Flaherty cautious on economy: report
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said he was concerned that economic weakness in the United States, his country's top trading partner, could hold back the domestic economy in the coming months, a news service reported on Tuesday. Flaherty said he welcomed Monday's stronger-than-expected report on April gross domestic product, which showed Canada's economy had expanded for the first time in three months.
Oil rises on supply worries, Middle East tension
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose by nearly $3 on Tuesday after the International Energy Agency revived concerns about long-term supply shortages and tension between Israel and Iran raised fears about possible outages in the much nearer term. U.S. crude rose $1.96 to $142.96 a barrel by 1505 GMT (11:05 a.m. EDT). London Brent crude rose $2.17 to $142.00.
Chrysler St. Louis cut seen good for Canada plant
TORONTO (Reuters) - Chrysler LLC's decision to shut down its St. Louis minivan plant is good news for the company's van plant in Windsor, Ontario, although it underscores the long-term uncertainty of the van segment, an analyst said on Monday. "I think for now the production there is safe," said Aaron Bragman, an automotive analyst at Global Insight, of the Windsor plant, which currently runs three shifts producing the industry-leading Town & Country and Dodge Grand Caravan minivan models.
CIT shares jump on deal to shed mortgage assets
NEW YORK (Reuters) - CIT Group Inc
Writedown fears nag as UBS rejigs management
ZURICH (Reuters) - UBS failed to address nagging concerns about further possible writedowns on Tuesday, dishing out instead a restructuring of top management and sending shares to a fresh 10-year low. UBS, Europe's biggest casualty of the credit crisis so far, and under fire from investors for shoddy corporate governance, said it would dismantle the office of chairman, a key demand of one of its top shareholders, Olivant.
Babcock to maintain Canada's submarine fleet
LONDON (Reuters) - British engineering support services
company Babcock International Group Plc
Real, not speculative reasons for record oil: IEA
LONDON (Reuters) - It is easy to blame speculation for the doubling of oil prices over the past 12 months, but the real reasons are strong demand growth, coupled with shortages of supply and refining capacity, the IEA said on Tuesday. In its Medium-Term Oil Market Report, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said there was little evidence speculation had distorted prices over both the longer and shorter term, although it noted a lack of data on inventory levels, as well as on financial market participants.
Factories hit worldwide as commodity prices soar
LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Soaring commodity costs are denting manufacturing activity in Asia and Europe and the outlook looks bleak as new orders drop off in the face of rising prices, surveys showed on Tuesday. Manufacturing activity in the euro zone contracted in June for the first time in three years while business confidence in Asia's largest export markets is buckling and output has likely contracted further in the United States.
BCE defers second-quarter common share dividend
TORONTO (Reuters) - BCE Inc
Banking woes, oil fears hit global markets
LONDON (Reuters) - The second half of 2008 got off to a brutal start for equity investors on Tuesday as worries about the banking sector battered European stocks while inflation fears increased with oil over $142 a barrel. Wall Street also looked set for a poor start.
© Reuters Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Reproduction or redistribution of Reuters content, including framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

