May 23, 2013

Analysis: ECB poised to cut rates to help recession-hit euro zone

 Analysis: ECB poised to cut rates to help recession hit euro zone

() – The European Central Bank is closer to lowering interest rates than at any time since it last cut them in July 2012 and is likely to shave a quarter-point off at its policy meeting next week.

Senior sources involved in the say momentum is building for action to help a economy which has slipped back into recession, a move that some wanted to take earlier this year.

Inflation sliding well below target gives the bank scope to act and a senior ECB official said even Bundesbank chief Jens , the most hawkish member of the 23-man , had an open mind.

After the bank’s last meeting on April 4, Mario Draghi signaled that a cut could come soon when he said that the bank stood “ready to act” to boost the recession-hit euro zone economy.

“Now we are free,” one senior ECB official said. “For the next meeting in Bratislava, I would look at rates, certainly.”

The ECB’s Governing Council meets in Bratislava next Thursday – one of two annual policy meetings outside Frankfurt. The 23-man body rarely moves rates when it meets off-base, but the bleak economic picture strengthens the case for action.

Any decision on whether to act in May will depend on the . Benoit Coeure, a dovish member of the ECB’s of policymakers, said on Monday the bank had not seen data pick up since its last rate decision.

The ECB expects a gradual recovery in the euro zone in the second half of this year, “subject to ”.

Figures indicating the economy’s performance will be weaker than that scenario would strengthen the case for a rate cut.

“If they confirm (the scenario), does that mean we don’t cut the rate? Not necessarily,” the senior official said.

Policymakers believe a rate cut would have limited impact on the economy but would at least show they are supporting it. A decision to cut could well not be unanimously supported.

The case for easier policy was boosted by Tuesday’s purchasing managers’ indexes, which the ECB watches closely, which showed a sharp drop in German business activity in April.

That marked the fourth time the German Composite PMI has fallen below 50, into contractionary territory, since September 2008. On the previous three occasions, an ECB rate cut has followed immediately after publication of the final data, or the month after.

Germany’s closely-watched Ifo business climate index tallied with the PMI on Wednesday, falling more than expected in April. An ECB survey also showed demand for corporate and household loans in the euro zone plummeted in the first three months of the year.

Any interest rate move is likely to focus on the ECB’s main refinancing rate, with a cut in the deposit rate the ECB pays banks for holding their cash overnight far less likely.

The main refinancing rate already stands at a record low of 0.75 percent, though this is higher than the policy rates of the other major global central banks.

“The German slowdown, the very low inflation rates we have in Germany, the latest decline in the oil price – all these factors are weighing on inflation and should make even the Bundesbank a little less opposed to a rate cut,” said Berenberg Bank economist Christian Schulz, though he expected the ECB to hold off for now.

LIQUIDITY GUIDANCE

Cutting the refinancing rate would help banks in the euro zone periphery that borrow sizeable amounts from the ECB, though the impact this would have on their lending activity is unclear.

“It’s not clear whether banks would use the full 25 basis points to lower their lending rates, or take it as profit and use that to build up their capital,” said one expert familiar with the ECB’s operations. “I think either would be positive.”

Draghi said after the ECB’s April 4 meeting it was essential that the “resilience of banks (be) strengthened where needed”.

While a rate cut would show the ECB is ready to support the economy, the bank believes it would have only limited impact because its ultra-low interest rates are not reaching all euro zone economies evenly, with lenders in crisis-hit countries passing on higher funding costs to their customers.

Related to this, ECB policymakers are looking at their liquidity provision to banks. The ECB flooded banks with more than 1 trillion euros in two long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) in late 2011 and early 2012 to avert a credit crunch.

Banks have already repaid early more than a quarter of the funds – a development the ECB sees as positive as it shows they are ready to stand on their own feet.

Repayment of these LTROs has driven down excess liquidity in the euro zone – the level of cash beyond what banks need to cover their day-to-day operations – to some 330 billion euros from above 600 billion at the start of this year.

But in the event of another shock to the financial system it is unclear exactly what the ECB would do.

Draghi said on April 4 “our monetary policy stance will remain accommodative for as long as needed” and that banks would be provided with unlimited liquidity “for as long as necessary”.

Though the ECB is unlikely to follow the U.S. Federal Reserve’s example and give guidance on rates — the Fed expects to keep them near zero until unemployment drops to 6.5 percent or so — it could flesh out its commitment on providing liquidity to try to boost banks’ confidence.

“Maybe we could be a little more specific on ‘as long as needed’,” the senior ECB official said.

(Additional reporting by John O’Donnell, editing by Mike Peacock)

US Intel believes some Benghazi attackers tied to al Qaeda in Iraq

b8ed075b8c5f4491271926dd7b29a743 US Intel believes some Benghazi attackers tied to al Qaeda in Iraq

(Phatforums News / Security) — U.S. intelligence believes that assailants connected to were among the that attacked the in Benghazi, a U.S. government official told CNN.

That would represent the second al Qaeda affiliate associated with the deadly September 11 attack that killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans.

Previously, intelligence officials said there were signs of connections to al Qaeda in the , the North African wing of the .

The revelation that members of al Qaeda in Iraq are suspected of involvement in the Libya attack comes at a time when there is a growing number of fighters from that group also taking part in the Syrian civil war.

Doubts surface over on claim of responsibility for Benghazi attack

It also surfaces as questions persist about Benghazi security and the Obama administration’s response to the attack that have become issues in the presidential campaign. Republicans have said issues around the attack illustrate weaknesses in President ’s foreign policy.

The weakened al Qaeda affiliate has had a resurgence in Iraq since U.S. forces left the country at the end of last year. The group had used Libya as a source for fighters. In a 2008 cable, Stevens described a nearby town of Derna as “a wellspring of Libyan ” for al Qaeda in Iraq.

The latest intelligence suggests the core group of suspects from the of the attack on the Benghazi mission numbered between 35 to 40. Around a dozen of the attackers are believed to be connected to either al Qaeda in Iraq or al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, the government official said.

The attack had two waves: The first targeted the main compound where Stevens and another diplomatic official were believed killed. A a few hours later involved an annex building approximately a mile away.

According to the official, others in the core group are suspected of having ties to the Libyan group Ansar al-Sharia, and many of them are believed to be Egyptian jihadis.

A suspect in the attack is being held in Tunisia where the United States has been denied access to him, according to Sen. Saxby Chambliss, the ranking Republican on the Intelligence Committee.

Chambliss would not name the suspect, but CNN has been told it is Ali Ani al-Harzi, a Tunisian connected to extremist groups in North Africa.

Details about al-Harzi were first reported by the Daily Beast.

In a statement Chambliss said, “Tunisian authorities have a suspected terrorist in custody, yet our guys aren’t able to interrogate him.”

An aide to Chambliss said the suspect was first arrested in Turkey and later sent to Tunisia.

CNN has learned that the United States first became aware of al-Harzi when he apparently posted details of the attack on social media while it was happening.

At the request of the United States, Turkish officials detained al-Harzi when he entered that country after leaving Libya. Turkey then transferred him to Tunisia.

The United States fully expects to have access to him and is trying to figure out how that will happen, another U.S. official told CNN. The FBI is leading the investigation and the intelligence community, according to the official, is working behind the scenes to help with that as well.

Video from one security camera at the Benghazi mission was recovered from the site, but a U.S. official would not say whether al-Harzi or any other suspects were identified from the video.

E-mails obtained by CNN made clear that less than 30 minutes after the attack began, the State Department notified officials within the agency, the White House, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Pentagon and the FBI that an attack was underway and that Stevens was in the compound.

And just two hours later, one of the e-mails indicated the Libyan extremist group Ansar al Sharia was claiming responsibility for the attack on social media websites. “Embassy Tripoli reports the group claimed responsibility on Facebook and Twitter and has called for an attack on Embassy Tripoli,” the e-mail said.

Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, told CNN the e-mails show the attack was not a spontaneous demonstration in protest of an anti-Muslim video as the intelligence community and Obama administration officials initially claimed.

“So what you saw in the e-mails in that real time was a real description,” Rogers told Soledad O’Brien on “Starting Point.” “And, as you noticed, there was no talk of demonstrations or other things. And it was clearly very early identified with a terrorist affiliate of AQIM.”

Eight hours after the first e-mail was sent by the State Department to officials around the government, another message, obtained by CNN on Wednesday from a government official, said that the personnel in the “shelter location” in Benghazi were “under attack by mortar fire.” It added there are reports of injuries to staff.

The timing of the message suggests the “shelter” referenced was the CIA annex a mile from the main diplomatic mission where, ultimately, two former Navy SEALs were killed in an effort to fight the attackers.

The email will likely be cited by critics to show that the administration knew within hours about the military nature of the attack.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the documents did not tell the whole story, describing conclusions drawn from the one document as “cherry picking.”

“Posting something on Facebook is not in and of itself evidence, and I think it just underscores how fluid the reporting was at the time and continued for some time to be,” Clinton said.

Moreover, intelligence officials do not believe Ansar al-Sharia is solely responsible with indications now that some of the attackers were associated with al Qaeda in Iraq, al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and an Egyptian jihad network.

A spokesman for Ansar al-Sharia denied the group was responsible the day after the assault.

Campus Confidential: Redefining Friendships

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( News / The Frisky) — In high school, I had a single group of really . Yes, I had other friends outside of that core group, but those five girls were unequivocally my best friends – the ones with whom I shared monumental , the ones I could talk about everything or nothing with for hours on end. When I left for college, I couldn’t fathom ever replacing them. I wondered if I would ever find a group of friends that close again.

But here’s the thing: I haven’t made another group of really close friends. And the fact that I haven’t has actually been a blessing.Now, granted, I’ve only been in college for a little over . Who knows what will unfold over the course of the year or the next four years. But so far, I’ve been spending my time not with a single group of close friends, like I was so accustomed to doing in high school, but with a bunch of different people. I like and respect them all and get something different from all of them. For example, I have a friend with whom I explore New York City and with whom I share a love of writing. I go to the typical college parties and events with another group of fun-loving friends. I have friends that I simply hang out with, get meals with and out the lounge with in order to watch “Modern Family.”

I think that this aspect of college, this ability to have a lot of different friends — free from cliques and concerns about relative social status — has been one of the most rewarding for me so far. I love that I am able to develop so many of with so many different people and learn from all of them. The I thought I’d feel from not knowing exactly where I fall in a social order is nonexistent. In fact, I actually feel liberated. I feel like I can explore new and different aspects of myself, rather than restrict myself to a single definition, to a single group of people.

Still, though, I miss the that comes with knowing a group of people will always have your back and who unconditionally love and support you. But something tells me that that is something that will come with time and can’t be forcefully created within the first few weeks of school. And I am more than fine with waiting.

How about you? What are/were your friendships like in college?

Want to contact the author of this post? Email her at Hidden Email Address. Julie Zeilinger also edits and blogs for The F Bomb.

U.S. official: Al Qaeda leader killed in drone strike in Pakistan

7adce0f408e89f52bf138d8cbcd2c3cd U.S. official: Al Qaeda leader killed in drone strike in Pakistan
Abu Yahya al-Libi has appeared frequently in videos on the Internet, including one in 2006 by an al Qaeda-linked media group.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: Al-Libi “played a critical role in the group’s planning against the West,” official says
Abu Yahya al-Libi, the No. 2 man in al Qaeda, is killed in a U.S. strike, official says
The militant was a prominent al Qaeda face on the Internet
The drone strike, in , was the 21st in Pakistan this year

() — Abu Yahya al-Libi, the No. 2 man in al Qaeda and a longtime public face of the , has been killed by a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan, a U.S. official said Tuesday.

His death marks one of the most significant blows to al Qaeda since the U.S. military killed Osama bin Laden in a daring nighttime raid in Pakistan a year ago.

Al-Libi was second-in-command behind al Ayman al-Zawahiri, who took the helm after bin Laden’s death.

“There is no one who even comes close in terms of replacing the expertise (al Qaeda) has just lost,” said the U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Al-Libi “played a critical role in the group’s planning against the West, providing oversight of the efforts,” the official told CNN.

“Zawahiri will be hard-pressed to find any one person who can readily step into Abu Yahya’s shoes,” the official said. “In addition to his gravitas as a longstanding member of AQ’s leadership, Abu Yahya’s religious credentials gave him the authority to issue fatwas, operational approvals, and guidance to the in Pakistan and regional affiliates.”

Al-Libi loss would be major blow for al Qaeda

The Monday strike was the third such deadly attack in as many days and the 21st suspected U.S. drone strike in Pakistan this year. At least six missiles were fired at a militant compound near the town of Mir Ali in the North Waziristan region near the Afghanistan border.

Official: 15 militants killed in suspected U.S. drone strike in Pakistan

Reports emerged a couple of years ago that al-Libi was slain, but they proved to be incorrect.

After bin Laden’s death, Ayman al-Zawahiri became al Qaeda’s leader and al-Libi was elevated to No. 2 in the terror organization.

Al Qaeda’s leadership has been so thinned by the U.S. drone campaign in Pakistan that these men were the only two real leaders of the organization left, U.S. counterterrorism officials said, according to CNN Security Analyst Peter Bergen. Al Qaeda offshoots in other parts of the world, such as the group’s affiliate in Yemen, have meanwhile become more potent and worrisome to the United States.

An Islamic scholar and high-ranking member of the group, al-Libi frequently appeared in Internet videos. He gave many videotaped speeches praising al Qaeda leaders, urging resistance and trying to recruit new members.

“Al-Libi is a key motivator in the global jihadi movement and his messages convey a clear threat to U.S. persons or property worldwide,” said a “Wanted” statement posted on the website of the U.S. State Department’s “Rewards for Justice” program, which offers rewards for information about suspected terrorists.

“Al-Libi is believed to be in hiding in Afghanistan or Pakistan,” said the website, which offered a reward of up to $1 million for the 49-year-old Libyan.

Al-Libi purportedly was among al Qaeda leaders working in Libya since last year to establish a presence there.

In a video message to fellow Libyans distributed on jihadist forums in December, al-Libi said: “At this crossroads you have found yourselves, you either choose a secular regime that pleases the greedy crocodiles of the West and for them to use it as a means to fulfill their goals, or you take a strong position and establish the religion of Allah.”

Al-Libi was captured in 2002 and imprisoned at Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan, according to the U.S. government, but he escaped in 2005.

Al Qaeda’s most wanted

In 2008, a statement posted on radical Islamic websites known to carry messages from al Qaeda described how four “military leaders” including al-Libi escaped from the prison, but the statement said then that one of the escapees, Abu Abdallah al-Shami, had been killed in a U.S. airstrike.

The statement said that among those escaping with al-Shami was key al Qaeda figure Omar al-Faruq, who died in a British airstrike after the escape.

Another escapee, Abu Nasir al-Qahtani, was captured in Afghanistan in 2006. Al-Shami’s death left al-Libi as the only remaining member of that escape who had not been killed or captured.

President ’s administration recently justified its use of unmanned drones to suspected terrorists overseas in a rare public statement, with John Brennan, the president’s top counterterrorism adviser, saying the strikes are conducted “in full accordance with the law.”

The program uses unmanned aerial vehicles, often equipped with Hellfire missiles, to target suspected terrorists in remote locations overseas, with many such strikes occurring in Yemen and Pakistan, despite some internal opposition within the latter country.

Brennan said the United States “respects national sovereignty and international law” and is guided by the laws of war in ordering those attacks.

The Pakistani border area is widely believed to be the operating base for the Haqqani network and other militant groups that have attacked international troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

NHL Playoffs: Capitals clip Rangers in Game 4 to even series

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The warms up before the game against the New York Rangers in Game Four of the Eastern Conference Semifinals during the 2012 Playoffs at the Verizon Center on May 5, 2012 in Washington City.
(May 4, 2012 – Source: Greg / North America)

WASHINGTON (AP) – A few seasons ago, when Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and Mike Green were helping the Washington Capitals finally start to emerge from years of rebuilding with a go-go, attacking style, the team promoted its high-scoring with the slogan “.”

These days, the Capitals are succeeding in the playoffs with a more conservative, defensive-minded style — and it still never hurts when the best of the best put the puck in the net.

Green’s slap shot on a power play with 5:48 left in regulation was the go-ahead goal, and Ovechkin and Backstrom scored Saturday, too, lifting the Capitals to a 3-2 victory against the top-seeded New York Rangers that tied their Eastern at two games apiece.

BOX SCORE: Capitals 3, Rangers 2
PHOTOS: Top shots from the NHL playoffs
COLUMN: Predators need some offense to stay alive

When the bygone marketing tag was mentioned afterward in the loud Capitals locker room, 26-year-old Green repeated the ’s words, saying with a wry smirk: ” ‘Young Guns’? Not so young anymore. But we needed to step up.”

According to STATS LLC, it was the 13th time in their Capitals careers — all were first-round — that Ovechkin, Backstrom and Green scored in the , but the first in the postseason. Washington’s record in those games? Not surprisingly, 13-0. That trio last tallied together Oct. 30, 2010, STATS said.

“People have been talking about (how) we need to step up,” said Backstrom, who missed 40 games in the regular season with a concussion and hadn’t scored since Game 2 of the opening round against Boston. “If you work hard, good things happen to you, somebody told me.”

Ovechkin made it 1-0 about 12½ minutes into the game with a 40-foot slap shot after Rangers rookie Chris Kreider accidentally sent the puck to the two-time NHL MVP’s stick. In the second period, Ovechkin’s skates left the ice as he delivered a high hit to defenseman Dan Girardi, a play that resulted in a charging penalty against the Russian wing and could draw attention from the league office.

“My head’s kind of there, and he hits it,” Girardi said.

Ovechkin, treated for a bloody upper lip in the third period, said he was trying to protect himself and thought he caught Girardi in the shoulder, not the head.

Said Capitals coach Dale Hunter: “It was incidental contact, where both of them were looking down and they hit each other.”

Rangers coach John Tortorella’s take? Who knows? He declined to answer a general question about the officiating and walked out of his news conference after about 30 seconds.

On the go-ahead goal, Rangers captain Ryan Callahan got knocked down along the boards and lost the puck, which went to Capitals defenseman Dennis Wideman. He slid the puck over to wide-open Green, who slammed into the glass after releasing his shot from the right circle.

“I didn’t see the puck,” Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist said. “I was pretty much just guessing where it was going.”

It allowed the No. 7-seeded Capitals to make a much-needed recovery from what could have been a demoralizing defeat: The Rangers won Game 3 in triple overtime.

“If we lost this one, we’d be down 3-1, going back there (to New York),” Hunter said. “So the guys knew what was at stake and they came out with a big first (period), a big push. We generated a lot of offense.”

Well, relatively speaking.

The Rangers host Game 5 on Monday, with Game 6 at Washington on Wednesday.

Artem Anisimov had a goal and an assist for the Rangers. New York’s other goal came from Marian Gaborik, who scored the Game 3 winner after nearly 115 minutes. The teams had two days off to recuperate from that marathon, which began Wednesday night and finished after midnight. The Rangers’ 2-1 victory in that game might have given them control of the series.

But anyone counting out the Capitals must have forgotten that they haven’t lost two games in a row since March 22-23. Or that they also trailed 2-1 in the first round before eliminating the reigning NHL champion Boston Bruins in seven games. Then there’s this: The Capitals are 3-0 after OT losses this postseason.

They’re also growing accustomed to playing tight ones: 10 of their 11 playoff games have been decided by one goal, and only once has Washington scored as many as four. It’s a long way from when they were winning playoff games by 4-0 or 5-3 — and, incidentally, never making it beyond the second round.

“We’re a grinding team now. Our identity has kind of flipped. We try not to give up much defensively, keep pucks out of the middle and along the boards, and we’ve been successful with that,” forward Brooks Laich said. “Talking to friends and family, they’re sitting at home, biting their nails and pulling their hair out. They’re just dying for a 4-0 or 5-0 win. But I keep telling them those days are gone a little bit.”

Indeed, the Capitals entered Saturday second in the postseason in blocked shots, behind only the Rangers, and the hosts compiled a 26-7 edge in that stat Saturday.

“The guys are committed,” said Hunter, who replaced fired Bruce Boudreau in November.

The beneficiary was Capitals goalie Braden Holtby, who needed to make only 18 saves and didn’t need to turn away a shot until nearly 5½ minutes into the game. By then, Washington had taken seven shots.

At the end of the first period, the Capitals had a 14-3 edge in shots. The final tally was 26-20 in Washington’s favor.

The biggest, of course, came off the stick of Green, who missed 50 games this season because of a right ankle injury, then abdominal surgery.

“Before he was injured a lot,” Backstrom noted, “we used to see that all the time.”

NOTES: The Capitals are 6-1 this postseason when scoring first. … Ovechkin’s goal was his 29th in the , moving him one away from Peter Bondra’s team record.

NHL Playoffs: Capitals clip Rangers in Game 4 to even series is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NHL Playoffs: Capitals clip Rangers in Game 4 to even series

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MLB: Yankees’ Rivera hints 2012 may be his last year

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speaks to the media after announces his retirement from the duirng a press conference at on January 24, 2012 in the of .
(January 23, 2012 – Photo by Mike / North America)

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Mariano Rivera hinted 2012 could be his final year in the major leagues, saying he won’t announce his long-term plans until after the season.

The 42-year-old closer says he has reached a decision about whether he will retire or return in 2013 but said he won’t reveal it until “maybe October.”

“I know,” Rivera said. “I’ll tell you when I’m ready.”

Rivera, the career saves leader with 603, is signed through this season. Following the of Bernie Williams, and Jorge Posada, Rivera and 37-year-old are the only remaining players from the core group that led the Yankees’ .

“My kids want me home,” Rivera said Monday. “They were ready for me to stay home. I had to tell them, I have a job to do. I have obligations.”

Should he retire, Rivera has many interests away from .

“I have my church, my family,” he said. “I’ve been blessed in amazing ways. I’ve have a great career, but at the same time, there’s other things to do.”

Rivera played catch with fellow reliever during the Yankees’ first workout of the year. When asked whether he was as excited as he was in his first big league camp almost 20 years ago, Rivera responded: “Believe it.”

“You come here to compete,” Rivera said. “I love to compete. I don’t come here for a free ride. I’m come here to get ready: the playoffs, the World Series, that’s the goal.”

Rivera was 1-2 with 44 saves in 49 chances and a 1.91 ERA. He was selected for his fourth straight All-Star appearances and 12th overall.

Rivera had an eventful offseason, undergoing surgery in December to remove polyps from his vocal chords.

“It did scare me,” Rivera said. “It did change a lot of things. It shows you how quick you can be gone. How important not to overlook anything. It could be cancer. I was relieved when everything came back negative.”

Rivera wasn’t able to talk for a week following the operation,

“Not being able to speak, I was going crazy,” he said, “but at the same time you appreciate that.”

Notes: DH Raul Ibanez has agreed to a $1.1 million, one-year contract that allows him to make $2.9 million more in performance bonuses, a person familiar with the agreement said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the deal had not been announced. The 39-year-old outfielder, who played with Philadelphia the last three seasons, is expected to be the Yankees’ primary designated hitter against right-handed starting pitchers. … The Yankees have an offer out to re-sign backup INF Eric Chavez.

… RHP Joba Chamberlain (elbow ligament replacement surgery) threw off a 5-inch half-mound for the fifth time and remains on to throw off a full mound on Feb. 28. … Lou Piniella, a special assistant to the general manager with San Francisco last season, will join a group of spring training instructors that also includes Yogi Berra, Reggie Jackson, Goose Gossage and David Wells. … Manager Joe Girardi said if he made up a lineup on Monday, would hit leadoff, with Robinson Cano batting third, Alex Rodriguez fourth and Mark Teixeira fifth.

MLB: Yankees’ Rivera hints 2012 may be his last year is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 MLB: Yankees’ Rivera hints 2012 may be his last year