Oil prices rose in Asia Monday as dealers welcomed the U.S. Federal Reserve's plan to kickstart the economy, while tensions in the Middle East also provided support, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in October gained 10 cents to $99.10 a barrel in the afternoon and Brent North Sea crude for November added 26 cents to $116.92.
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The Canadian Auto Workers union will focus on reaching an agreement with Ford as negotiations continue with all of Detroit's Big Three automakers with a strike deadline looming Monday night, the head of the union said.
CAW President Ken Lewenza said Sunday that Ford has shown a willingness to reach an agreement. He said talks with Chrysler and General Motors will continue but high level talks will be focused on Ford. A strike at all three automakers would affect about 20,000 workers and about 16 percent of North American auto production.
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India's central bank kept its benchmark interest rate on hold on Monday, preferring to wait to see the impact of a flurry of government reforms before reducing the cost of borrowing.
The Reserve Bank of India had been under pressure from business leaders and the government to cut interest rates to give a further boost to the ailing economy, which grew at just 5.5 percent on year in the quarter to June.
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Greece's international creditors no longer believe Athens can achieve its financial objectives, especially a reduction in its debt burden, the German business newspaper Handelsblatt reported.
"til now, creditors worked on the principle that Greece would achieve a sustainable level of indebtedness by 2020. This goal is no longer achievable," the newspaper said, citing sources close to the so-called troika of creditors -- the International Monetary Fd, the European ion and the European Central Bank.
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Greece needs a two-year extension from its international creditors to meet fiscal pledges, and a liquidity boost from the European Central Bank, said Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.
In a Washington Post interview appearing in Greece on Saturday, Samaras said the recession-hit country was determined to adopt a new austerity package worth 11.7 billion euros ($15 billion) to avoid leaving the eurozone.
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The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank will hold their 2015 annual meetings in the Peruvian capital Lima, the two Washington-based institutions announced Friday.
It will be the first time the meetings have been staged in Latin America since 1967, when they were held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
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The U.S. economy continues to demonstrate underlying strength and contains the seeds of future growth for the auto industry, Chrysler's top executive Sergio Marchionne said Friday.
But he blamed German officials for impeding a rationalization of the industry in Europe that could bring it back to health.
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Global tobacco giant Philip Morris on Friday lost its attempt to overturn a ban in Norway on the display of cigarettes in stores.
Following in the footsteps of several other countries such as Ireland and Iceland, Norway in 2010 banned the display of cigarettes in stores in an attempt to cut impulse buys of tobacco products.
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The massive financial rescue of Greece, with the country still struggling to meet its lenders' conditions, is placing strains on relations between the IMF and its European partners in the bailouts.
Officially, the three providers of funds to Greece -- the "troika" of the International Monetary Fund, the European Union, and the European Central Bank -- are unified as they press Athens to stick to the growth-crunching austerity program that came with their emergency loans.
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Japan's finance minister on Friday ratcheted up warnings of currency market intervention to tame the strong yen, after the dollar tumbled in the wake of the Federal Reserve's bond-buying plan.
Jun Azumi made the comments to reporters in Tokyo after the dollar hit a seven-month trough of 77.13 yen at one point in New York trade on Thursday.
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