Posts Tagged ‘auction’

Italy says free TV frequencies unacceptable (Reuters)

MILAN (Reuters) ? Italy’s new industry minister, Corrado Passera, said on Sunday the previous government’s plan to give away digital television frequencies for free was unacceptable while the country was going through tough times.

Under the plan by the former government of Silvio Berlusconi, broadcasters would parade their suitability in a “beauty contest” rather than bid in a competitive auction. But critics said the system would favour state broadcaster RAI, Telecom Italia Media and Berlusconi’s own broadcaster, Mediaset.

“It is not tolerable that while we ask for sacrifices from Italians, (the frequencies) are assigned for free. It is very likely that we will not tolerate it,” he told state-controlled channel Rai 3.

A possible auction could net the finance ministry up to 5 billion euros, Daily La Repubblica reported on Saturday, without citing sources.

News Corp subsidiary Sky Italia has already pulled out of the beauty contest, saying the process was too long and favoured incumbent operators.

However Passera, CEO of bank Intesa Sanpaolo until Mario Monti brought him into the new cabinet last month, did not say whether he would launch an auction in its place.

“It could be something slightly different. I have taken the commitment to look into the issue and make proposals,” he said. “The frequencies could be used for new technologies and not necessarily for television.”

(Reporting By Danilo Masoni; Editing by Ben Harding)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enindustry/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111218/media_nm/us_italy_frequencies

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“Awful” Italy debt sale heightens euro zone stress (Reuters)

MILAN (Reuters) ? Italy paid a record 6.5 percent to borrow money over six months on Friday and its longer-term funding costs soared far above levels seen as sustainable for public finances, raising the pressure on Rome’s new emergency government.

The auction yield on the six-month paper almost doubled compared to a month earlier, capping a week in which a German bond auction came close to failing and the leaders of Germany, France and Italy failed to make progress on crisis resolution measures.

Though Italy managed to raise the full planned amount of 10 billion euros, weakening demand and the highest borrowing costs since it joined the euro frightened investors, pushing Italian stocks lower and bond yields to record highs on the secondary market.

Yields on two-year BTP bonds soared to more than 8 percent in response, a euro lifetime high, despite reported purchases by the European Central Bank.

In a sign of intense market stress, it now costs more to borrow for two years than 10 on the secondary market and borrowing costs for whatever term are above the 7 percent threshold, over which Italy is likely to need outside help if they do not subside.

“The pricing is awful,” said Padhraic Garvey, rate strategist with Dutch bank ING in Amsterdam. “The object of the exercise this morning was to get the job done and they’ve done that, but that’s about the only positive thing to say.”

Investors’ attention will now turn to a bond sale of up to 8 billion euros that Italy is planning for next Tuesday.

“For the BTP auctions next week, we’ll have more of the same they’ll probably get it done at a concession,” Garvey said.

Italy’s new technocrat government, which took power last week, is at work on structural reforms to revive the stagnant economy but markets are looking for quick and effective responses from European policymakers, such as a greater involvement of the European Central Bank.

Traders said the ECB was buying Italian and Spanish bonds in an attempt to shore the market up. But given its reluctance to prop up high-debt euro zone governments, its bond-buying program has been conducted intermittently, and never powerfully enough to provide more than short-term stability.

New Bank of Italy Governor Ignazio Visco said short-term measures to tame Italy’s budget deficit would not be enough to solve the country’s economic problems and only structural reforms will generate growth.

At an annual average rate of just 0.3 percent over the past decade, the Italian economy has grown faster than only a handful of other countries across the world. Real purchasing power has fallen 4 percent in 10 years.

BIG SPRING DEBT BILLS

Since being thrust to the fore of the euro zone crisis in July, Italy has always managed to attract sufficient demand at its auctions.

But record high yields threaten Rome’s planned gross issuance of 440 billion euros for 2012 as interest payments on the country’s 1.9 trillion euro debt pile rise.

Analysts say that, at current yield levels, the euro zone third-largest economy risks losing market access as redemptions totaling a massive 150 billion euros for the February-April period approach.

The euro, already trading around a seven-week low, inched down after Friday’s auction. European stock markets remained in negative territory for the day with the Milan stock-market the worst performer.

The six-month yield nearly doubled from an auction level of 3.5 percent a month ago.

By comparison, Spain paid 5.2 percent to sell six-month paper at a much smaller short-term auction earlier this week, after elections handed power to an austerity-committed conservative government.

Italy also sold 2 billion euros of zero-coupon CTZ bonds at a euro era record high yield of 7.8 percent, up from 4.6 percent at the previous sale.

(Reporting by London and Milan government bond desks; editing by Patrick Graham/Mike Peacock)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111125/bs_nm/us_italy_bonds_auction

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Tamayo tops Latam auction, kinetic art sales strong (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Rufino Tamayo’s painting “Watermelon Slices” fetched $2.2 million, topping Sotheby’s Latin American sale, which also set auction records for pioneering Venezuelan kinetic artist Carlos Cruz-Diez.

“It was a great night for Rufino Tamayo,” Sotheby’s Latin American art chief Carmen Melian said of the Wednesday evening sale, which totaled $17 million.

“Watermelon Slices is a symphony of colors that recall the (late U.S. master abstract colorist) Mark Rothko. Dozens and dozens of reds and orange shades vibrate,” she said.

Melian added that the work, which shows watermelon slices precariously balanced on a brown stand, is difficult to reproduce because Tamayo used pure dried pigment for each tone.

The painting, which was sold by The Museum of Modern Art for its acquisition fund, held a personal significance for Tamayo, Sotheby’s said. As a boy, he helped his aunt sell watermelons at a Mexico City market stand.

Tamayo, who died in 1991, is widely seen as a monumental figure of Mexican 20th century art. The Sotheby’s auction also fetched unusually hefty prices for work from a long overlooked earlier period when he explored surrealism.

The 1928 “Frutero y Domino” fetched $530,500 and the 1932 “La Tenista” sold for $398,500.

Among other highlights was kinetic art, which “had an exceptional night,” said Melian.

Kinetic art plays on optical illusion. Typically, works seem to vibrate for viewers walking past.

Venezuelans played an early and prominent role in developing the genre. Among them was Cruz-Diez, whose 1962 “Physichromie 88″ set an auction record at $518,500.

Featuring cardboard on wood, the work at first seems to display what looks like a miniature multicolored skyline. But shapes can turn solid black depending on the viewing angle.

Fellow Venezuelan kinetic artist Jesus Rafael Soto’s 1976 “Escritura Cobalto” fetched $530,500.

Bids for kinetic art came from around the world, said Axel Stein, Sotheby’s vice president. Explaining its global appeal, he said the genre bears the “universal language of geometry.”

“You can be Russian, Latin American, French, it’s abstract you get it or you don’t,” he said. “It’s also playful.”

The auction also set records for Mexican artist Francisco Corzas for his oil on canvas of a nude young woman “Desnudo (Fleur du Mal”) which sold for $218,500.

Argentine artist Martha Boto’s “Abstraccion No. 3″ sold for $56,250, setting an auction record for her painting.

(Reporting by Walker Simon; editing by Patricia Reaney)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/arts/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111117/stage_nm/us_art_auction_latam

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Giant yellow diamond auctioned for over $10.9M (AP)

GENEVA ? The Sun-Drop Diamond of South Africa, a giant pear-shaped yellow gem weighing 110.3 carats, has sold for more than $10.9 million at auction Tuesday, beating previous records for a jewel of its type.

Including commission the unidentified telephone bidder paid almost $12.4 million for the gem, putting it within the $11 million to $15 million range Sotheby’s had estimated before the sale.

“It’s a record for a yellow diamond at auction,” said David Bennett, the head of Sotheby’s jewelry division. He added that it was the eighth most expensive diamond ever sold at auction.

After Sotheby’s sold a 24.78-carat fancy intense pink diamond for a record-breaking $46 million last year, some had expected the auction’s headline piece to finish higher.

“When it gets to this price there are only half a dozen people who can actually participate,” said Mourad Hatik, a Geneva jewel trader. “If they decide they already have a similar stone, then the price doesn’t go up.”

Still, exceptional gems such as the Sun-Drop will always attract bidders, he said. “There is very little quality to buy.”

The Sun-Drop, which was found in South Africa last year, was put up for sale by New York-based company Cora International.

Gemologists had rated it as fancy, vivid yellow ? the highest possible color grading. Yellow diamonds are created by nitrogen impurities being trapped within carbon molecules and hardening over the course of millions of years.

Other lots at the $70 million sale in Geneva’s Beau-Rivage hotel included a white cushion-shaped diamond weighing 38.88 carats that sold for almost $7 million, including commission.

A 12.01-carat emerald from Colombia’s Muzo mine sold for $1.4 million, while a blue diamond ring was snapped up for $4.3 million.

However, several precious jewels ? including an elaborate gold and diamond ‘peace dove’ brooch, a blue diamond ring estimated at over $7.5 million, and a suite of imperial jewels ? failed to find a buyer.

The set comprising a necklace, brooch and pair of earrings was given by the Ottoman Empire’s Sultan Abdul Hamid II to the wife of the Khedive of Egypt in the late 19th century.

Sotheby’s said some of the gems may have been part of a peace offering given by Russian Czar Peter the Great’s wife Catherine to Ottoman Sultan Ahmed II in 1711. A bid of $9.3 million wasn’t enough.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_on_re_eu/eu_switzerland_yellow_diamond

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