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TRADE WARS
China's Wen to meet EU amid debt crisis, trade row
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 19, 2012

Engineer admits stealing software for China exchange
Washington (AFP) Sept 19, 2012 - A former software engineer for Chicago-based CME Group pleaded guilty Wednesday to stealing computer code and other proprietary data for an electronic trading exchange in China, officials said.

The Justice Department said Chunlai Yang admitted that he downloaded more than 10,000 files containing CME computer source code from the operating systems of the Globex electronic trading platform.

Officials estimated the potential loss at between $50 million and $100 million.

The Libertyville, Illinois man pleaded guilty to two counts of theft of trade secrets. He had worked for CME Group for 11 years.

Yang, 49, faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine on each count. His plea agreement calls for a sentencing guideline of 70 to 87 months in prison.

He was arrested in July 2011 and released on a $500,000 secured bond. Chicago District Judge John Darrah scheduled sentencing for February 20.

Yang also agreed to forfeit computers and related equipment seized from him during the arrest.

"This case and similar prosecutions demonstrate that law enforcement and corporations can work together to protect trade secrets," acting US Attorney Gary Shapiro said.

Prosecutors said that between late 2010 and June 2011, Yang downloaded more than 10,000 computer files containing CME computer source code and then transferred many of these files from his work computer to his personal USB flash drives.

Officials said he and two unnamed business partners developed plans to form a business referred to as the Tongmei (Gateway to America) Futures Exchange Software Technology Company (Gateway), to boost trading volume at the chemical electronic trading exchange in Zhangjiagang, China.

CME is the parent of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and a major platform for commodities and derivatives.


Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao meets Europe's leaders Thursday as the world's second-biggest economy falters in the eurozone debt crisis downdraft and the two sides face a long list of trade disputes.

Wen is attending his last China-EU summit in Brussels, meeting European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, as well as EU foreign policy head Catherine Ashton.

Beijing has repeatedly expressed concern about the EU slowdown and offered help in resolving the debt crisis but at the same time has been increasingly forced to take costly stimulus steps of its own to sustain growth.

Wen told visiting German Chancellor Angela Merkel last month that despite "serious concerns," Beijing was ready to continue investing in eurozone sovereign debt markets "on condition of fully evaluating the risks."

He also said China was ready to strengthen communication and discussion with the EU, the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund and key countries to support indebted eurozone nations.

Europeans have expressed hope that China could deploy some of its trove of about $3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves -- the largest in the world -- to invest in EU bailout funds.

Wen's visit comes, however, with the European debt situation showing some improvement after the ECB announced a bold plan to buy government bonds so as to cut borrowing costs for under-pressure eurozone economies.

That move is in turn linked to the bloc's new bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, which was finally cleared earlier this month by Germany's top constitutional court, allowing full implementation.

In Brussels, EU sources said the talks would consolidate ties ahead of major Chinese leadership changes, due later this year and early next, and "it is not a summit for big decisions."

The summit will reflect EU appreciation of Wen's role in building ties and "look forward to continuing (the relationship) with the new leadership," one of the sources said.

Given the adverse economic backdrop, it would be important that both sides give a strong signal of "mutual confidence" in the future, the source added.

While stressing the positives, the EU source also recognised a long list of disputes but argued that they were only to be expected give the importance of the relationship as a whole.

The 27-state EU bloc is China's single largest export market while China is the EU's second largest trading partner after the United States, with total trade worth nearly 430 billion euros in 2011.

In that context, a series of disputes -- including the recent EU anti-dumping probe into Chinese solar panels, the biggest of its kind -- should be kept in proportion, the EU source said.

"Frictions only touch a small part of that," the source said, adding that EU procedures were to protect EU industry and well understood by all concerned.

EU sources said the community was also worried by increasing territorial disputes -- in the South China Sea and between Japan and China over disputed islands -- and stressed the need for diplomatic solutions.

"We are all disturbed by the escalation," the EU source said, adding: "I doubt it is directly linked to the leadership" change. "Periods of transition can be bumpy," the source said.

Other contentious issues to be covered will likely include human rights in China, and Syria and Iran on which Beijing has opposed activist Western policies, the sources said.

Thomas Koenig, London-based China programme coordinator with the European Council on Foreign Relations, said he would be looking to see if the crisis had eased sufficiently for the EU to assume a more robust stance towards Beijing.

"With China, it's always important to emphasise reciprocal engagement," Koenig said, adding he was hoping for a "little more candid assessment of the situation" in the relationship.

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EU-China summit marred by fresh row over press coverage
Brussels (AFP) Sept 19, 2012 - The EU executive Wednesday scrapped efforts to organise a press conference at the close of an EU-China summit Thursday, as is traditional at such events, after failing to agree with Chinese authorities.

"It was not possible to agree conditions to enable the press conference that we would have liked to take place," European Commission spokeswoman Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen said.

European Union officials had been working to organise a media conference at the close of talks between Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, EU president Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso.

But China wanted the right to vet the journalists, said a European diplomat who asked not to be namd.

"The Chinese wanted to select the journalists, on the grounds of security, which was unacceptable," the diplomat said.

The Brussels-based International Press Association said that due to space constraints, only 50 journalists would have been able to attend, with 25 accredited by the Chinese authorities and 25 by EU authorities.

"Any agreement to sidestep media freedom such as by the EU agreeing not to invite journalists representing a certain country and allowing the visiting country to have a veto over journalists from their or any other country is not acceptable," API said in a letter

A row over press coverage also marred the last EU-China summit held in Brussels, in October 2010.

A closing press conference was cancelled at the last minute, officially due to a late schedule.

But diplomatic sources later said the Chinese side refused to attend to avoid facing questions from independent Chinese media on Tibet or other sensitive issues.



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Australia cuts mining forecasts on China drop
Sydney (AFP) Sept 18, 2012
Australia's resources agency slashed its mining export forecasts Tuesday as China's slowdown hits commodity prices, with earnings set to fall for the first time since the financial crisis. The Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics scaled back its export earnings forecast for the year to June 30, 2013 to Aus$189 billion (US$198 billion), 10 percent lower than guidance given in June and a f ... read more


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