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Swiss inching towards U.S. tax deal agreement


Switzerland is currently seeking to add to its existing double taxation agreement with the United States the possibility that the United States can get access to client data based on the behavioral patterns of clients.SDA reported that the commission said it was not opposed to the notion but asked the government to be more precise about when exactly Switzerland should deliver data to the United States, and said passive activity, for example a client opening a bank account, should not be a good enough reason to pass on details.Swiss banks Credit Suisse, Julius Baer and Basler Kantonalbank, accused of helping Americans to dodge taxes, were summoned to the parliamentary commission hearing this week at which they were asked to explain their actions.

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WL Ross & Co cuts fund-raising target: report


U.S. billionaire Wilbur Ross founded the private-equity firm which he sold to Invesco (IVZ.N) in 2006. WL Ross & Co could not be reached immediately for comment.WSJ said that Wilbur Ross declined to comment on fund raising efforts.

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GLOBAL MARKETS-China data weighs on stocks, copper


* Copper declines after data from China, the biggest user* Global stocks slip after six days of gainsBy Rodrigo CamposNEW YORK, Oct 13 (Reuters) - Global stocks fell and oil and copper declined on Thursday after soft Chinese data drove worries about the strength of world economy.The euro slipped against the dollar a day after hitting an almost one-month high. European Central Bank policy makers warned the euro zone could fall back into recession.The ECB also warned that forcing private bondholders to accept losses on euro zone sovereign debt could damage the euro and hurt banks.An index of U.S. bank shares slid 2.9 percent and an index of European lenders lost 3.7 percent.Shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second largest U.S. bank, slid 4.8 percent to $31.60. after it reported a drop in quarterly earnings. JPMorgan was the first major U.S. bank to post results this season.Prices of U.S. Treasury debt rose as investors sought relative safety. Major stock markets and the euro had recently jumped sharply on hopes the debt crisis was close to being resolved.”Over the last week we have seen a major short squeeze in a number of risk-sensitive assets,” said Jens Nordvig, head of G10 currency strategy at Nomura in New York.”But the fundamental picture remains clearly negative,” he said. “We remain very skeptical that European policy makers will bring out a convincing policy response in coming weeks.”U.S. shares fell from three-week highs after China reported its trade surplus narrowed for a second straight month in September. Both imports and exports were lower than expected.The Dow Jones industrial average fell 40.72 points, or 0.35 percent, to 11,478.13. The S&P Poor’s 500 dipped 3.59 points, or 0.30 percent, to 1,203.66. The Nasdaq Composite gained 15.51 points, or 0.60 percent, to 2,620.24.A spike in shares of chip makers helped drive the tech-heavy Nasdaq higher.The S&P 500 has run up more than 10 percent from a 2011 low hit on Oct. 4; on Wednesday it notched the largest seven-day rally since March 2009 on growing optimism European leaders were making progress in tackling the region’s debt problems.World stocks as measured by MSCI were down 0.2 percent after six days of gains.Crude oil imports into China, one of the largest engines of demand growth, dropped 12 percent in September from last year’s record high. Brent crude fell 0.2 percent on the day, snapping a six-day winning streak. U.S. light crude futures dropped 1.2 percent, further hurt by a rise in stockpiles.The soft data from China also pressured copper prices . The industrial metal, often taken as a proxy for economic growth expectations, fell 2.5 percent. China is the world’s largest copper consumer, accounting for nearly 40 percent of global demand.The euro slipped against the U.S. dollar, pulling back from a one-month high, after the ECB warned about the impact on the currency and the region’s banks of involving bondholders in euro zone bailouts.Slovakia’s parliament backed a plan to bolster the euro zone’s rescue fund after political parties agreed to hold an early election, concluding the ratification process in all euro zone countries.But even with a revamped rescue fund, European banks remain vulnerable to a Greek default and to sovereign downgrades. That increases the urgency for them to raise more capital to remain financially sound, analysts said.The single currency hit a New York session low of $1.3685 on trading platform EBS. It last traded at $1.3786, down less than 0.1 percent on the day. The euro on Wednesday touched its highest level versus the greenback since Sept. 16.Italy sold 6.2 billion euros of debt, split across four bonds. But yields remained under pressure, and the European Central Bank stepped into the secondary market after the auction, buying Italian debt to cap rising yields.The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was up 9/32, with the yield at 2.1798 percent.Thirty-year bonds gained as much as two points after a $30 billion auction that saw yields fall below market forecasts. They last traded up 30/32 in price to yield 3.149 percent.

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UPDATE 2-Chevron sees Q3 profit flat vs Q2, boosted by sale


By Braden ReddallOct 11 (Reuters) - Chevron Corp expects third-quarter earnings similar to the previous quarter, with lower oil prices and output offset by a $500 million gain on the sale of its Welsh refinery and British and Irish marketing assets.The second-largest U.S. oil company reported a $7.7 billion net profit in the second quarter, and analysts had previously been looking for $6.5 billion on average in the third quarter, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.But any improvement in near-term profit estimates could be offset by lingering concerns about efforts by leading private-sector oil companies to increase their oil and gas production.Chevron’s international oil-equivalent production fell to 1.93 million barrels per day (bpd) in the first two months of the quarter from 2 million in all of the second quarter, the company said in its quarterly interim update on Tuesday.Chevron said this drop largely reflected a now-remediated third-party pipeline incident in Thailand and planned work in Kazakhstan and Britain, predicting better production this quarter as these effects disappear and new output is added.Average U.S. production in July and August fell to 676,000 bpd from 694,000 in the second quarter, it said, blaming that on maintenance work in the Gulf of Mexico.In total, Chevron reported 2.60 million bpd of oil-equivalent production for the first two months of the quarter, down from 2.69 million in the second quarter.In July, Chevron trimmed its average 2011 output estimate by 30,000 bpd to 2.76 million, assuming oil at $79 per barrel, or 2.73 million bpd with Brent crude prices assumed at $111. Under production-sharing contracts, pricier oil means Chevron must leave more output in the hands of state-owned partners around the world.Brent crude averaged $112 per barrel in the quarter, down from $117 in the second quarter but up from $77 a year before.Chevron switched to using Brent from the U.S. benchmark of West Texas Intermediate earlier this year when calculating production-sharing contract changes.Chevron, offering the quarter’s first big oil company view of last quarter, cited data showing refining margins were mixed overall. They edged higher in Singapore and Europe, while U.S. refining margins came off their second-quarter peaks, which was anticipated by a Chevron executive in May.As for the one-off $500 million gain for the downstream division, Valero Energy Corp , the largest U.S. company focused solely on refining, closed its $730 million purchase of Chevron’s Pembroke refinery in August.Chevron shares slipped immediately after the interim update, but were last trading just 5 cents lower at $97.55 in after-hours trading on Tuesday.The San Ramon, California-based company reports its third-quarter results on Oct. 28.