European Press Roundup: Wells Fargo in Paris Move, Germany Shores Up EU-Unemployment Fund Plans
October 17 2018 - 7:24AM
Dow Jones News
In Europe today, stocks are down slightly as a global market
rebound stalls, the European Union weighs extending the U.K.'s
post-Brexit transition period and European banking heads pull out
of a Saudi Arabia conference. Read about the above topics on Dow
Jones Newswires or WSJ.com.
In Other Media...
Wells Fargo, the third largest U.S. bank by assets, said it
would shift its European investment-banking business to Paris
following Brexit after applying for an investment-firm license in
France. The bank said it still plans to serve U.K. and non-EU
customers from London and gave no indication whether the move would
lead to job cuts in the U.K. -La Tribune
German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz is finalizing plans for an
EU-wide unemployment insurance scheme ahead of a December summit in
Brussels. Under the proposal, member states would contribute to an
EU-wide unemployment fund that they can draw on during an economic
or jobs crisis, preventing states from having to increase
unemployment contributions during a recession and strengthening
solidarity between EU members. -Handelsblatt
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
included Cyprus and Malta in its list of 21 countries whose "golden
passport" schemes pose a high risk of tax evasion. Cyprus, which
has earned around EUR4.8 billion by issuing EU passports to 3,300
foreign nationals since 2013 according to a joint report from
Global Witness and Transparency International, is increasingly
coming under scrutiny for its investment-for-citizenship scheme.
-Cyprus Mail
Greece's Eurobank has struck a deal to sell a EUR2 billion
package of nonperforming loans to B2Holding ASA and Waterfall Asset
Management under better terms than it obtained for its first NPL
package sale. Other Greek banks--namely Alpha Bank, the National
Bank of Greece and Piraeus Bank--are set to sell more NPLs in the
near future. -Kathimerini
Germany is the world's third most competitive economy according
to the World Economic Forum's "Global Competitiveness Report 2018",
ranking only behind the USA and Singapore and placing ahead of
perennial WEF favorite Switzerland. Germany scored points for its
efforts to digitize its industry, stable economy and highly skilled
workforce. -FAZ
Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Borrell will not appeal a
sanction from the country's stock market regulator over the sale of
some Abengoa shares in 2015 when he was a member of the board.
-Cinco Dias
Write to Barcelona editors at barcelonaeditors@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 17, 2018 08:09 ET (12:09 GMT)
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