in Schleswig-Holstein, giving it a voice in a third regional parliament after similar success in Saarland and Berlin.

In Greece, both extreme left and extreme right parties are celebrating a surge in their popularity. And all this follows France's extreme rightwing presidential candidate getting almost 20% of the votes in the first round a couple of weeks ago.

Simply put, this translates into more fragmented European politics, at least in the short run. A politically more disparate Europe will find it even more challenging to reach common ground on a range of important issues.

9.38am: Looking at the surge in Mediterranean bond yields – Greek 10-year yields have reached 23%! – while the equivalent German yield has dropped to 1.56%, David Buik of BGC Partners, says:

Many expect Mediterranean country bond yields to continue rising until the EU gets its act together. Markets may be sepulchral today. Tomorrow is a new dawn – I am less than convinced how brave it will be!

He also notes that bank analyst Ralph Silva has made the following succinct observation against a background of French euphoria and Greek bravado – "None of these newly elected politicians have actually seen the books! They may find the cupboard is bare!"

9.42am: Markets have clearly taken fright at the election results. Credit default swaps in France, Spain and Italy have risen. French five-year CDS are up 5 basis points to 194, Spanish CDS up 9 points to 486 and Italian swaps are up 12 basis points to 442, according to Markit.

9.49am: My colleague Alexandra Topping is doing a sister live blog on the the latest news, reaction and analysis after Hollande's victory in France and the big protest vote in Greece.

European leaders are busy congratulating Hollande on his victory, even David Cameron, who declined to meet the Socialist president on a recent trip to London. One of the first to call was the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, who invited Hollande to Berlin. That meeting will be interesting, given his insistence in his victory speech that "austerity can no longer be the only option".

9.58am: A quick look at the stock markets: Athens is still down 6.6% at 644.45, after the country's main parties failed to win enough votes to form a ruling coalition. The French market is holding up reasonably well, only down 1.4%, while Germany's Dax has lost 1.6%.

10.02am: Some more reaction, from Markus Huber at ETX Capital:

Although Mr Hollande's victory yesterday didn't come to many as much of a surprise, especially after having led the polls with a sizeable lead for several months and being endorsed by all of the parties leaning to the left after the first round of presidential elections, stock markets are still struggling this morning to come to terms with the fact that the alliance Merkel-Sarkozy has been terminated.

The main problem stock markets across Europe are facing this morning is not that Mr Hollande has become the new French president but rather the uncertainty his election is bringing with him. While many are convinced that President Hollande will be fairly limited in regards to what he can do when it comes to turning back austerity measures already agreed on within the eurozone, many are worried that the eurozone will be less united in the future and therefore not be able to combat the financial crisis and any future crisis in such a quick and decisive manner as before.

For the next few days and weeks the direction of the stock market will very much hinge on how much efforts all sides, mainly chancellor Merkel and President Hollande will be putting into trying to work together and to find common ground.

10.07am: The euro has tumbled this morning, hitting a three-month low against the dollar, a 3-1/2-year low against the pound and a 2-1/2-month trough against the yen.

Traders reckon the euro has further to fall in coming days.

10.42am: Let's have a look at some of the European papers. Germany's liberal daily Süddeutsche Zeitung, based in Munich, is enthused by Hollande's victory. With the heading "Adieu election campaign, bonjour reality," French correspondent Stefan Ulrich writes from Paris:

France must face the truth after the victory of François Hollande over Nicolas Sarkozy. The astute Socialist can show the ailing nation the right way in this situation. For Merkel, Hollande might turn out to be the better partner. "Merklande" has a good chance to meet the challenge posed by Europe.

The German conservative daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung is, naturally, far more cautious. Under the headline "Moi, Président," Günther Nonnenmacher writes:

It wasn't enthusiasm but his persistency that led François Hollande to victory. And the weakness of his opponent Sarkozy ...

President Hollande will not be allowed any time to get used to the job. In 10 days G8 leaders meet in America, directly followed by the Nato summit in Chicago: with his decision to withdraw French troops from Afghanistan by the end of the year Hollande will arouse little enthusiasm. Then follow European matters, where the first test will be with how much persistency Hollande will try to change course.

And France's left-leaning daily La Libération writes: "For the Socialists, the real work begins". In an editorial entitled "Enfin" ("Finally"), its director, Nicolas Demorand, is jubilant.

The joy, the immense joy of watching one parenthesis close and a curse fade. And in what manner! François Mitterrand was not a historic anomaly but simply the first president from the left. Now there's a second: François Hollande. For the people of the left, 2012 revives 1981, gives back life and colour to those old sepia images that seemed condemned to the history books.

10.57am: More analysis of the French election from Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy.

1. Franҫois Hollande's victory is a historic one in France and a seminal event in European politics. It's the first time since 1988 that the left has won a French presidential election and the first time since 1981 that a Fifth Republic president failed to get re-elected. L'anti-Sarkozysme helped bring Mr Hollande to power. Mr Sarkozy lost because he failed to win over a sufficient number of National Front voters, many of whom grudgingly backed Mr Hollande. Although the right won a bigger slice of the vote in the first round, the political arithmetic in the second favoured Mr Hollande.

2. Mr Hollande appealed to the anxieties of French voters. Austerity is a dirty word in France, but never more so than now. This election is a rebuke to Germany's austerity-focused approach to managing the eurozone crisis. Yet satisfying anxieties is one thing, proposing credible solutions is another. The election was more about Mr Sarkozy's shortcomings than policies to address France's economic weaknesses. While Mr Hollande is not an old-style tax-and-spend socialist, his understanding of "growth" differs sharply from that of Germany and the ECB. France has just elected a president who believes that austerity is failing and is in favour of more stimulative policies.

3. The markets will remain suspicious of Mr Hollande. His programme gives investors reasons to be even more concerned about France's creditworthiness. Yet Mr Hollande is by nature a pragmatist and will attempt to reach a consensus with Chancellor Angela Merkel as quickly as possible. The question is not whether he will embark on a spending spree – he can't and he won't – but to what extent he will feel emboldened to challenge Germany and the ECB. It's noteworthy that Mr Hollande's proposals to erect a stronger financial "firewall" are actually more in line with market thinking.

4. Attention now turns to France's parliamentary election next month. In many ways, this is the election to watch. The anti-austerity backlash in France has just been given a huge boost and the centre-right UMP is unlikely to do well. If the new parliament is decidedly "populist-leftist", this may make it more difficult for Mr Hollande to govern in a centrist manner.

10.58am: ... and some analysis of the Greek election, again from Nicholas Spiro.

1. Greece needed this election like it needed a hole in the head. The results confirm what has been patently clear for some time: there's no political consensus for the kind of reforms that Greece must implement if it wants to remain in the eurozone. Greek parliamentary politics has just become much more fragmented and radicalised. This is a large-scale protest vote with very little consideration of the implications of non-compliance with the terms of Greece's second bailout package. The strong showing for Syriza is a rebuke to Pasok and New Democracy which will struggle to form a durable coalition government. Politics has trounced economics.

2. The Greek crisis was overshadowed by the Spanish one over the past few months. This election brings into sharper relief the growing political risks to an adjustment programme that is already bedevilled with huge fiscal, structural and institutional risks. To many external observers, particularly in Germany, the result of this election will be interpreted as a sign that Greece has had enough of non-stop austerity and recession and refuses to accept the stringent conditions attached to its financial rescue package.

3. The markets expected the result of the Greek election to be a messy one. This adds to what remains a very bleak picture for a country whose membership of the eurozone is hanging by a thread. It will now prove even more difficult for Athens to make headway on implementing key fiscal and structural reforms.

11.07am: News in from Athens where Helena Smith, our correspondent, says that after Greece's shock vote it is far from certain whether the debt-stricken country will continue receiving rescue loans.

Greek TV channels are reporting that the country's electoral earthquake has been met with "stunned silence" by officials at the International Monetary Fund in Washington. "Our sources at the fund are telling us they had no idea of the extent of the anger and anti-austerity feeling in Greece. They are amazed," said Alpha TV's Washington correspondent.

Given the IMF's role in the two bailouts that have propped up the Greek economy since May 2010, the fund is watched closely by US-based Greek journalists now famed for putting IMF spokesmen on the spot in daily briefings. "They are insisting they want commitments to the [debt relief] programme," the correspondent said.

A team of EU monitors, to be placed permanently in the capital is expected to arrive within the week. Greek radio channels this morning reported the inspectors would want to see "solid proof" that Athens is determined to stick to the principles of its latest €130bn financial support programme.

The debt-stricken country faces payment of civil servants' wages and pensions in less than a month – bills worth about €1.5bn. Greece has been told, clearly, by creditors that failure to adhere to the rules – for which read austerity measures and unpopular structural reforms – will result in a freezing of funds and automatic default.

"There are doubts whether the [rescue] loans will keep coming in," said Flash radio's economic reporter. "And they extend to whether the country will be able to tap the special account that has been set up [for the funds]."

Prior to Sunday's election, the German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble warned Greece that it should "expect to pay the consequences" if it did not abide by its commitments. He may now be ruing his words – the German intervention has been interpreted by analysts as one more reason for pushing Greeks to massively reject the EU-dictated belt tightening.

Greece's conservative New Democrat leader, Antonis Samaras, is expected to be given a mandate to form a government after 1pm when, in keeping with tradition, the speaker of the Greek parliament will formally present President Carolos Papoulias with the results of the vote.

He will have three days in which to persuade other parties to join him in a coalition – a feat that few commentators currently think possible. If that is the case, the mandate will then be given to Syriza, the coalition of radical left and green groups which emerged as the election's biggest winner, garnering 16.6% of the ballot compared to the 13.2% captured by the mainstream socialist Pasok – a vote that now makes it the second biggest party in the 300-seat parliament.

Fears of the country plunging into protracted political instability were reflected in the continued freefall of the Athens stock exchange where banks' shares have lost up to 20% of their value this morning. Meanwhile, repeated pledges by Syriza to annul the latest rescue accord has added to the climate of uncertainty.

Syriza leader, Alexis Tsipras, told Greeks late on Sunday: "We have won the war but not the battle." That, he said, would come when the "cruel bailout measures" were cancelled once and for all. "The parties that signed up to them are now in a minority," he said.

Speaking on the eve of the poll, the 38-year-old politician reassured me that he believed in the euro "but not the policies pursued in its name". Along with the annulment of the controversial loan agreement he said his party's priority would be to create a "protective shield" around the poor, who had been worst-hit by repeated rounds of austerity. "It could start with the rich paying taxes. They have to do this. There is too much tax evasion by Greeks who have money," he told me.

11.12am: Giles Tremlett from Madrid reports that: Something afresh is going on in Spain's banking sector ... but

Spain's prime minister Mariano Rajoy has this morning announced a further round of reforms to the country's ailing banking system for later this week.

Full details will only come after Friday's cabinet meeting, leaving everyone guessing about the latest plan for cleansing Spain's banks of toxic real estate assets - announced during a radio interview this morning. Rajoy said he was against creating a "bad bank" to absorb the toxic assets held by Spanish banks who lent generously to developers, builders and speculators before the residential property bubble burst in 2008.

But he has backtracked before and his finance minister has said the government intends to approve the creation of special vehicles (which many see as mini bad banks) where banks can offload these assets. Again, it is unclear what form these mini bad banks will take, or whether public money will be involved.

Many analysts believe more public money will be needed for a full cleanout of Spain's banks, with speculation that this might come directly from Europe's EFSF rescue fund. El País today reports that giant Bankia, which has €32bn in toxic real estate assets, is to get a huge government loan. Reuters says officials have put together a rescue plan for Bankia – which holds 10% of Spanish deposits – that may be up to €10bn.

Rajoy is not famous for the clarity of his announcements. The following phrase from today's interview might mean he is preparing to use more public funds – or not. "The last thing I want to do is inject or loan public money, but if I have to I will – just as other governments have done," he said. In a rare media appearance, Rajoy also admitted that VAT hikes were a possibility as Spain tries to slash its deficit.

11.15am: Let's have another look at financial markets. The Greek stock market is still down 6.3% while the French market has recovered somewhat, trading down only 0.3% and the German Dax has slid 0.9%. UK markets are closed today.

On bond markets, the yield, or interest rate, on the ten-year Greek government bond is 23.25% while the German equivalent is at 1.57%, the ten-year gilt yield at 2% and the French equivalent at 2.78%. The Spanish yield has risen to 5.79% while the Italian yield is at 5.65%.

11.26am: Some headlines flashing on Reuters. Klaus Regling, who heads up the temporary European bailout fund EFSF, has just said that Greece's exit from the eurozone would have "catastrophic" consequences for Greece and its creditors.

12.03pm: Here are Klaus Regling's comments in full:

If Greece exited the eurozone that would "of course have a huge impact not just for other programme countires, not just for the banks, but also for Greece itself". Greece's public creditors would also suffer.

It would be a catastrophe for Greece.

12.07pm: Forget the elections, German industrial orders have come in very strong. Orders jumped 2.2% in March, but demand came almost exclusively from countries outside the eurozone.

Carsten Brzeski at ING Bank said:

Today's German new order data nicely illustrate the eurozone's dilemma. While everyone is talking about growth or the lack of growth, demand for "Made in Germany" is still stable. However, it is demand from Germany and outside the eurozone, not from other eurozone countries.

It is doubtful the German engine will be able to continue running on non-eurozone fuel for a long time.

BMW and Porsche reported record first quarter profits last week as wealthy Chinese snapped up sporty sedans and SUVs.

12.14pm: Moving out of the austerity trap and towards a growth and employment strategy will be crucial for France as it tries to tackle the jobs crisis that is particularly affecting the young, said Raymond Torres from the International Labour Organization (ILO).

What's important now is to stimulate job-rich growth, ensure a more progressive funding of social protection so that it weighs less on low-paid jobs, and adopt a special programme for tackling youth unemployment –presently more than twice as high as adult unemployment. That's the best and quickest way of improving the employment outlook.

France has more than 2.6 million jobless people according to the latest available unemployment statistics based on ILO standards. Around 22% of French 15 to 25-year-olds are unemployed.

According to Torres, head of the ILO's International Institute for Labour Studies, France has the scope for tackling the job crisis while meeting fiscal goals:

France's financial situation and competitiveness are better than in some of its neighbours. However, a major policy shift is called for as the country moves forward.

The first step is to come out of the austerity trap that has characterized policies in several European countries over the past two years or so.

Likewise, EU member states should refrain from deregulating labour markets. In the present crisis context, deregulation will aggravate job losses without promoting job creation. Of course, looking further ahead, badly-designed regulations should be reconsidered. Successful reforms as in Austria suggest that social dialogue is an effective instrument in this respect.

He said "the second step for France is to embark on a growth and employment strategy", adding that "reinitiating the credit market for small enterprises, the main providers of job creation, is critical to achieve this goal".

One way of boosting credit is to strengthen guarantees for existing banks that lend to small firms, as in Germany. Another option is to create a new credit institution which focuses on increasing investment in the real economy, notably in industrial sectors and services where the country has a comparative advantage.

12.21pm: Here's some more reaction to the strong German industrial orders figures. Klaus Baader at Société Générale says:

The remarkable feature was that this gain in export orders came despite no growth in orders from other euro area member states. But this lack of dynamism was more than made up by a 4.8% month on month gain from non-EMU countries, after a gain of 4.9% in February. Hence, these data support other evidence that global trade is indeed reviving, driven mostly by import strength in emerging economies.

The key impulse for export orders came from demand for capital goods as usual, as this sector is by far the largest and usually also the most volatile.

12.23pm: The Athens stock market is in freefall... down 7.4% and the Greek banking sector has crashed 16%. Trading volumes are thin, though, with the London Stock Exchange - Europe's biggest market - closed. By contrast, the French CAC continues to recover and is now down only 0.2%. Germany's Dax hast lost 0.86%.

12.27pm: The view from Dublin - from our Ireland correspondent Henry McDonald.

France's protest vote against EU imposed austerity programmes has left the Fine Gael-Labour government in Dublin with a headache as it tries to persuade Irish voters to endore the European fiscal pact.

Opponents of the fiscal treaty such as Sinn Fein and the United Left Alliance have been trying to harness Francois Hollande's triump to convince the Irish electorate they can say No to yet another EU financial reform plan and, like the French, renegotiate for a better deal.

The Enda Kenny led government still believes it can secure a yes vote at the end of the month but there are fears that anger over domestic issues ranging from the imposition of new household charges and water rates as well as the ongoing recession could prompt to votes to register a protest vote and reject the treaty.

In response the Yes camp have been busy this morning in Dublin with the formation of a new alliance of civic bodies from farmers to the business community and even a former leading figure in the Irish Labour Party calling on Ireland to back the treaty in the referendum on 31 May.

Among those voices speaking up for a Yes vote today was the former President of the European parliament and former Irish MEP Pat Cox.

At the launch of the Alliance for Ireland group in a Dublin hotel this morning Cox said a Yes vote was needed so that the Republic would continue to have accss to the European Stability Mehcanism after 2013.

"A Yes vote will signal certainty as to where Ireland stands. A No vote will add to uncertainty and in a period of crisis and national vulnerability will raise additional questions about our national credit-worthiness," Cox said.

He claimed that a No vote would severely damage Ireland's ability to go back into the world markets to borrow and no longer to rely solely on the IMF and ECB to shore up its public services.

"As a State planning to return to the markets Ireland does not need at this time a self-imposed credit-negative event with its downside consequences. To point this out is a duty and not a threat. The Irish people deserve to be told the truth."

Former Labour TD and MEP Brendan Halligan said the economic future of the country was the central issue in the referendum and that was what had prompted so many organisations and individuals to unite under the slogan "Securing Our Future". He said that at present the country was bankrupt and needed to borrow from other countries in order to pay our way and repay existing debt.

"We will need their help for the foreseeable future, in particular from the other countries participating in the euro. For that reason alone the ratification of the stability treaty is essential. We should ratify it in our own self-interest, just as Portugal and Greece have done."

Pat Smith, the secretary general of the Irish Farmers' Association, said a Yes vote was in the best interests of the country, while a No vote would be massively destabilising.

12.34pm: Tristan Cooper, sovereign debt analyst at Fidelity Worldwide Investment, on the outcome of the Greek and French elections:

Greece

The eurozone's weakest link just got weaker. Although it should be no surprise that Greeks are spurning the Troika's bitter medicine, the violence of the rejection is a shock. A Greek Eurozone exit is now firmly on the cards although the probability and timing of such an event is uncertain.

The irresistible force of German austerity has clashed with the immovable object of Greek popular resistance. It is difficult to see how this paradox can be resolved without a significant watering down of the Troika program and de facto fiscal transfers. The scale of cuts demanded by the Troika are clearly unacceptable to a broad swathe of Greek voters.

To date, the rhetoric of the Troika has been increasingly unforgiving and their patience with policy-slippage in Greece is wearing thin. This makes it tricky for them to accommodate the harsh political reality. The upcoming Troika review to Greece will be a key event although this may be postponed if elections are to be held again. However the political constellation in Greece develops, any government that is formed is likely to be fragile and prone to collapse. Digging Greece out of its economic hole seems an impossible task.

France

Hollande's victory marks a turning point in the EU policy debate and presages a demise of the centre right. Growth will have to be re-emphasised. Indeed, congratulatory messages to Hollande from austerity champions such as Merkel and Monti have been laced with pro-growth promises. What this means exactly is obscure. Despite professed sympathy for the growth dilemma, markets will punish any government that strays from its fiscal targets. Spain and the Netherlands were recently at the sharp end of the stick.

This will continue to keep EU governments broadly in line although more frequent market spasms over fiscal anarchy are likely. Pressure on the ECB to do yet more will build but its options are limited. Recent LTROs have satisfied banks' short-term funding needs and direct support for governments is banned by EU treaty. Intra-ECB politics are fragmenting as the Bundesbank finds itself more isolated in the policy debate. This makes Draghi's task of plotting a coherent course for monetary policy all the harder. We do not expect Hollande to be a political earthquake in France. He is more likely to tilt the broad direction of policy in favour of growth than to take it completely off course.

Hence, after a period of volatility in the run-up to parliamentary elections in mid-June, we would expect the dust to settle as he gets down to business and navigates his significant policy constraints. This is of course dependent on events elsewhere in Europe, especially in Greece.

1.08pm: Let's turn to the view from Germany. News magazine Der Spiegel has this: "Merkel's Less than Super Sunday For Chancellor, Torturous Months Lie Ahead".

Roland Nelles writes:

German chancellor Angela Merkel can't be pleased about François Hollande's election victory, but it will at least be bearable for her. The newfound self-confidence of her junior coalition partner, the FDP, which scored a surprise success in the state election of Schleswig-Holstein on Sunday, poses a greater threat to the chancellor.

Sunday's elections showed how this much-maligned Europe is becoming more politically integrated. In former times, Germans called it a "Super Sunday" when three regional elections were being held on the same day. On Sunday, though, the term applied to votes held simultaneously in France, Greece and the northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein. The outcome of the French presidential election has the potential to determine the future of the entire continent. And the Greek vote could well decide what will happen to the euro. And Schleswig-Holstein will shape the fate of Philipp Rösler, the leader of the ailing pro-business FDP, Chancellor Angela Merkel's ailing junior coalition partner.

From Germany's point of view, the impact of the victory of Socialist François Hollande in the French presidential election shouldn't be exaggerated. The hyperactive Nicolas Sarkozy made grand promises when he entered into office but didn't deliver much. At the moment, Germany is calling the shots in Europe while France is fighting to prevent its own economic decline. The French election wasn't a vote against Germany but a vote for France. The French want a president who can negotiate on equal terms with Angela Merkel. That's perfectly understandable.

Hollande promised the French he will do this. Of course he will be a difficult negotiating partner for Angela Merkel, but he will learn that she can be difficult too. He wants economic stimulus programs, she wants budget discipline. If they're clever, they'll reach a compromise that will allow both of them to save face in front of their respective domestic audiences. In the long run, neither can possibly have an interest in blocking the other.

It's clear that there is no alternative to austerity. Angela Merkel's most important allies, the ratings agencies, would immediately and mercilessly punish countries that run up excessive new debts. For Merkel, Hollande's election victory isn't good news, but it is bearable. She backed Sarkozy in the campaign, and there will be some embarrassing moments when she meets Hollande the first few times. But that will be it.

Everything is tied together: Europe, the euro crisis, those are the dominant issues, for German voters as well. Most Germans think Merkel has a grip on the euro crisis. Many of them appear unperturbed by the fact that her government doesn't seem able to agree on or implement any significant domestic policies.

Indeed, Merkel is riding high in opinion polls. That is helping her party, the conservative Christian Democratic Union. In Sunday's vote in Schleswig-Holstein, the CDU managed to stay above the 30 percent level. The rival Social Democrats (SPD) and Greens made gains, but they're not really stronger. That means Merkel and her CDU can hope to remain the strongest political force after the 2013 general election, and to win a third term, as head of a coalition with the FDP, or the SPD, as junior partner.

1.23pm: Helena Smith in Athens has taken a look at the Greek papers. The Greek media, almost unanimously, has welcomed Hollande's victory with newspapers calling the French socialist's elevation to the presidential post a seismic shift in Europe's approach to the debt crisis.

"Hollande, the victor, promises growth to the people of the European south," proclaimed the left-leaning Ta Nea on its front page.

"The results of the French election have been interpreted by analysts as an anti-austerity message to German chancellor Angela Merkel," the paper opined in an inside story. "It will reinforce hopes of a Europe being based on development and not fiscal discipline," it said.

Ta Nea, widely espouses the views of the centre-left Pasok party whose leader Evangelos Venizelos had openly backed Hollande's candidacy describing it in an interview with the Guardian the "best solution" to the continent's financial woes. Quoting economic analysts, the paper called the votes in France and Greece "a blow" for Germany and its handling of the debt crisis.

The end of 17 years of right wing rule in the Élysée palace was also welcomed by the mass-selling Ethnos which said Hollande had "demolished Sarkozy's Bastille". "François Hollande scored a historic victory garnering 51.6% of the vote, compared to the 48.3% captured by his conservative opponent," it wrote.

Greece's leading conservative newspaper, the authoritative Kathimerni, emphasised the socialist's refusal to endorse Berlin's deficit-reducing policies. "He has said] "no" to the fiscal pact," it opined.

With Europe's debt crisis showing every sign of worsening the socialist faced a "difficult and high-pressured workload: with no grace period."

Only Rizospastis, the mouthpiece of Greece's hardline communist KKE party, had a different take – totally in keeping with its views on the crisis so far.

"Hollande, 'the socialist,'" it said in a headline, "had taken charge of the policy of serving French capitalism". "Very soon," it opined beneath a picture of cheering French socialist party supporters, "the celebrations and hopes of the French people will be dashed by the new man in charge."

1.30pm: France's CAC has turned positive: it has edged 14 points, or 0.45% higher, to 3176. Germany's Dax is still in the red though, down 26 points, or 0.4%, at 6535. And the battered Greek stock market has lost 7%, or 48 points, to 641.

1.41pm: Analysts at Citigroup have raised the likelihood of Greece leaving the euro within 18 months to 75% after the shock election result.

1.44pm: Our woman in Athens, Helena Smith, is firing on all cyclinders. Here is her latest missive:

The president of Cyprus has also warmly welcomed François Hollande's election.

In a warmly worded congratulatory telegram, the Cypriot president Demetris Christofias said the socialist candidate's victory had made him "especially happy."

"I am certain that guided by the values of humanity that are our common heritage, France under your leadership will work tirelessly so that European citizens can regain hope, which is so important today for progress and for a better Europe," the veteran communist said.

Cyprus, whose banks have also been badly hit by the Greek debt crisis, assumes the European Union's rotating presidency in June.

2.04pm: Here's a summary of today's main developments. Socialist François Hollande's election victory in France, coupled with the inconclusive result in Greece, have rattled markets, particularly in Greece. Greek shares have plummeted nearly 7% while the French market has shrugged off earlier losses and edged up 0.4% this afternoon.

The euro tumbled, as analysts worried that Hollande's victory over Sarkozy could mean a less united Europe. Spanish and Italian bond yields are rising again while ten-year Greek yields are sky-high at 23.2% - compared with just 1.57% for the German equivalent.

While analysts at Citigroup have raised the likelihood of Greece leaving the eurozone in the next year and a half to 75%, the head of the EFSF bailout fund Klaus Regling warned this would be a "catastrophe".

2.18pm: The US stock markets have yet to open but early indications are that they are about to shrug off the European shakeout, reports Dominic Rushe, our Wall Street correspondent. The Dow Futures, a shaky indication of which way the markets are heading, are down only marginally.

US investors once sold off on almost any news from Europe but seem increasingly convinced that the problems on the other side of the Atlantic are largely contained there.

2.20pm: Developments in from Greece where Helena Smith says the quest to form a durable government is about to begin.

Less than an hour after being given an "exploratory mandate" to form a government from the country's head of state, president Carolos Papoulias, the conservative leader Antonis Samaras, now begins the arduous quest to create a coalition. As leader of the party with the most votes, Samaras has three days to persuade feuding political heads to merge forces in "a government of national salvation."

His first port of call is Alexis Tsipras who leads the radical left party Syriza which emerged as the surprise winner of the poll, garnering 16.6% of the vote. Tsipras, whose fortunes have risen dramatically on the back of a campaign based solely on opposing austerity, is unlikely to accept the overture. Sources in Samaras' New Democracy party said after meeting Tsipras in his parliamentary office, the conservative leader will hold talks with Evangelos Venizelos who heads the socialist Pasok party. The former finance minister, who worked alongside Samaras in the left-right coalition government that has ruled Greece for the past six months, has suggested the creation of "a national unity government." If two leaders can agree it is them, but so far Pasok cadres are keeping their cards close to their chest.

New Democracy sources said: "We hope the process will be over by tomorrow. There is no time to lose. Greece needs to be governed!"

2.42pm: On Wall Street, the Dow Jones has opened some 20 points lower at 13013, a 0.2% drop. The Nasdaq and S&P 500 have erased early losses and edged into positive territory.

3.22pm: Another update from Giles Tremlett in Spain on the banking shake-up there.

Further confirmation of an impending major shake-up in the troubled Spanish banking sector has come this afternoon with the resignation of former finance minister Rodrigo Rato as head of the Bankia bank. Former BBVA bank CEO José Ignacio Goirigolzarri is taking over amid rumours that Bankia will have to ask for some 8bn euros from Spain's bank rescue fund as it struggles to digest toxic real estate assets left by a burst residential property bubble.

Rato, a former head of the IMF, was once considered a rival to prime minister Mariano Rajoy for leader of the ruling People's party. Rajoy confirmed this morning that the government would announce further measures in the banking sector after this Friday's cabinet meeting. Rato had insisted Bankia could continue as an independent bank and claimed it had no solvency or liquidity problem. Rumours now also include a merger, nationalisation or a break-up of Bankia.

4pm: Before we wrap for the day, here's another summary of today's main developments.

Markets have been rocked by Socialist François Hollande's election victory in France, coupled with the inconclusive result in Greece. Greek shares have plummeted nearly 7% while the French market has shrugged off earlier losses and eked out a 0.8% gain this afternoon. Germany's Dax is still in negative territory, though, down 0.5%. The London stock market is closed for the May bank holiday.

The euro tumbled, as analysts worried that Hollande's victory over Sarkozy could mean a less united Europe. Spanish and Italian bond yields are going up again while ten-year Greek yields have hit 23.5% - compared with just 1.58% for the German equivalent amid a flight to safety.

Analysts at Citigroup have raised the likelihood of Greece leaving the eurozone in the next year and a half to 75%. The head of the EFSF bailout fund Klaus Regling warned this would be a "catastrophe".

3.47pm: Right, I'm handing over to my colleagues in the US now. You can follow the action on a new blog here. Good-bye and thankyou for all your great comments. We'll be back tomorrow.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/may/07/eurozone-crisis-live-greek-market

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Bill Frisell/John Taylor – review

Cheltenham jazz festival

Guitarist Bill Frisell's demeanour is one of amiable bafflement in most circumstances. Commendably, it stayed with him on Sunday at Cheltenham despite a big chunk of his audience noisily coming in late from another show and bar staff clanking bottles outside. The jazz festival's new tent-show layout had its background-ruckus teething problems, but Frisell's Beautiful Dreamers trio eventually won the day with its country harmonies, reworked Beatles, bebop classics and raw power.

Earlier, the pianist and composer John Taylor premiered his 70th-birthday commission from Radio 3. The highlights were his own piano improvisations in his Kurt Vonnegut-inspired suite for octet – all of them different, and all enthralling. Taylor's complex harmonic architecture sometimes seemed to fox the soloists (saxophonist Julian Arguelles and tuba-player Oren Marshall were the most relaxed with it), but the soulful earthiness of the opening and closing theme, and some subtle manipulations of a simple melody called 2081, testified to Taylor's composing skills – and, at times, to his relationship with the understated methods of his friend Kenny Wheeler.

But it was Frisell's Beautiful Dreamers trio who dominated the festival's Big Top with the eccentric audacity of their interpretations, care for detail and love of enduring melodies. Frisell, viola-player Eyvind Kang and drummer Rudy Royston atmospherically reharmonised the Beatles' In My Life and Strawberry Fields, they interspersed jazz swingers and Thelonious Monk classics with bursts of rock-guitar distortion over flying drum-patterns, and probed the voicings of country ballads in ways that made the hairs on your neck stand up. There's no other group on the circuit quite like them.

• John Taylor's performance is broadcast on Jazz on 3 on 21 May, and Bill Frisell's on 28 May.

Rating: 4/5


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/may/07/bill-frisell-john-taylor-cheltenham-review

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London's still calling

With their eighth album about to be released, Saint Etienne take us on a guided tour of the city that has coloured so much of their work

The wind is blowing the rain up the Thames from the North Sea. The trees that line the South Bank are shivering with each gust and the windows of the Royal Festival Hall's cafe are spattered with water. Nevertheless, it's spring: the trees are laden with buds and from time to time the sun forces a golden arm through the clouds.

It's a very Saint Etienne kind of a morning. Theirs is music suffused with an exquisite sadness, a melancholy so fragile it can be banished with the merest glad thought, just as the sun can sweep away the rain. But it's exactly the wrong kind of morning to suit our plans. No one – not the band, not me, not the photographer – is bursting with excitement about the prospect of standing on successive street corners in the drizzle as we traverse the city celebrated in music and film by Saint Etienne, visiting the landmarks of their past.

Which is why our London tour diverts from the streets to the pub later that day, a cavernous former cinema on the Holloway Road – the A1 – where old men nurse pints and Sarah Cracknell, Pete Wiggs and Bob Stanley retire to a corner and reminisce. "It's been really, really good fun," Cracknell says, considering the 21 years of the group's existence. "There haven't been any low points." Then she adds, darkly: "Apart from Chessington World of Adventures."

"You know the puppet show in This is Spinal Tap?" Stanley asks. "It was like that."

"It was a charity event," Wiggs explains. "We'd been persuaded it would be a good thing to do. It was for the Variety Club of Great Britain. We were supposed to be bringing lots of press with us but we didn't realise that was our job. So they were cross we didn't bring camera crews. It was a PA – we were miming – and before us there were Australian clowns driving miniature cars and motorbikes, playing electric guitars while they drove. When they came off you could hear the roar of applause. Then Judith Chalmers interviewed Sarah on stage, and it was really awkward because she had no idea who we were. While that happened you could hear the flip-up seats banging as people left. The interview went on for ages because I didn't realise we were meant to be on stage. We heard the backing tapes start and ran on. My keyboard wasn't even plugged in – the plug was just dangling at the end of the cable. The only people left in the audience were these kids at the front in wheelchairs who couldn't get out. Afterwards, one of the clowns came up to me and said: 'Never mind, mate.' And we didn't even raise any money for charity."

It seems fitting that Saint Etienne's most shaming moment came in the suburbs. They were suburbanites who escaped to the city at the earliest opportunity. Wiggs and Stanley grew up in Croydon, south London, a musically mythologised map of which appears on the cover of their new album, their eighth, Words and Music by Saint Etienne, where Wiggs, even as a child, would gaze in awe at the London portrayed in the TV series Paddington. Cracknell lived in Old Windsor: "As soon as I was 15, my friend Alison would get on the train at Ascot and I'd get on at Egham and we'd go up to Kensington Market. Well, at first it was to go ice skating at Richmond. We were serious about our skating."

Childhood friends Stanley and Wigg were so in thrall to the capital they'd all but lie to themselves to feel part of the city. "The cachet of London was such that we used to go to pubs by the nearest stop that had a London postcode, because Croydon had a Surrey postcode," Wiggs remembers. "So we'd go to Norwood and New Cross, just to go to the pub. 'We're out in London tonight! Going uptown!'"

Nevertheless, for a group who employ London and its landmarks almost as a character in their songs – not for nothing is one of their best-ofs called London Conversations – they seem to have slipped almost by accident into being chroniclers of the place. "I don't know why that is, apart from writing ourselves," Stanley says. And in the great psychic divide marked by the Thames that separates one sort of Londoner from another, they come down firmly on one side. "South London's not really London, is it?" Stanley says. "It's just an endless suburb. Also, there's obvious musical heritage in the bits of London I'm drawn to – Joe Meek in the Holloway Road. And Muswell Hill always seemed like a grimy place from the Kinks."

We assemble at the Festival Hall in part because Saint Etienne were artists in residence there in 2006/7, and in part because it seems such a perfect symbol for the group: London's past, present and future in one concrete shell. For all their sense of history, Saint Etienne's music has always been sleekly modern, even as it nods to the past. And while Cracknell mourns the steady loss of London's old-fashioned pubs to the gastro invaders, and Stanley moans about faux-gentrification that does nothing to improve a street except drive out its previous inhabitants, Words and Music doesn't sound like the work of Luddites. It was recorded with former members of the Xenomania writing/production team, responsible for the success of Girls Aloud.

"We were all working at Xenomania at various points in the last few years. It was pretty inspiring – you'd start really basically, sitting in a room humming melodies into a Walkman," Stanley says. "Then you'd take them into another room and work on them until they sounded like hit records. Alesha Dixon would make tea for everyone; Nicola Roberts would be watching MTV next door – I never heard her speak; Neil Tennant would call you up to the studio to put handclaps on something – it didn't bother me too much that he called me 'Lawrence'. It was an ideal setup, like the Brill Building, but with soft furnishings and a big picture of Serge Gainsbourg on the wall." Again past, present and future combined.

After the Festival Hall we go to 83 Clerkenwell Road, where we stand outside the offices once occupied by Creation Records, then by Heavenly Recordings, Saint Etienne's long-time label. Though Saint Etienne have often stood on the fringes of scenes – indie pop, indie dance, Britpop – they've never been at the centre of any. "There was more of a connection with Heavenly, through the Social [a club set up by the label] and the people there. We made loads of friends and that felt like a community," Wiggs says.

We hail another cab and head north. Stanley points out the pub that marked the westernmost outpoint of the Kray twins' empire; we bemoan the Islington Academy, a venue built in a shopping centre – until Saint Etienne remember that they, too, have played in a shopping centre, at the opening of a Virgin Megastore in San Sebastián. And we arrive at the site of Saint Etienne's old rehearsal studios on the Holloway Road, now long gone. We stand in the rain staring down an alley at nothing, getting wet. At which point the pub beckons.

Before she heads back to her current home in Oxfordshire, Cracknell talks about what would have been our next location – her mid-80s flat just up the road in Archway, above a gun shop, where she was too terrified of her surroundings to do much more than venture out for kebabs. "Whenever we left the flat there'd be kids shouting abuse at us. So for food we had a sack of potatoes and I'd make tuna surprise." What was the surprise? In unison, Wiggs and Stanley answer for her: "No tuna!"

Instead of going out, she and her flatmate would hook up the radio to an echo unit, get stoned and watch cricket with Brian Johnston's voice reverberating round the room. "But it was good," she says. "It made me feel on the edge."

Stanley raises an eyebrow and laughs. "On the edge of Highgate."

Saint Etienne tour the UK from 22-28 May


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/may/06/saint-etienne-london-interview-hann

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