A TEXT POST

UPDATE 1- Packaging Corp sees Q4 profit above view


* Q3 sales $671 mln vs est $663.61 mln* Sees Q4 EPS $0.37 vs est $0.36Oct 17 (Reuters) - Paper container maker Packaging Corp of America forecast fourth quarter earnings ahead of Wall Street estimates, helped by lower recycled fiber costs.The company expects Oct-Dec earnings to be about $0.37 per share.Analysts, on an average, were expecting earnings of $0.36 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.For the third quarter, net income fell to $42 million, or 42 cents a share, from $62 million, or 60 cents a share, last year.Excluding items, it earned 43 cents a share.Revenue at the company, which competes with RockTenn Co and International Paper Co , rose 4.4 percent to $671 million.Analysts expected 43 cents in third-quarter earnings on revenue of $663.61 million.Packaging Corp of America produces containerboard and corrugated products, including shipping containers used to protect and transport manufactured goods.Shares of the Lake Forest, Illinois-based company closed at $24.66 on Monday on the New York Stock Exchange.

A TEXT POST

G20 ministers to back big bank capital surcharge


A draft communique from a meeting of G20 finance chiefs endorses a 1-2.5 percent capital surcharge on top banks like Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan Chase.The aim is to make sure they have enough capital to withstand market turbulence so that taxpayers won’t have to rescue banks again in the next crisis.A summit of the G20 leaders in Cannes, France in early November is set to give final approval to the surcharge plan and name the banks affected, known as global systemically important financial institution or G-SIFIs, G20 sources said.”Now that the framework applicable to G-SIFIs is agreed, we urge the Financial Stability Board to define the modalities to extend expeditiously the framework to all SIFIs,” the draft communique obtained by Reuters said.Insurers are battling against a surcharge as second tier banks.The charge — which will be in addition to a 7 percent minimum core capital buffer being phased in for all banks from 2013 — is part of a wider package the G20 ministers are set to endorse on Saturday.The other elements include common “tools” for supervisors to wind up ailing banks, compulsory “living wills” or resolution plans for every big bank, and more intensive supervision for large lenders, the communique said.The FSB, which formulates and coordinates financial regulation on behalf of the G20, has already drawn up criteria to determine which banks face a surcharge.It has said 28 banks would be affected if the regime was introduced immediately but G20 sources said the Cannes summit may name up to 50 lenders.POSITION LIMITSThe FSB is also expected to update ministers on its work to define the so-called shadow banking sector before thrashing out recommendations next year to regulate it.Supervisors fear that as banks face tougher rules, risky activities could migrate to other parts of the financial system such as money market funds and special vehicles.G20 presidency France appears to have lost its battle to introduce tough curbs on what it sees as speculation in food and energy commodity markets by imposing limits on the size of positions a trader can hold at any given time.G20 sources said the group was expected to approve a report from the International Organization of Securities Commissions, which groups national market watchdogs, on the benefit of imposing trading limits but it would remain “optional.”The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is set to discuss fixed limits on Tuesday but in Europe there is no consensus, with Britain opposed to such permanent curbs.STRONGER FSBBank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi is expected to propose strengthening the FSB, which he chairs, in order to ensure proper implementation of a welter of new rules the G20 has pledged to introduce, including the bank capital surcharge.Draghi, who steps down as chairman this month to become president of the European Central Bank, is expected to propose more members from emerging markets and developing countries on the FSB’s agenda-setting steering committee.Some Asian and Latin American countries feel the regulatory measures now being finalized plug supervisory holes in European and U.S. markets and want their circumstances to shape future G20 regulatory work.Draghi also wants representatives of finance ministries on the steering committee to add political clout.”Draghi will also discuss the possibility to give FSB a legal personality and to allow it to receive resources from more diversified sources,” a G20 source said.Saturday’s meeting will also touch on who will replace Draghi. Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney is seen by some G20 officials as the main contender so far that the Cannes summit will endorse.G20 ministers are also expected to look at proposals to reinforce non-binding draft principles on financial consumer protection authored by the OECD which have been criticized for being too weak.

A TEXT POST

Gucci replaces 2 China store managers after staff-abuse allegations


Gucci has established “direct confidential communications” between senior management and staff after the letter was released, the company said in a statement to Reuters.The retailer has also hired outside consultants to conduct a comprehensive review of the situation, including “talent recruitment and retention.”Late on Thursday, Chinese state media reported that the Shenzhen city government was investigating the company after the release of the letter.”Gucci has been closely monitoring recent media reports regarding certain complaints from a small group of former employees,” the company said.”Gucci does not and will not endorse or tolerate the alleged malpractices,” it said.Company representatives had met local authorities in Shenzhen on Thursday, Gucci spokesman Ben Huang said. He did not give further details of the meeting.A number foreign companies operating in China have come under fire in recent months for various rule violations, leading some executives to complain privately that their companies are subject to stricter enforcement than local Chinese firms.Earlier this week, state media reported that authorities in the central city of Chongqing arrested two employees of Wal-Mart and detained dozens more over alleged mislabelling of pork products, after ordering 13 of the retail giant’s stores in the region to close.This summer, oil company ConocoPhillips was roundly criticised in the Chinese press for its handling of an oil spill that occurred in June.The State Oceanic Administration has threatened to sue ConocoPhillips, but not its state-owned partner CNOOC .’NO SHORT REST’The letter from former Gucci employees claimed the store repeatedly rejected requests for overtime pay and required employees to reimburse Gucci for stolen items, even though they were insured.”It was a kind of torture for us to stand for more than 14 hours a day,” said the letter, posted on sina.com.”No short rest, water or food was allowed even for a pregnant employee.”The company’s China operations are based in Shanghai and it has 44 stores in China, Gucci spokesman Huang said. He would not say how many people Gucci employs in the country.Despite the recent focus on foreign firms, local Chinese companies haven’t been exempt from criticism.Local media often report that Chinese companies are found to have committed serious abuses such as underpaying workers in sweatshop conditions, using child labour and substituting fake or toxic ingredients in food.