UPDATE 1-Syntel cuts FY profit view, takes charge in Q3


* Sees 2011 EPS $2.65-$2.73, including charge* Narrows rev outlook to $635-$640 mln vs est $634.76 mlnOct 17 (Reuters) - Outsourcing company Syntel Inc reported preliminary third-quarter revenue above market estimates, and cut its full-year profit expectation to reflect a one-time charge related to a dispute settlement.The company said it resolved a services dispute with a former client and took a one-time non-recurring charge of 17 cents per share in the third quarter.Syntel said it now expects full-year profit of $2.65-$2.73 per share, including the charge, compared with its prior view of $2.75-$2.90 per share.Analysts on an average were expecting a profit of $2.84 a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.The company also reported a 19 percent rise in third-quarter preliminary estimated revenue to $167 million, above market expectations of $163.12 million.Syntel narrowed its full-year revenue forecast to $635-$640 million compared with its prior view of $625-$640 million.Analysts are expecting full-year revenue of $634.8 million.Shares of the Troy, Michigan-based company closed at $49.40 on Friday on Nasdaq. The stock has fallen 17 percent since July, when the company forecast a weak full-year profit.

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Republicans ask deficit panel to rethink Dodd-Frank


* Also seeks changes to public housing, mortgage modsWASHINGTON, Oct 14 (Reuters) - Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee are calling on the deficit reduction panel to consider curbs to the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul in a bid to boost the sputtering economy.In a letter addressed to the congressional “super committee”, 20 Republicans joined Chairman Spencer Bachus in urging consideration of a raft of Republican legislation to repeal or limit last year’s Dodd-Frank oversight law.”Congressional proponents of (Dodd-Frank) promised that it would ‘increase investment and entrepreneurship, foster competitiveness, confidence in our financial sector, and robust growth in our economy,’” Bachus wrote in a letter on Friday.”Yet some 15 months after Dodd-Frank was enacted, many small businesses are starved for customers and credit; unemployment has soared to more than 9 percent; and for far too many American families, economic security seems further away than ever.”The Dodd-Frank financial oversight law was passed to limit the type of excessive Wall Street risk taking that many blame for the financial crisis of 2007-2009.It subjects big financial firms to stricter oversight, tries to bring transparency to the roughly $600 trillion global derivatives market, and puts restrictions on Wall Street pay, among other reforms.Republicans have blasted Dodd-Frank as a regulatory overreach that has hindered the U.S. economic recovery.The letter also recommends that the super committee — headed by Republican Congressman Jeb Hensarling and Democratic Senator Patty Murray — cut or rein in spending on a number of federal programs, from public housing to mortgage modification programs.It also advocates easing restrictions on capital raising by small businesses.Bachus is particularly tough on Dodd-Frank derivatives regulations, which he says will put U.S. markets at a competitive disadvantage and could impose trillions of dollars in compliance costs.He also slammed the billions of dollars of fees that he says will be imposed on the private sector as part of Dodd-Frank.”This is a dead weight loss to the economy,” Bachus writes. “None of these funds will be used to create jobs.”The letter attached 24 bills with a range of changes to Dodd-Frank and other laws, including exemptions for corporations that use derivatives, and a repeal of the entire Dodd-Frank act.The 12-member super committee is facing a deadline of Nov. 23 to come up with at least $1.2 trillion in deficit reductions over the next decade.

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UPDATE 2-CNPC, Shell refinery JV in deal with local govt


* Shell likely to lead in the Shell-Qatar side* Imported condensate eyed as feedstock for petchemBEIJING, Oct 13 (Reuters) - A proposed oil refining and petrochemical joint venture between China’s CNPC, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Qatar signed an initial agreement with local authorities in east China’s Zhejiang province, where the mega project will built, the Chinese company said on Thursday.The project, to include a 400,000-barrel-per-day oil refining and 1.2 million tonnes-per-year ethylene plant, was approved by the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s macro planner, in June, industry officials said.Pending final government approval, which also includes environmental clearance, the greenfield refinery would give Shell and Qatar their first solid foothold in the world’s second biggest oil consumer, which is in the midst of a refinery building boom.The Taizhou venture, in coastal Zhejiang province, will use imported condensate and other raw materials to produce ethylene and other petrochemicals, CNPC said in a company newspaper.”The agreement further clarifies work scope and targets for each side, reflecting sincere intentions to cooperate,” it said.Qatar is the world’s largest liquefied natural gas (LNG)producer and pumps increasing amounts of condensates as a by-product of its gas production.In January, Qatar Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah and Wang Yong, head of the state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), which is both a regulator and shareholder in most of China’s big state-owned companies, pledged to strengthen cooperation in the oil and gas sector and discussed the Taizhou project.Industry experts told Reuters that the project, likely to cost close to $10 billion, would be led by Shell on the foreign partners’ side. Such an alliance follows a giant supply agreement between Qatar and China.”The project looks promising to win Chinese government’s final blessing, as China may see Qatar as quite a stabilising factor among the Middle East resource nations,” said an industry veteran.CNPC, parent of PetroChina , Asia’s top oil and gas firm, will take 51 percent stake in the project and Shell and Qatar to have 24.5 percent each, according to Chinese media reports.China guards its fuel market tightly against foreign participation. So far only a few foreign firms, including Exxon Mobil , Saudi Aramco and Total , via joint ventures with Chinese partners, have direct marketing access to the roughly 9 million bpd fuel market, the world’s second largest after the United States.

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PRESS DIGEST - British business - Oct 13


Proposals to introduce compulsory workplace pensions contain little protection for employees and could lead to widespread mis-selling, David Pitt-Watson, the renowned fund manager, has suggested.CLEGG SET TO CONFRONT EUROPEBritain’s deputy prime minister Nick Clegg is to confront Brussels over attempts to use the euro zone crisis to tame London’s financial district.BILLIONAIRE HAS GRAND DESIGNS FOR MAYFAIRThe billionaire former used car salesman who co-founded the Phones 4U chain is splashing out 155 million pounds to buy a site in Mayfair that could be developed into a “super-mansion” and luxury apartmentsThe TelegraphHMRC IN DOCK OVER GOLDMAN TAX SETTLEMENTBritain’s most senior tax collector has been accused of lying to parliament over a “sweetheart” tax settlement with Goldman Sachs .THINK TANK CALLS FOR TAX CUTS TO BOOST UK ECONOMYTax cuts and deregulation are urgently needed if the government is to administer the “shot of adrenalin” needed to inject life into Britain’s ailing economy, the Centre for Policy Studies (CPS) think tank has warned.WSJ ACCUSED OF SCAM OVER CIRCULATIONAndrew Langhoff, the European publisher of Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal (WSJ), has resigned amid allegations of a circulation scam.The GuardianUK UNEMPLOYMENT TOTAL HITS HIGHEST IN 17 YEARSThe number of people out of work in Britain has hit its highest level in 17 years and youth unemployment has reached a record high as the economic slowdown continues to take its toll.The IndependentENERGY GIANT’S PRICE PLOY ATTACKED BY RIVALSAnalysts and rivals lined up to attack Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE) on Wednesday over its plan to shake up the energy industry by auctioning on the open market all of the electricity it generates.

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AOL CEO pitches investors on Yahoo deal: sources


While Yahoo’s own strategic review has bumped AOL to the back burner for many on Wall Street, Armstrong is still trying to drum up shareholder support for a deal with Yahoo, presenting it as an alternative to going it alone as an Internet media company.”The focus in the meeting has gone from a year ago of being around the fundamentals to now being how could you carve this up, what are separate assets worth, are there ways to sell off the business to extract value from them,” said a top 20 AOL shareholder who attended one of the meetings.Armstrong said a merger between AOL and Yahoo could wring out $1 billion to $1.5 billion in savings from overlapping data centers and duplicate news sites, such as sports, entertainment and finance, according to another major shareholder who met with Armstrong.He is pushing the notion that a combination with Yahoo would appease ad agencies looking for more efficient buys with a bigger audience, said the two shareholders.They said they liked the idea of a merger with Yahoo but it remains to be seen if Armstrong can pull it off.Armstrong’s defection from Google Inc to AOL in 2009 had raised investors’ hopes that he could revive a fallen giant once famous for connecting the world to the Web.Recruited to AOL for his advertising sales prowess, Armstrong wants to turn the company into one of the top media destinations dependent on ad revenue, after a disastrous 10 year merger with Time Warner Inc.But so far, that seems elusive when AOL has to compete for advertising dollars against the likes of Facebook and Google, in addition to Yahoo itself.In August, AOL reported a surprise quarterly loss and blamed weaker-than-expected advertising growth. Shares plunged 31 percent.AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft in mid-September formed an advertising partnership to go up against Google, according to AllThingsDigital blog.A deal with Yahoo could serve as a way for Armstrong to bow out gracefully. The idea is not new — it was floated when Microsoft Corp made a bid for Yahoo in 2008, and resurfaced again last year when AOL hired Bank of America and Allen & Co to review alternatives.”As far as Armstrong’s desire for an exit, he doesn’t want to be doing what he is doing 18 months from now. He wants to be out,” said a source familiar with Armstrong’s thinking. “He’s an ambitious sort of guy and AOL is such an afterthought. But he would definitely put his hat in the ring to run a combined Yahoo/AOL.”Although Armstrong’s performance has disappointed many shareholders, some are not ready yet to pitch him overboard.”He’s in the sixth inning,” said the top 20 AOL shareholder. “It is not fair to grade him right now but I think the investment community is a little put off. There is a strong desire to see tangible results.”AOL declined comment for this story.Yahoo and AOL have many common shareholders as of June 30, including Capital Research, BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street.Fidelity Management and Research Co, AOL’s No. 2 shareholder as of June 30, cut its stake in AOL to 3.7 percent from 10.3 percent according to a regulatory filing Tuesday.WHAT’S BLACK AND WHITE…AOL’s stock has sunk more than 40 percent since it was spun out from Time Warner in 2009, ending what is widely regarded as one of the worst corporate mergers in history.What was supposed to be a new media company is looking increasingly old media, similar to newspapers.Both AOL and newspapers are trying to jump-start digital revenue based on news and information, but both are yoked to legacy assets, the Internet dial-up access business and printing press respectively.”Dead money” is how another media investment banker described the predicament of the rapidly dwindling dollars derived from dial-up access and print newspapers.AOL has invested heavily in news, some $160 million so far this year on building out its online local news network Patch and its $315 million acquisition of the Huffington Post.Subscriber revenue, which represents about 38 percent of AOL’s total revenue in the first six months of 2011, is expected to decline 23 percent this year, estimated Benchmark Co analyst Clayton Moran.Moran forecast that advertising revenue at AOL will grow 1 percent to 2 percent this year.”There is a race to grow the digital business before the subscription business disappears and right now they are losing that race,” Moran said.There are still some believers in AOL, just as there are in the newspaper business. Dallas based investment firm Hodges Capital Management holds shares in the New York Times Co, Gannett Co and A.H. Belo on the notion there will always be a need for content.

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Suncor refinery restarting after snag - report


“The unit was off-line for a short period of time before crews started to safely turn the unit back on,” the Denver Post said, quoting a Suncor official.The operational snag led to flaring on Sunday and a larger than normal flare on Monday during the start-up, the report said.Suncor operates the 93,000-barrel-per-day refinery that produces gasoline, diesel fuel and paving-grade asphalt, according to the company website.

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