Monday, February 25, 2008

Electronic Arts bids for Take-Two

(Reuters) - Video game giant Electronic Arts on Sunday said it had made an unsolicited $1.9 billion offer for "Grand Theft Auto" publisher Take-Two Interactive Software, escalating its battle with Activision for the title of biggest video game maker.

Electronic Arts said it had pursued the deal privately since December, and Take-Two on Sunday immediately rejected the offer, a 50 percent premium to its Friday close, and accused EA of trying to scoop up a company in turnaround with an "inadequate" bid just before the publication of its next hit.

The $26-per-share all-cash bid is Electronic Arts' answer to Activision Inc's $18 billion acquisition of the gaming unit of French media and telecoms giant Vivendi. That combination, announced last November, is set to challenge EA's long-standing industry dominance.

Electronic Arts, publisher of blockbuster games like "Madden" and "Need for Speed," would become the largest sports game maker by far if it buys Take Two.

The offer follows months of speculation that Take-Two would be acquired by a major games publisher or media firm, with News Corp and Viacom often mentioned as possible suitors as they eye the fast-growing video game industry.

Take-Two said the offer valued it at a "significant discount" to peers. EA's offer would be about 18 times its expected fiscal 2008 earnings, while France's Ubisoft trades at 34 times expected earnings in the year ending March 2009 and Activision, with a similar year, trades at 24 times.

Take-Two Chairman Strauss Zelnick, who helped oust former management last March after it was laid low by accounting scandals and controversy over its games, said he hadn't ruled out a potential deal.
 

Visa sets possible record $18.8 billion IPO

(Reuters) - Visa Inc, the world's largest credit-card network, on Monday said it may raise up to $18.8 billion in its eagerly awaited public sale of shares, which could make it the largest initial public offering ever.

The company filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to sell 406 million Class A shares at $37 to $42 each, resulting in proceeds of $15 billion to $17.1 billion. It said it might sell another 40.6 million shares to meet demand, boosting the potential size of the IPO to $18.8 billion.

A successful IPO would surpass the $10.6 billion offering in 2000 by AT&T Wireless Group.

San Francisco-based Visa plans to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "V."

The timing of Visa's offering is risky, as worries that the U.S. economy might be entering a recession have chilled investor demand for stocks and IPOs.

But shares of smaller rival MasterCard Inc (MA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) have more than quintupled since that card network went public in a $2.4 billion IPO in May 2006.

"MasterCard has been an explosive stock, and investors may hope Visa will be the same," said Steve Roukis, a managing director at Matrix Asset Advisors Inc in New York, which invests $1.7 billion.

Visa intends to set aside $3 billion of net proceeds to cover a wide variety of antitrust and other litigation.
 

Home Resales in U.S. Probably Dropped, Further Eroding Growth

(Bloomberg) -- Sales of existing homes in the U.S. probably dropped in January to the lowest level in at least nine years, according to a survey of economists, signaling the housing slump is deepening and will weigh on growth in 2008.

The National Association of Realtors will report that purchases fell 1.8 percent to an annual rate of 4.8 million, the fewest since record-keeping began in 1999, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 63 economists.

Mounting foreclosures are adding to a glut of unsold homes that is driving down property values. Would-be homebuyers may be waiting for even lower prices, keeping the housing market depressed for a third year and dragging the economy close to a recession.

``With the backdrop of elevated inventories of unsold homes and continued falling home prices, prospects for the housing market in general seem quite grim,'' said Dana Saporta, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort in New York.

The Realtors group is scheduled to release the report at 10 a.m. in Washington. Estimates in the Bloomberg News survey ranged from 4.65 million to 5 million.

For all of last year, sales of single-family homes declined 13 percent, the most since 1982, the group said Jan. 24. Earlier this month, it forecast sales this year would slip to 5.38 million, from 5.65 million for all of 2007.

The effects of the worst housing recession in 25 years have spread into other areas of the economy. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's general economic index fell this month to minus 24, the weakest reading in seven years.
 

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Allianz cuts jobs, structured finance at Dresdner

(Reuters) - Europe's biggest insurer, Allianz , is axing hundreds of jobs at its Dresdner Kleinwort investment bank and slashing its complex structured finance business, after suffering big fourth-quarter writedowns.

Allianz confirmed on Thursday it made a record net profit of nearly 8 billion euros ($11.79 billion) in 2007, despite the writedowns that pushed Dresdner into the red and halved the insurer's profit in the final three months of the year.

Allianz finance head Helmut Perlet said the market situation at the end of last month pointed to possible further writedowns of 300-400 million euros at Dresdner for the first quarter after about 1.5 billion euros of subprime writedowns in 2007.

Allianz unit Dresdner Bank, which in turn owns Dresdner Kleinwort, said it was shedding 450 jobs, most already axed, and cutting back on activity in structured investment vehicles (SIV) and other structured debt products, which spread the U.S. subprime loans crisis across the global banking system.

"Dresdner Bank will reduce its engagement in the SIV business, as the model of interest arbitrage faces a tough future," Allianz Chief Executive Michael Diekmann said.

Dresdner Bank said it would support its SIV, called K2, to ensure repayment of its senior debt, and had cut its size to $18.8 billion now from $31.2 billion in July.

Allianz said it was not clear whether, or to what extent, it might have to take K2 onto Dresdner's books, but it did not believe that supporting K2 would have a big impact on the group.
 

Microsoft to open up some key software blueprints

(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp said on Thursday that it would make key technology elements of some of its best-selling software products widely available to boost interoperability of its software with that of competitors and customers.

To make connecting Microsoft products with third-party software products easier, Microsoft will publish on its Web site key software blueprints, known as application program interfaces, pertaining to its high-volume products used by other Microsoft products.

Microsoft also pledged not to sue open-source developers for development or noncommercial distribution of those software blueprints.

In January, the European Commission launched new antitrust investigations into Microsoft to see whether the company broke competition rules to help its Web browser and its Office and Outlook products.
 

Dresdner Rescues $19 Billion SIV, Follows Citigroup

 (Bloomberg) -- Dresdner Bank AG, Germany's third- largest bank, agreed to rescue its $18.8 billion structured investment vehicle, joining Citigroup Inc. and HSBC Holdings Plc in bailing out funds crippled by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market.

Dresdner, a unit of Munich-based Allianz SE, will provide a credit line to enable the K2 fund to repay all of its senior debt, spokesman Ulrich Porwollik in Frankfurt said in a telephone interview. Dresdner will cut the size of the fund, which has been reduced from $31.2 billion since July, according to an e-mailed statement.

The bank is the last of the world's biggest financial institutions to put capital at risk salvaging a SIV from the seven-month freeze in credit markets. Banks including Citigroup, HSBC, Bank of Montreal and WestLB AG have disclosed plans to support their SIVs with $140 billion of assets.

``This is a potential threat to Dresdner Bank,'' said Thilo Mueller, managing director of MB Fund Advisory in Frankfurt. ``There is little liquidity for some of these assets and with comparative assets continuing to fall, you need to book further writedowns.''

SIVs, which use short-term borrowing to buy higher-yielding assets, have shrunk by $100 billion from $400 billion since August, according to Moody's Investors Service.

Exit Plan

``Allianz plans to exit K2 and the SIV business in general,'' Chief Financial Officer Helmut Perlet said today in an interview. ``The SIV business has no future.''

The fund, which Allianz expects will be wound down by year- end, is unlikely to cause a ``major negative hit'' if the assets are taken on to Dresdner's books because the company has the ``financial strength to sit out parts of the valuation declines,'' Perlet said.

Allianz's banking division, which is mostly Dresdner, wrote down more than 1.3 billion euros ($1.9 billion) on structured investment products, contributing to a 52 percent decline in fourth-quarter profit announced today. Europe's biggest insurer earned 665 million euros, missing the 729 million-euro median estimate of 12 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Allianz, which has fallen 19 percent this year, rose 1.91 euros, or 1.61 percent, to 120.27 euros at 4:25 p.m. in Frankfurt trading.

No Subprime

K2, named after the world's second-highest mountain in the Himalayas, was started in 1999 by Paul Clarke and Alan Harley, who previously helped manage Europe's first SIVs at Citigroup.

The fund has no ``direct exposure'' to securities backed by subprime or midprime debt, the mortgages made to U.S. homeowners with poor or limited credit histories. K2 also doesn't contain collateralized debt obligations based on asset-backed notes, the statement said. CDOs are securities packaged from mortgage bonds and other assets.

One of the SIV's three portfolios has entered a ``restricted operating period,'' a rule designed to protect senior investors that prevents it making payments to lower- ranking bondholders. The credit line from Dresdner may enable K2 to end the restriction, K2 said in a separate statement today.

``Such an outcome, however, cannot be assured,'' the statement said. K2 didn't disclose the size of the portfolio.

SIV Defaults

The SIV bailouts avert the risk of forced sales of assets by the funds. Concern that fire sales by SIVs would further roil credit markets prompted U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to begin talks on setting up an $80 billion rescue fund last year. Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York and Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America Corp. abandoned the so- called SuperSIV after banks began rescuing their own funds, led by London-based HSBC.

More than $20 billion of SIVs have defaulted after being forced to start winding down since August, including funds set up by New York-based Ceres Capital Partners LLC and Cheyne Capital Management (UK) LLP in London.

Whistlejacket Capital Ltd., set up by Standard Chartered Plc, may default today after the company's receiver, Deloitte & Touche LLP, froze debts last week. The London-based bank abandoned a rescue plan for SIV yesterday, prompting Moody's to downgrade Whistlejacket's senior debt rating by three steps to B2, five levels below investment grade.

``It's a positive signal that Dresdner is willing to step in and support its SIV, but the story is far from resolved as we saw with Standard Chartered's Whistlejacket SIV,'' said Henry Tabe, an analyst at Moody's in London. Moody's rates K2's senior debt at Aaa.
 

U.S. Stocks Fall, Erasing Early Gains; Exxon, GE Shares Retreat

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell after manufacturing in the Philadelphia region unexpectedly contracted the most in seven years and a drop in oil prices dragged down energy shares.
 
Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp. and General Electric Co. declined, helping erase a 76-point gain in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The market's losses were limited by gains in technology companies after Citigroup Inc. told clients to buy shares of Cisco Systems Inc., the largest maker of computer- networking equipment.
 
 

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Ackman Proposes Bond Insurer Split, Policyholder Veto

(Bloomberg) -- Hedge fund manager William Ackman distributed a plan to restructure bond insurers that may prevent dividends from being paid to the parent companies and minimize losses for holders of asset-backed securities.

Ackman, the managing partner of Pershing Square Capital Management LP in New York, calls for a corporate structure in which dividends would flow to the so-called structured finance unit from the municipal insurer, according to his proposal, sent yesterday to regulators, lawmakers and banks.

Ackman, who is betting against MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc., the two largest bond insurers, stands to benefit from his plan. He has short positions that would gain in value if the holding companies were to default on their debts.

The proposal ``offers the best prospect for protecting the most policyholders and ensuring a viable ongoing municipal bond insurance market,'' New York law firm Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge LLP, which performed an analysis for Pershing, said in a memo included with the presentation. Copies were obtained by Bloomberg News and confirmed by Ackman.

Ackman's plan has two separate boards of directors, one for the municipal insurer and the other for the structured finance unit. Each board would include policyholders. The municipal insurer would pay dividends to its structured-finance parent only when the board was satisfied the unit could remain AAA rated. The structured finance insurer would send dividends to the holding company only after its board determined the money wasn't needed to cover claims.
 

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Credit Suisse Writedowns to Cut Profit by $1 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- Credit Suisse Group discovered pricing errors on bonds that will cut first-quarter profit by about $1 billion, prompting the biggest share decline in more than five years.

Switzerland's second-largest bank took $2.85 billion of writedowns on asset-backed securities after an internal review found ``mismarkings'' by a group of traders and credit markets worsened. The Zurich-based bank said in a statement today that it's assessing whether 2007 earnings were also affected.

The announcement comes two days after Qatar said it was buying shares in Credit Suisse and a week after the company reported net writedowns of 2 billion Swiss francs ($1.8 billion) for 2007, a fraction of those disclosed by bigger Swiss competitor UBS AG. Chief Executive Officer Brady Dougan said on Feb. 12 that he was ``more optimistic than many'' about prospects for a debt market recovery.

``I'm speechless,'' said Georg Kanders, an analyst at WestLB in Dusseldorf with a ``buy'' rating on Credit Suisse. ``To announce this just a week after reporting earnings is a major blow. This will again put the whole sector under pressure.''

Credit Suisse fell as much as 10 percent, and was down 4.40 francs, or 7.7 percent, to 52.35 francs by 1:15 p.m. in Swiss trading, cutting the company's market value to 60.8 billion francs. UBS AG, the biggest Swiss bank, dropped 0.8 percent.

`Loss of Confidence'

Credit-default swaps on Credit Suisse's subordinated debt rose to a record, according to Deutsche Bank AG. Credit-default swaps, used to speculate on a company's ability to repay debt, rise as perceptions of credit quality worsen.

Credit Suisse blamed the writedowns on ``significant adverse first quarter 2008 market developments'' and pricing errors ``by a small number of traders'' in the structured credit trading business. The company estimated that it remained profitable so far in the first quarter.

The announcement may raise questions about oversight at the bank less than a month after Societe Generale SA reported the worst trading loss in banking history following unauthorized bets by trader Jerome Kerviel.

``The big question mark is about the bank's control systems,'' said Stefan Raetzer, who helps manage about $28 billion at Allianz Global Investors in Frankfurt. ``The writedown isn't as much of a problem here as the loss of confidence.''

Credit Suisse spokesman Marc Dosch said a ``small number'' of traders had been suspended, declining to provide their names or location. The internal review will be finished before the publication of the annual report, scheduled for March 18, he said. The company will hold a conference call for reporters and analysts at 3 p.m. Zurich time today.

Dougan

The loss is the biggest setback for Dougan, 48, since he took over as CEO from Oswald Gruebel in May after heading the investment bank for three years. Gruebel returned the bank to stable earnings after a decade of management turnover, bungled acquisitions and the first criminal conviction of a bank in Japan. Credit Suisse's writedowns follow about $19 billion in debt and loan markdowns at UBS.

``It unfortunately just reinforces the reputation that the large Swiss banks have generated over the last year for financial ineptitude,'' Peter Thorne, a London-based analyst at Helvea Ltd., said in a note to clients. ``Whilst we had received some assurance that the Credit Suisse balance sheet is not as laden with problem securities as UBS, this disclosure just raises the prospect that they may be simply bad at knowing what problems they do have.''
 

Cadbury profits dip, shares slip on no cash return

(Reuters) - The world's largest confectionery maker, Cadbury Schweppes (CBRY.L: Quote, Profile, Research), missed analyst forecasts with a 2 percent fall in 2007 profits and its shares dipped as it warned there will be no cash return from its drinks demerger.

Cadbury also gave a cautious outlook on Tuesday for the North American soft drinks business which is to be spun off at the end of the second-quarter, with profit margins down sharply in 2007 and unlikely to start to recover until 2009.

The London-based group had intended to return cash to shareholders on the demerger but has now decided against this in order to preserve investment-grade ratings for both companies. Cadbury shares slumped 6.1 percent to 575 pence, the FTSE 100's biggest loser, by 5 a.m. EST.

"There is unlikely to be a return of cash to shareholders as we have decided to maintain both companies on investment-grade ratings," Chief Executive Todd Stitzer told a conference call.

Cadbury decided last October to spin off its 7 billion pound ($13.7 billion) drinks business -- to be called Dr Pepper Snapple Group -- and list it in New York, after a world credit squeeze derailed a lucrative sale to private-equity buyers.

The group, which makes Dairy Milk chocolate, Trident gum and Halls cough drops, reported 2007 underlying pretax profit of 915 million pounds, below an analyst forecast range of 922 to 936 million and a consensus forecast of 929 million pounds.

Cadbury is raising the 2007 dividend by 11 percent to 15.5p.
 

Medtronic quarterly net falls

(Reuters) - Medical device maker Medtronic Inc (MDT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Tuesday said quarterly earnings fell on charges related to the acquisition of Kyphon.
 
Fiscal third-quarter net earnings were $77 million, or 7 cents a share, compared with $710 million, or 61 cents a share, a year earlier.
 

Monday, February 18, 2008

Euro zone growth may be weaker than hoped: Noyer

(Reuters) - European Central Bank (ECB) Governing Council member Christian Noyer said in an interview released on Sunday euro zone growth might be weaker than hoped as a result of market turmoil but he saw no "big setback."

In an interview with the Financial Times newspaper, Noyer said French banks' exposure to the U.S. subprime market was lower than others' and the European Union economy should resist financial turmoil better than that of the United States.

"Growth may be weaker than we hoped but I don't see a big setback," Noyer said when asked about the impact of the subprime crisis on the European economy.

ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet warned after the last rate meeting on February 7 that the euro zone economy might grow slower than potential in 2008.

In December ECB economists forecast 2008 growth of around 2 percent, but a number of ECB policymakers have suggested this might need to be revised down when fresh projections are published in March.

"If we are a little bit below potential, but still close to the average we've had for a number of years... I don't think that makes (structural) reforms impossible," Noyer said in a transcript of the interview released ahead of publication in Monday's edition.
 

Westland/Hallmark Recalls Record Amount of U.S. Beef

(Bloomberg) -- Westland/Hallmark Meat Co., the supplier of ground beef to U.S. school lunch programs, recalled a record 143.4 million pounds of meat after the government said it was unfit for humans.

The company, based in Chino, California, withdrew all raw and frozen products made since Feb. 1, 2006, because some of the cattle weren't fully inspected, the Department of Agriculture said in a statement yesterday. A total of 37 million pounds went to nutrition programs, including schools, since October 2006.

The order relates to so-called downer cattle discovered between the normal USDA inspection before slaughter and the killing of the animals, the department said. Downer cattle, those unable to walk, are banned from the food chain as a precaution against Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy, also known as mad-cow disease, the USDA said.

The risk of consumers contracting BSE from the meat is ``negligible,'' the USDA said in a separate statement. ``The prevalence of the disease in the United States is extremely low,'' with two animals testing positive for the disease out of 759,000 tested nationwide since June 2004, the department said.

A video taken at the plant released by the Humane Society of the U.S. shows workers kicking cows and using electric prods and forklifts to make them move. Two Westland/Hallmark former employees were charged with animal cruelty by the San Bernardino District Attorney's office Feb. 15.

Operations Ceased

The company ceased operations last month after the video was revealed. In a statement posted on the company's Web site Feb. 3, Westland/Hallmark president Steve Mendell said the company was cooperating fully with the USDA. Two messages left yesterday with Westland/Hallmark seeking comment weren't immediately returned. Today is a U.S. public holiday.

The U.S. consumed 28 billion pounds of beef in 2006 and the U.S. beef industry was worth $71 billion that year on a retail basis, according to the USDA. Beef exports totaled 1.15 billion pounds worth $1.63 billion.

The recall shouldn't create a supply problem, Kim Essex, vice president of communications at the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, said in a Bloomberg Television interview from Denver today. ``I am very confident in the safety of the beef supply,'' she said.

The recalled meat is considered a low risk to food supply because almost all the meat has either been consumed or is being held from distribution, Richard Raymond, USDA under secretary for food safety, said in a teleconference call yesterday.

Hamburger Patties

The ground beef bought for schools was processed into products such as hamburger patties, chili meat and taco meat, Bill Sessions from the USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service, said on the call, according to a transcript.

The recall is categorized as a Class II, meaning ``there is a remote probability of adverse health consequences from the use of the product,'' according to Raymond.

The recall is more than four times the size of the previous record, a 35 million-pound removal of Thorn Apple Valley Inc. ready-to-eat meats potentially contaminated with listeria in January 1999, Raymond said.

``All of the larger recalls done in the past were all Class I,'' Raymond said. ``In this one we feel there is a very, very remote possibility of anyone suffering health consequences.''

About 150 U.S. school districts are no longer using beef from Hallmark Meat Packing Co., the Associated Press reported, without saying where it got the information.

Kidney Exports

Schools in Washington state and California said they wouldn't serve students beef for now, Agence France-Presse reported, citing unidentified local officials.

Hamburger patties and meatballs in schools in South Florida are being destroyed as part of the recall, the South Florida Sun- Sentinel newspaper reported, without saying where it got the information.

Westland/Hallmark's exports last year consisted of kidneys and livers to Ivory Coast and livers to Angola, the USDA said. There have been no exports to Japan or South Korea since at least 2003, the department said.

Japan and South Korea banned U.S. beef imports after the first U.S. case of mad-cow disease was found in 2003. Japan, once the largest U.S. beef export market, now only imports meat from animals aged 20 months or younger, which have a lower risk.

The 27-nation European Union only imports hormone-free beef from the U.S., which has to be produced separately from other livestock, Michael Mann, a spokesman for agriculture and rural development at the European Commission, said by telephone today. The EU exported 87 tons of beef to the U.S. in 2006.
 

Rio Seeks Higher Prices Than Vale in Iron-Ore Talks

(Bloomberg) -- Rio Tinto Group, the world's second- largest iron-ore producer, is seeking bigger price increases from Asia steelmakers than Brazilian rival Cia. Vale do Rio Doce.

Rio wants to receive a ``freight premium'' to reflect the lower cost for customers in China, Japan and South Korea of shipping ore from ports in Australia rather than Brazil, it said today in a statement distributed by the Regulatory News Service. Nippon Steel Corp., JFE Holdings Inc. and Posco today said they agreed to a 65 percent increase in Vale's prices from April 1.

This ``could mark the end of the `one price fits all' settlements of the last few decades,'' Michael Rawlinson, head of mining, resources and energy at Liberum Capital Ltd. in London, wrote today in a report. A full recovery by Rio of the freight premium to China would mean a ``massive'' 154 percent boost in ore prices, he said.

In comparison, JFE agreed to a 71 percent boost for higher- grade ore from Vale's Carajas mine in Brazil, while the biggest- ever annual gain was 71.5 percent in the year that started April 1, 2005.

Contract prices for the steelmaking ingredient have risen to a record for a sixth straight year as China boosts output of the metal to feed a construction boom. Soaring freight fees last year added to the price increases for Asian steelmakers and made iron ore from Australia more cost effective than Brazilian supplies.

Carajas Settlement

Rio Tinto ``will continue to negotiate to obtain a freight premium, to reflect its proximity to Asia and its major customers,'' Sam Walsh, chief executive officer of the London- based company's iron ore unit, said today in the statement.

Rio will also seek ``further customer clarification about the settlements, and in particular the settlement for Carajas ore, which is the relevant reference ore for Rio Tinto products,'' Walsh said.

BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's largest mining company, tried and failed to negotiate a freight premium in 2005, Macquarie analyst Jim Lennon said today by telephone from London. The company didn't get the support of Rio and other producers at the time, he added.

``This has never happened before, but it's certainly a possibility,'' Lennon said. ``The fact that spot prices are three times higher than contract prices means that 65 percent is almost being viewed as a disappointment by the market.''

BHP, based in Melbourne, has started seeking regulatory approvals for its increased $141 billion all-share hostile bid for Rio, which was rejected by Rio on Feb. 6 as too low. A combination of the companies would rival Vale in iron-ore output.
 

Friday, February 15, 2008

U.S. January Import Prices Rise More Than Forecast

(Bloomberg) -- Prices of goods imported into the U.S. rose more than forecast in January, pushing the increase for the last 12 months to a record, led by rising costs for energy products and food.

The 1.7 percent increase in the import price index followed a revised 0.2 percent decrease the prior month, the Labor Department reported today in Washington. Prices excluding petroleum rose 0.6 percent.

Higher import costs, sustained over several months, may increase the chances U.S. companies will try to follow their foreign competitors in increasing prices. Still, Federal Reserve policy makers remain focused on risks to growth and are prepared to lower interest rates further, Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told U.S. lawmakers yesterday.

``Growth is still the biggest worry, but inflation concerns are alive,'' said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at Global Insight Inc. in Lexington, Massachusetts. ``The Fed will be cutting interest rates.''

Import prices were forecast to rise 0.5 percent, according to the median estimate of 52 economists in a Bloomberg News survey, after being previously reported as unchanged in December. Forecasts ranged from a gain of 2 percent to a drop of 1 percent.

Treasury Yields

Treasury securities, which rose earlier today, stayed higher after the figures. Ten-year note yields were at 3.76 percent at 8:38 a.m. in New York, from 3.82 percent late yesterday.

Compared with a year earlier, prices of imported goods increased 13.7 percent, the biggest jump since record-keeping began in 1982. That followed a 10.4 percent year-over-year increase in the prior month. Excluding petroleum, prices rose 3.6 percent in the 12 months to January.

The import-price index is the first of three monthly price gauges from the Labor Department. The government is scheduled to release its measure of consumer prices on Feb. 20 and wholesale prices on Feb. 26. Both reports are forecast to show that excluding fuel costs, price pressures were contained.

Fed officials have trimmed forecasts for growth after the U.S. lost jobs in January and consumer spending slowed because of falling home and stock values and rising energy costs. The central bank will cut rates a further half-point by March 18 after 2.25 percentage points of reductions since September, futures trading shows.

Bernanke Message

``The outlook for the economy has worsened in recent months, and the downside risks to growth have increased,'' Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee in Washington yesterday. ``To date, inflation expectations appear to have remained reasonably well anchored.''

The price of imported petroleum and petroleum products rose 5.5 percent after a decline of 1.9 percent the prior month. Prices were 67 percent higher than at the same time a year earlier.

Crude oil prices, which reached $100 a barrel on Jan. 2 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest since trading began in 1983, have retreated in recent weeks.

Excluding all fuels, including natural gas, import prices rose 0.7 percent for the month and were up 3.3 percent for the 12-month period.

Food and beverage imports were 3.1 percent more expensive, the biggest gain since March 2005. Costs of imported industrial supplies rose 4 percent and were up 37 percent from a year earlier, the biggest year-over-year increase since March 2000.

Dollar Falls

The dollar, which weakened nearly 8 percent since the beginning of 2007 against a trade-weighted basket of currencies of major U.S. trading partners, also is making imports more expensive.

The cost of imported capital goods fell 0.2 percent, the first decrease in nine months, today's report showed. Prices of imported automobiles, parts and engines were unchanged and costs for imported consumer goods excluding autos rose 0.3 percent.

Some companies are getting hurt even after attempts to recover costs. Kraft Foods Inc., the world's second-largest foodmaker, last month said its fourth-quarter profit fell, in part because price increases on cheese didn't cover dairy expenses that surged 50 percent from the year-earlier quarter.

Others have gained some success. Tiremakers including Bridgestone Corp., the world's biggest, have boosted prices to counter higher costs of rubber and synthetic alternatives made from petroleum.
 

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Treasury 10-Year Notes Fall as U.S. Trade Deficit Narrows

(Bloomberg) -- Treasury 10-year notes fell for a third straight day as a government report showed the U.S. trade deficit narrowed more than forecast in December, renewing concern that inflation may accelerate.

Two-year notes yielded the least compared with 10-year debt since 2004 before Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke's economic testimony, in which he may signal the Fed is ready to cut interest rates further to keep the economy from dropping into a recession.

``The Fed is going to be aggressive and proactive, and with that you have to be concerned with inflationary pressures building,'' said Sean Simko, who oversees $8 billion in Oaks, Pennsylvania, at SEI Investments Co. ``Inflationary pressures will be tomorrow's problem, which is going to sell the long part of the curve.''

Ten-year note yields rose 4 basis points, or 0.04 percentage point, to 3.77 percent at 9:48 a.m. in New York, according to bond broker Cantor Fitzgerald LP. The price of the 3 1/2 percent security due in February 2018 fell 11/32, or $3.44 per $1,000 face amount, to 97 3/4. Two-year note yields increased 2 basis points to 1.93 percent.
 

New York's Dinallo Considers Splitting Bond Insurers

(Bloomberg) -- Bond insurers may be split into two pieces to bolster credit ratings and protect municipalities and bondholders, New York's top insurance regulator plans to tell Congress.

One part would operate the profitable municipal bond insurance business, while the other would handle so-called structured finance products, according to testimony prepared for Eric Dinallo, the New York State insurance superintendent. Dinallo is scheduled to address a U.S. congressional committee today.

``Our first priority will be to protect the municipal bondholders and issuers,'' according to Dinallo's testimony. ``We cannot allow the millions of individual Americans who invested in what was a low-risk investment lose money because of subprime excesses. Nor should subprime problems cause taxpayers to unnecessarily pay more to borrow for essential capital projects.''
 

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Retail sales rebound

(Reuters) - An unexpected rise in January retail sales, reported by the government on Wednesday, fired up hopes the U.S. economy might skirt recession despite the pressure on consumers from a weakening housing market.

The Commerce Department said sales at U.S. retailers rose 0.3 percent in January to a seasonally adjusted $382.91 billion on higher sales of new cars, gasoline and clothing.

That was sharply contrary to Wall Street analysts' forecasts for a 0.2 percent drop and helped drive stock prices higher in early trading while government bond prices fell.

"The report strengthens the case of those who think we'll skirt a recession," said Jim Awad, chairman of W.P. Stewart & Co. Ltd. in New York, but he cautioned the optimism might be short-lived.

"People will say this is subject to revision and it's inconsistent with other incoming data indicating softness and weakness in the economy," Awad said.

The dollar's value strengthened against other key currencies.
 

U.S. Economy: January Retail Sales Unexpectedly Rise

(Bloomberg) -- Retail sales in the U.S. unexpectedly rose in January, easing concern that the world's largest economy has already slipped into a recession.

The 0.3 percent increase was led by spending on autos, clothes and gasoline, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The figure followed a 0.4 percent decrease the previous month. Purchases excluding automobiles and gasoline were unchanged.

``Today's report will diminish recession anxieties, but it doesn't dispel them altogether,'' said Richard DeKaser, chief economist at National City Corp. in Cleveland, who accurately forecast the sales gain. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President William Poole said yesterday ``the best bet'' is the U.S. will avoid a recession.

Demand from consumers, whose spending accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, will probably wane in coming months, forcing the Fed to lower interest rates further, economists said. Macy's Inc., Target Corp. and Limited Brands Inc. said last week that sales at stores open more than a year declined in January. Macy's cut 2,300 jobs.

Treasury securities dropped after the report, with 10-year note yields rising to 3.70 percent at 10:22 a.m. in New York, from 3.66 percent late yesterday. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index added 0.6 percent to 1,356.24. At the same time, the S&P Retailing Index, which includes Home Depot Inc. and Best Buy Co., retreated 0.4 percent.

Inventories Increase

A separate report showed declining sales at U.S. businesses in December led to the biggest increase in inventories of unsold goods in a year and a half.

The 0.6 percent gain in inventories, the highest since July 2006, followed a 0.4 percent rise in November, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Sales declined 0.5 percent, the steepest since January 2007, after a 1.4 percent gain the prior month.

Retail sales were projected to fall 0.3 percent after an originally reported 0.4 percent drop the prior month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

Threats to Spending

The worst housing slump in a quarter century and shrinking access to credit threatens to hurt spending this quarter. The economy lost 17,000 jobs in January, the first drop in more than four years. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index has fallen three consecutive months, the longest losing streak since 2003, eroding households' investment portfolios.

Consumers are increasingly limiting expenses to those they can't avoid. The amount Americans must spend each month on debt service, housing, medical costs, and food and energy bills rose to 66.9 percent of their total spending in December, the highest since records began in 1980, according to Bloomberg figures.

``Food prices have been rising and gasoline prices have been rising and so we got a little boost to overall sales there,'' said Kevin Logan, senior market economist at Dresdner Kleinwort in New York, who forecast retail sales would advance 0.2 percent. ``There's evidence here that the slump in the housing market is affecting spending.''

Excluding automobiles, purchases gained 0.3 percent after a 0.3 percent decline in December.

Car Dealers

Sales at automobile dealerships and parts stores rose 0.6 percent after a decline of 1.1 percent in December, the Commerce Department said.

That contrasts with industry figures that showed cars and light trucks sold last month at a 15.2 million annual pace, down 6.7 percent from December. Auto industry sales this year are forecast to drop to the lowest level since 1998.

``There is still a lot of concern about consumers,'' said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York, said in an interview with Bloomberg Radio. ``Car sales did really badly during the month. People are going to continue to worry about this and darn well ought to continue to worry.''

Filling station sales rose 2 percent in January after remaining unchanged the prior month, today's report showed. Regular gasoline reached as high as $3.11 a gallon in early January, about 11 cents more than the average for the prior month, according to AAA. Excluding gas, retail sales rose 0.1 percent.

Sales also rose at clothing retailers, which posted a 1.4 percent increase, and grocery and beverage stores, which gained 0.6 percent. Purchases at non-store retailers, which include online and catalog sales, rose 0.5 percent.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

JD Group: More cases pending

(Fin24) - The Financial Services Providers' ombud is investigating eight other cases pertaining to the lending practices of furniture retailer JD Group.


This follows a ruling by FSP obmud Charles Pillai, which found that JD Group subsidiary Barnetts had circumvented the FAIS Act.


The company was ordered to pay back charges, interest on those charges and case fees to a customer who had bought a television and stove on credit, after Pillai found the customer - Ntiya Thuliswe Gumede, a domestic worker earning R300 a week - had not been made aware of the terms and conditions of the sale of a stove and television she had bought at Barnetts' Port Shepstone branch.


David Davidson at the ombud's office says they had eight cases relating to JD Group, prior to the determination being made public.


Davidson says that the cases are still to be investigated, first to determine whether they fall within their jurisdiction and also whether they any grounds.


The complaints relate to dealings with, among others: JD group businesses Bradlows, Hi-Fi Corporation, Russells, and Price n Pride, as well as Ellerines, Lewis, The Furniture Shop and OK Furniture.
 
 

Vodafone still after Vodacom?

(Fin24) - Any notion that Vodafone will give in to Telkom's rejection of its offer for a controlling stake in Vodacom (the duo's joint cellular business) has been dismissed - at least given Vodafone CE Arun Sarin's declaration that Africa and Asia were firmly on Vodafone's growth radar screen.


In a carefully crafted speech steering clear of the company's intention to up its control of Vodacom, Sarin - addressing a large audience at the 3GSM Mobile Word Conference in Barcelona, Spain - said South Africa and India were two countries in emerging markets critical to Vodafone's growth strategy.


"Last year we recorded 15% growth in our South African-based business," said Sarin, adding that with most markets across Europe reaching saturation South Africa and India were critical to the company's growth plans.


In India - a market in which Vodafone made its foray after acquiring a controlling stake in Bharti Telecoms - the company had signed up nearly 1.5m subscribers.


"Our target in that particular market is to sign up close to 300m subscribers over the next three years," said Sarin.


Asked by Fin24 to state weather Vodafone would return for Vodacom with a revised offer, Sarin declined to answer before quickly making a dash to the exit door of a packed auditorium with a horde of Vodacom executives in tow.
 
 

Platinum sets lifetime high

(Fin24) - Platinum hit a record high for the ninth straight trading day on Tuesday as concerns deepened over output losses in top producer South Africa due to a power crisis, analysts said.


Gold fell as much as 1% as the dollar gained ground versus the euro after Warren Buffett told CNBC television that he had offered to take over the liabilities of monoline bond insurers. But the metal later pared losses.


Platinum rose to a high of $1 965 an ounce before falling to $1 943/1 950 by 17:50, against $1 933/1 941 in New York late on Monday.


"You know that platinum demand is increasing on the back of emission controls and you know that supplies are going to be squeezed. So it just makes sense to be long in this market," said Johannesburg-based Walter De Wet, analyst at Standard Bank.


"There might be slight over-reaction as everybody is on the bandwagon because of the recent price rise, but there is also some realisation that things are going to get tighter. We believe that the bias is on the upside."


Platinum's rally, which has sent prices up 30% in just three weeks, gained pace after Anglo Platinum, the world's biggest producer, said on Monday the power problem alone would cut output by as much as 120 000 ounces in 2008. It had already cost 30 000 ounces in lost output this year.


Northam Platinum said on Tuesday its production fell 16.5% to 150 755 ounces the July-December period of 2007 from a year earlier and saw its output at the same level in the next six months, provided mines got 90% power.


The market nervously awaits financial results of Impala Platinum, the world's second-biggest producer of the metal, on Thursday for more cues on total production losses.


"It's a chronic problem. It has been a deficit market for many years and it looks like it has returned to a significant deficit market again," said David Holmes, director of metals sales at Dresdner Kleinwort Investment Bank.


Mines across South Africa, which accounts for four-fifths of the world's supply of the metal, ground to a halt for five days at the height of the power crisis last month. Platinum is used in jewellery and auto catalysts to clean exhaust fumes.


Negotiations were under way for South African state-owned power utility Eskom to buy surplus electricity from local producers as part of its bid to solve the nation's energy crisis, Public Enterprises Minister Alec Erwin said on Monday.


A spokesperson at Eskom said the company was in discussions with the government to ensure sufficient funding to meet its expansion programme.
 
 

Paulson, U.S. Banks Forge Foreclosure-Freeze Deal

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and four other U.S. lenders agreed with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to take new steps to help borrowers in danger of foreclosure stay in their homes.

Paulson and the banks offered a 30-day freeze on some foreclosures while loan modifications are considered. The Treasury chief, with Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson, said today at a news conference in Washington that ``Project Lifeline'' would help stabilize communities disrupted by mortgage defaults.

``If someone is willing to make a call, to reach out, there's a chance they can save their home,'' Paulson said. ``As our economy works through this difficult period, we will look for additional opportunities to try to avoid preventable foreclosures.''

The program is designed to help a broad range of homeowners, not just subprime debtors who borrowed more than they could afford. Still, it won't help everyone, Paulson said. The U.S. housing correction ``is not over'' and ``the worst is just beginning'' for subprime borrowers who face higher interest rates in the next two years, he said.

In a statement, the banks said the program would start with a letter to homeowners more than 90 days delinquent on payments that lays out procedures for them to ``pause'' the foreclosure process. The homeowner has 10 days to respond to the notice and give additional financial information so the lender is able to weigh new payment options.

Loan Types

Subprime, Alt-A and prime borrowers are eligible, according to the plan. Subprime mortgages are made to borrowers with poor credit or high debt. Alt-A loans are for borrowers who want atypical terms, such as proof-of-income waivers or investment- property collateral, without sufficient compensating attributes, such as larger down payments.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co., Washington Mutual Inc. and Countrywide Financial Corp. will also participate in the plan. All six are members of Hope Now, the alliance of lenders, trade groups and counselors formed last year to head off a surge of foreclosures by identifying and working with borrowers struggling to meet higher payments.

The Treasury chief said the six banks account for half of the U.S. mortgage market, and called on other lenders to adopt the plan as well.

Rate Freeze

Paulson, who as recently as last month opposed a moratorium on foreclosures, wants lenders to go beyond earlier pledges to freeze subprime interest rates for five years. The deepest housing slump in a generation is threatening consumer spending and the job market, pushing the economy to the verge of a recession.

Jackson said the plan is a ``responsible, timely effort'' aimed at encouraging borrowers to come forward if they're having trouble making payments.

``In some parts of our nation, the foreclosure crisis is have a devastating impact on neighborhoods and communities,'' said Floyd Robinson, head of Bank of America's home-loan business. He stressed that ``homeowners can only take advantage of this program by taking action -- they must respond when they hear from us.''

Democratic Complaints

Paulson last week heard complaints from Democrats in Congress that the number of homeowners receiving relief so far has been insufficient. ``We are now in the midst of one of the most serious economic crises we have seen in recent years,'' Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who heads the House Financial Services Committee, said in Boston yesterday.

Federal Reserve officials project about 2 million homeowners face higher mortgage rates over the next two years as their loans reset higher. Economists at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. estimate foreclosures this year will be about 1 million more than average, a level that FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair has said ``is just too high.'' They average about 600,000 in a typical year.

``This is good, but we've seen this over and over again,'' said Kathleen Day, a spokeswoman for the Center for Responsible Lending in Washington. ``The fact that they keep having to roll out subsequent rescue plans every few weeks underscores that each plan is inadequate.''
 

GM Posts Loss on North America; Overseas Profit Rises

(Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp., the world's largest automaker, posted a fourth-quarter loss on shrinking sales in North America while revenue overseas rose.

The shares gained as much as 2.6 percent in New York trading as the Detroit-based company recorded a profit after excluding one-time costs. GM's net loss of $722 million followed year- earlier net income of $950 million.

The results indicate Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner is delivering on his pledge to rely more on overseas sales while cutting expenses at home. Wagoner said he will offer buyouts to speed the hiring of lower-paid new workers in the U.S., where industrywide sales are projected to fall to a 10-year low this year.

``Wagoner is doing the right things; he's just doing them at a time when the economy might be masking some of the favorable benefits from his actions,'' said Pete Hastings, a fixed-income analyst at Morgan Keegan & Co. in Memphis, Tennessee. Buyouts for 74,000 United Auto Workers members would be ``money well spent,'' he said.

The quarterly per-share loss was $1.28, versus the year- earlier profit of $1.68. Automotive revenue rose 7 percent to $46.7 billion, GM said in a statement today.

Not counting costs and gains the company considers one-time, GM reported an adjusted profit of $64 million, or 8 cents a share. On that basis, analysts estimated a loss of 64 cents. In North America, GM lost $1.1 billion, excluding some costs. By that measure, analysts predicted a loss of $400 million.

Shares Rise

GM rose 46 cents to $27.58 at 11:34 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading after reaching $27.83 earlier. Through yesterday, the shares had advanced 9 percent this year, the most in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The adjusted profit stemmed mostly from a $1.6 billion tax benefit, Chief Financial Officer Fritz Henderson said. The tax gain stems from the sale of the Allison transmission unit and a $7.7 billion reduction in GM's overall pension and retiree health-care liabilities, he said.

``It was a tough quarter in North America,'' Henderson told reporters today in Detroit. ``Volumes were down, and there was tougher pricing because we had a full incentive load for our pickups.''

2007 Loss

The full-year deficit was a record $38.7 billion and included a $39 billion expense in the third quarter related to a tax-accounting change. In 2006, GM lost $1.98 billion, or $3.50 a share.

The third quarter included the $1.6 billion tax benefit and $768 million in one-time expenses.

GM had $27.3 billion in cash, readily available assets and funds from a retirement fund at the end of December, a decline from $30 billion at the end of September. The automaker ended 2007 with a negative adjusted automotive cash flow of $2.4 billion, a $2 billion improvement from 2006.

Outside the U.S., GM had a $424 million profit in the Latin America/Africa/Middle East region and a $72 million Asia-Pacific profit. Europe reported a fourth-quarter deficit of $445 million.

The automaker today also announced details of a buyout plan for its remaining 74,000 UAW employees in the U.S. The offers would provide payments of as much as $62,500 for the most-skilled workers with at least 30 years service.
 

Monday, February 11, 2008

R343.8m shot for local Mittal op

(Fin24) - ArcelorMittal SA (ACL), the SA arm of the world's largest steel producer, announced on Monday that it would spend R343.8m in capital expenditure at its Newcastle works.


The company said in a statement that the capital would be used to improve the plant's production capacity as well as improve its safety, health and environmental impact by bringing the plant in line with worldwide environmental standards.


Expenditure will be split into three parts, with R103.2m spent on the Sinter Plant refurbishment, R74.6m on a Hot Metal
Desulphurisation project and R166m on the Blast Furnace mini- reline.


The projects form part of ArcelorMittal SA's capacity
expansion programme to increase its liquid steel production to 9.5m tonnes by 2011, the company said.


Construction and installation for the Hot Metal Desulphurisation project began in November 2007 with commissioning taking place in January 2008, while refurbishment work on the sinter plant and raw materials handling plant will begin in May 2008 to coincide with the mini-reline of Blast
Furnace No 5 at Newcastle.
 
 

SocGen launches rights issue at deep discount

(Reuters) - Societe Generale (SOGN.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) launched a 5.5 billion euros ($7.97 billion) capital increase on Monday to plug holes in its balance sheet following a rogue trading scandal.

The one-for-four rights issue at 47.50 euros per share offers a discount of 38.9 percent to Friday's closing price.

"The price is very low. The feedback from the market cannot have been very encouraging. As they can't miss this deal they decided to strike very low," said Landsbanki Kepler banking analyst Pierre Flabbee.

Fund managers contacted by Reuters last week had been looking for a discount of up to 30 percent.

The bank's shares fell 3 percent to 75.40 euros by 1156 GMT with France's benchmark CAC 40 index .FCHI down 0.5 percent.

SocGen revealed plans to tap investors on January 24 when it stunned the financial world with 4.9 billion euros of rogue trading losses blamed on a single trader.
 

Auto Insurers Boost Premiums on Injury, Crash Costs

(Bloomberg) -- Allstate Corp. and Progressive Corp. are leading the push by U.S. auto insurers to raise premiums in at least 20 states as the $160 billion industry moves to end two years of price reductions.

Insurers say they need higher prices to counter climbing repair and medical costs. Allstate, ranked second by premiums, said collision bills rose 2.2 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier and payouts for injuries gained 9.3 percent. Safeco Corp., which gets almost half its total premiums from drivers, reported a $19 million loss on auto underwriting.

The rate adjustment may reverse the 20 percent drop in the market values of Allstate and Progressive during the past 12 months, said Bear Stearns Cos. analyst David Small. Earnings should improve this year because insurers have become better at predicting driving records and then setting prices, he said.

``There's a lag before rate increases show up on the income statement,'' said Small, who works in New York. ``But it's real, it's happening, and you'll see it in earnings by the end of the year.''

The largest car insurers include No. 1 State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., which isn't publicly traded, and Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s fourth-ranked Geico Corp. Bear Stearns's Small rates Northbrook, Illinois-based Allstate ``outperform'' with a target of $69 a share, and has a ``peer perform'' rating on Mayfield Village, Ohio-based Progressive.

Allstate fell $1.10, or 2.3 percent, to $46.57 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange trading and Progressive fell 16 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $18.49.

Warren Buffett

``Auto insurance has been surprisingly good for quite awhile. That's turning now,'' said Warren Buffett, the billionaire chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, at an appearance in Toronto this week. ``Frequency of accidents just kept going down for three or four years, which was just amazing, and the severity was not particularly bad. Now both are picking up somewhat.''

Rising prices for new vehicles and expenses for labor and replacement parts contributed to a 45 percent increase in car repair costs during the past decade, according to information compiled by the Highway Loss Data Institute in Arlington, Virginia.

Collision costs rose 2.4 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, according to data compiled by the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America in Des Plaines, Illinois. The cost of auto-body work was up 3.3 percent in 2007, the U.S. Department of Labor reported.
 

Wall Street Shareholders Suffer Losses Partners Never Imagined

(Bloomberg) -- Less than a decade after Wall Street's last major partnership went public, stockholders are paying the price for bankrolling the industry's expanding risk appetite.

Four of the five biggest U.S. securities firms lost about $83 billion of market value last year, almost 90 percent of their net income since 1999, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That cut the annual average return for Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch & Co., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. during those nine years to 9.7 percent from 16.8 percent.

The private partnerships that once dominated Wall Street guarded their capital, used less leverage and limited their risk to trading blocks of stock for clients and shares of companies in mergers, said Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business and a former partner at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Since raising money from the public, many of the biggest firms have abandoned that caution.

``If you're betting with other peoples' money, you're more willing to take risk than if it's your own,'' said Anson Beard, 71, who retired from Morgan Stanley in 1994 after 17 years at the New York-based company, where he ran the equities division and helped with the initial public offering in 1986. ``You think differently if you're paid in cash and not in ownership. It's heads you win, tails you don't lose.''

Shareholders, stung by the securities industry's losses last year on subprime mortgage-backed bonds and leveraged loans, may be in for more pain.

Shrinking Fees

Morgan Stanley, Merrill, Lehman and Bear Stearns have lost between 3 percent and 19 percent of their value this year in New York Stock Exchange trading on concern that they may be forced to take more writedowns if bond insurers like MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc. are stripped of their top credit ratings. Revenue from structured credit and leveraged finance has dropped and demand for takeover advice and underwriting may dwindle as the U.S. economy slows, analysts say.

Even Goldman has faltered. New York-based Goldman, which went public in May 1999, evaded last year's market losses and reaped record earnings. This year, the biggest and most profitable securities firm has lost 13 percent in NYSE trading, while analysts predict earnings will drop as equity stakes in companies such as Beijing-based Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. lose value and investment-banking fees decline.

Merrill, which went public in 1971, outperformed the Standard & Poor's 500 Index in just five of the past 10 years. The largest U.S. brokerage paid more to employees last year than it collected in revenue. Morgan Stanley, public since 1986, beat the index in four of the past 10 years. Both New York-based companies diluted investors' stock last year when they sold stakes to foreign governments to shore up capital.

Other People's Money

``Shareholders share in the downside and not necessarily in the upside, that's the whole story,'' said John Gutfreund, 78, who ran Salomon Brothers in the 1980s when it was renowned for the size of its trading bets. ``It's OPM: Other People's Money.''

To be sure, the firms have been good investments over a longer period. Merrill rose at an average annual rate of 14.7 percent, including dividends, from 1980 through the end of 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Bear Stearns returned an average 15.2 percent since the end of 1985 and Lehman's average annual gain was 25.5 percent since it became a separately listed company at the end of 1994.

While none of the companies are more than one-third owned by employees today, senior executives typically receive at least half their pay in shares. At Merrill, top managers get 60 percent of their compensation in stock; they're required to keep three quarters of it each year and are prohibited from hedging it, according to the brokerage's proxy statement.
 

Cheap Gas Seen Returning 20% as Oil Meets Slowdown

 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. natural gas is the cheapest it's been relative to oil since the 1991 Gulf War, raising the prospect of a windfall for investors who sell crude and buy the other heating fuel.

Gas prices will probably rise because inventories are at a four-year low and below-normal temperatures are stoking demand, said Brian Hicks, who helps manage $1.5 billion at U.S. Global Investors in San Antonio. At the same time, he said, an increased supply of oil and a slowing U.S. economy will drag crude prices lower.

A barrel of crude has cost at least 11 times as much as 1 million British thermal units of gas for three months, compared with an average of 7.8 times in the past 10 years and 18 times in July 1991, when the Gulf War threatened oil supplies from Kuwait and Iraq. The spread, a function of oil's 54 percent surge in the past year, was as high as 13.6 times before oil peaked at $100.09 a barrel on Jan. 3. Gas has climbed just 5 percent in the year.

``In the world of hydrocarbons, natural gas is a bargain compared to crude,'' said Peter Beutel, the president of energy consulting firm Cameron Hanover Inc. in New Canaan, Connecticut. He correctly predicted oil would reach $98 a barrel last year.

Futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange indicate traders are betting this year will be the first since 1993 that gas prices advance while oil declines. Consumers would pay higher household gas and electricity bills, and costs for companies such as Dow Chemical Co., the biggest U.S. chemicals maker, would climb. Profit at gas producers ConocoPhillips, biggest in the U.S., XTO Energy Inc. and EOG Resources Inc. will advance this year, according to analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Gas Seen Rising

Gas may increase to $9 or $10 per million British thermal units by May or June, up from $8.30 on Feb. 8, according to Neal McAtee, who was named to the All-Star Analysts Hall of Fame in 1998 by the Wall Street Journal. Oil, which ended last week at $91.77 a barrel, may go to $70 or $72, he said.

U.S. natural gas for March delivery rose as much as 15.3 cents, or 1.8 percent, to $8.454 per million Btu in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile exchange at 10:47 a.m. London time. Crude oil for March delivery traded at $91.66 a barrel, down 11 cents.

A trader who sells $10 million of Nymex oil and buys an equal amount of gas right now would come out about $4 million ahead, or 20 percent, should gas reach $10 and oil $70.

``Natural gas looks to be setting up for a bullish run going into the summer,'' said McAtee, who helps manage $18 million at Red Rock Asset Management in Memphis, Tennessee.

In the past decade, oil sold for more than 12 times natural gas in three stints prior to the latest one. Each time the gap narrowed to the average within four months.

XTO's Simpson

XTO Chief Executive Officer Bob Simpson is predicting something similar this time. Oil will sell for as little as 10 times gas next year and 8 times within five years, he said.

``There's a perceived oversupply of natural gas that's transitory and illusory,'' Simpson, 59, said in a telephone interview from the company's headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas. ``There's going to be a correcting event.''

The last such event was in August 2005, when Hurricane Katrina shut down every gas well and pipeline off the U.S. Gulf Coast. Gas prices peaked in December 2005 at $15.78.

XTO's profit will rise by 4 percent this year to $1.76 billion, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. EOG, the Houston-based gas producer born out of Enron Corp., will post a 27 percent increase to $1.38 billion, the data show.

Hurricane Season Flopped

Natural gas represents 24 percent of U.S. energy supply, about as much as coal, according to statistics compiled by BP Plc. Oil contributes about 40 percent, and much of the rest comes from nuclear reactors and hydropower plants.

One reason not to buy gas is the unpredictable nature of weather. Amaranth Advisors LLC lost $6.6 billion on the expectation gas prices were poised to rebound in 2006, leading to the biggest hedge-fund collapse on record. When forecasts for a strong hurricane season proved incorrect, producers were able to keep output flowing from the Gulf of Mexico, the biggest domestic source of gas in the U.S.

Commercial traders such as power-plant owners had a record- large holding in natural gas at a net 81,263 contracts on Jan. 7, according to U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. As of Jan. 29, commercial traders held 24 percent more short positions than long positions on oil futures, meaning most were betting on declines in prices, and 15 percent more long positions than short positions on gas.

U.S. gas inventories fell 12 percent to 2.06 trillion cubic feet in the past 12 months, reaching the lowest for this time of year since 2004, according to Energy Department data.
 

Ford May Cut 9,000 More U.S. Plant Jobs, Person Says

 (Bloomberg) -- Ford Motor Co., the world's third- largest automaker, may eliminate as many as 9,000 more U.S. factory jobs through its latest buyout offers, a person with direct knowledge of the situation said.

The cuts would be in addition to the 33,600 union workers who left through buyouts and early retirements in 2006 and 2007, when Ford lost a combined $15.3 billion. Further reductions may help Ford restore profit by speeding the hiring of new workers who would be paid about half as much as current employees.

``These are realistic numbers,'' said Harley Shaiken, a labor professor at the University of California at Berkeley. ``Workers are reassessing their options. It is a very tough choice.''

Ford doesn't have an estimate of how many workers will accept the buyouts, proposed to a first group of workers last month, the person said. The Dearborn, Michigan-based automaker won't limit the number who leave if more than the target range of 8,000 to 9,000 opt for the offers, the person said.

Marcey Evans, a Ford spokeswoman, declined to comment. Roger Kerson, a spokesman for the United Auto Workers union, didn't return telephone messages. The Detroit Free Press reported Feb. 9 that Ford had an internal target of 8,000, citing people familiar with the objective. That reduction would represent more than 12 percent of the carmaker's North American factory workers.

Ford's employment fell to 64,000 at the end of last year at North American plants from 99,500 two years earlier. That decline includes the 33,600 UAW-represented jobs shed through the buyout and retirement offers.

New Contract

Ford and the UAW in November agreed on a contract that permits the company to pay lower wages for new hires while keeping open five factories targeted for closure. Under the four-year agreement, Ford can pay up to 20 percent of its U.S. factory workers the reduced wage.

Under the accord, Ford's hourly costs for new workers will be $26 to $31, or about half the $60 expense for a current UAW member's wages and benefits.

Before any new, lower-paid workers can be hired, Ford must resolve the fate of workers at closed factories and at its Automotive Components Holdings unit. Automotive Components includes factories Ford took back from former parts subsidiary Visteon Corp. Most of those plants are being closed or sold, and some of the UAW-represented employees may go to Ford plants.

UAW workers at Automotive Components are eligible for buyouts. The outcome of the buyout program will determine how many of those employees are reassigned to Ford factories.

Ford has about 54,000 UAW-represented employees, with about 12,000 eligible to retire.

Savings

UAW President Ron Gettelfinger last month estimated that new contracts at Ford, General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC will save the automakers ``somewhere in the neighborhood'' of $1,000 per vehicle. Buyouts of higher paid workers will help Ford increase the number of new hires at lower wage levels.

Ford hopes to reach the 9,000 target through offers pending at four closed U.S. plants that will be broadened to other U.S. factories next week.

Workers at St. Louis; Edison, New Jersey; Norfolk, Virginia; and Atlanta began considering buyouts Jan. 22 and have a ``buyout window'' running through Feb. 28, Ford said Jan. 24 when it released 2007 year-end earnings. Workers from that group who accept buyouts are to leave the company by March 1.

Workers at those sites are being offered buyouts or relocation to other Ford plants. Workers who don't accept either choice will be placed on a ``no-pay, no-benefit leave,'' Ford's Evans said. That leave would last as long as their employment with Ford, she said.
 

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Children's Place ex-CEO says could bid for company

(Reuters) - Children's Place Retail Stores Inc (PLCE.O: Quote, Profile, Research) former Chief Executive Ezra Dabah said on Thursday he was confident he could make a bid to buy the company for $24 a share, sending its shares up 18 percent in pre-market trading.

The $24 price would represent a 35 percent premium to the closing price of Children's Place shares on Wednesday. Dabah said he had received interest from private equity firm Golden Gate Capital to be a participant in the deal.

Dabah, who said in a filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission that he owns 17.2 percent of the children's clothing retailer's shares, resigned as CEO last September after an internal probe found he did not comply with the company's securities-trading policies.

The SEC filing comes the same day that Children's Place said its sales at stores open at least a year rose a better-than-expected 6 percent in January.

Wall Street on average had been expecting a same-store sales gain of 2.5 percent, according to Reuters Estimates.

Same-store sales rose 9 percent at the Children's Place brand and 2 percent at the company's Disney Store chain.

Children's Place also said it has been notified by Nasdaq that its stock was subject to delisting because of its failure to hold its fiscal 2006 annual meeting by February 3.

Last September, the company said its board was evaluating strategic options -- including a potential reorganization or an outright sale.
 

Dec pending home sales fell 1.5 percent: Realtors

(Reuters) - Pending sales of previously owned homes fell a steeper-than-expected 1.5 percent in December, pointing to more dreary conditions for the beleaguered housing market, a real estate trade group report on Thursday showed.

The National Association of Realtors Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed in December, dropped to 85.9 from 87.2. Economists were expecting pending home sales -- which are a key gauge of future home sales activity -- to fall 1.0 percent.

 Read more at Reuters

Euro Declines as Trichet Says U.S. Slowdown May Hurt Europe

(Bloomberg) -- The euro fell for a third day against the yen and dollar as European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said the slowdown in the U.S. may curtail economic growth in Europe, signaling lower interest rates this year.

The euro extended its drop against the yen this year to 5.3 percent and erased gains against the dollar after the ECB left interest rates unchanged today. Investors have raised bets the ECB will cut interest rates by mid-year even as policy makers say inflation is accelerating. The pound fell after the Bank of England lowered rates today.

``The market is being disappointed by the ECB's stubbornness and is selling the euro,'' said Toshi Honda, a currency strategist in London at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd., a unit of Japan's second-biggest bank by assets. ``The ECB will have to concede to the market eventually.'' The euro may fall to $1.40 by the middle of the year, he said.

The currency dropped to 154.49 yen as of 2:14 p.m. in London, from 155.88 yesterday in New York. It declined against the dollar to $1.4523 from $1.4632, losing 2.1 percent in the past three days.

Against the pound, it rose to 74.66 pence from 74.59 pence, after policy makers at Britain's central bank cut the benchmark interest rate by a quarter-point to 5.25 percent, citing slowing global growth and tighter credit. All but two of 61 economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted the decision.

Carry Trades

The yen gained against all of the 16 most-active currencies as European stocks dropped and the risk of the region's companies defaulting on their bonds rose, increasing demand for safer assets and reducing appetite for so-called carry trades.

The yen traded at 106.39 against the dollar, from 106.54 yesterday. It gained the most versus the rand, rising 1.6 percent to 13.63. It climbed 0.4 percent to 95.01 against the Australian dollar.

The Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50, a benchmark for the 15 nations that share the euro, declined 2.2 percent today, after slumping to the lowest since Jan. 24 yesterday. The Morgan Stanley MSCI World Index fell 0.9 percent.

In carry trades, investors get funds in a country with low borrowing costs and invest in one with higher interest rates, earning the spread between the two. Higher currency volatility may discourage carry trades.

Implied volatility for one-month options on dollar-yen was 12.4 percent today and has declined from 12.8 percent a week ago. Dealers quote implied volatility, a gauge of expectations for currency moves, as part of pricing options.

Citigroup Idea

Investors should sell the New Zealand dollar and buy the Swiss franc to hedge against currency losses on high-yielding assets and reduce their carry trades between the two countries, said Citigroup Inc., the largest U.S. bank by assets.

The New Zealand dollar will be among the hardest hit currencies if global economic growth slows, according to a report from a Citigroup research team led by Todd Elmer, a currency strategist in New York.

The ECB left its main refinancing rate at a six-year high of 4 percent, in line with the forecasts of all 56 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

Trichet, speaking in a press conference in Frankfurt, said countering inflation remains the key for the central bank. Inflation in the 15 nations sharing the euro reached a 14- year high in January of 3.1 percent, overshooting the bank's 2 percent limit for a fifth month.
 

Trichet Sees `Unusually High Uncertainty' on Growth

(Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet signaled that risks to euro-region economic growth are increasing, prompting investors to raise bets on interest-rate cuts.

``As the reappraisal of risk in financial markets continues, there remains unusually high uncertainty about its overall impact on the real economy,'' Trichet said at a press conference in Frankfurt today after the ECB kept its key rate at 4 percent. ``We will continue to monitor very closely all developments over the coming weeks.''

The ECB has kept borrowing costs at a six-year high, declining to follow counterparts in the U.S. and Great Britain by cutting borrowing costs as it seeks to contain inflation in the 15 euro nations. Investors predict that a slowing economy will prompt the ECB to reduce its key interest rate.

``There is a greater acknowledgment that risks to growth are on the downside,'' said David Owen, chief European economist at Dresdner Kleinwort in London. ``The ECB's not going to cut in next couple of months, but it is starting to prepare the markets for rate reductions.''

The euro weakened 0.8 percent to $1.4521 at 3:21 p.m. in Frankfurt and the yield on 10-year German bunds fell 5 basis points to 3.85 percent.

Growth Forecasts

The ECB on Dec. 6 projected the euro-region economy to expand about 2 percent this year after 2.6 percent in 2007. Trichet said today that latest data confirmed the bank's assessment that ``risks surrounding the economic outlook lie on the downside.''

The International Monetary Fund on Jan. 29 cut its 2008 euro-region growth estimate by half a point to 1.6 percent, saying that ``no one is going to be exempt from some slowdown.'' The Washington-based fund also trimmed its growth estimates for the U.S. and Japan, the world's two largest economies.

Stock markets have dropped this year on concern the U.S. economy is sliding into a recession, curbing earnings growth. Germany's benchmark DAX Index has lost 16 percent this year and the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index 12 percent.

The Bank of England today cut interest rates for the second time in three months, lowering the benchmark by a quarter point to 5.25 percent. The Fed last month lowered its rate by 1.25 percentage points in two reductions to 3 percent.
 

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Biogen Fourth-Quarter Net Rises 85 Percent on Tysabri

 (Bloomberg) -- Biogen Idec Inc., the world's largest maker of multiple sclerosis drugs, said fourth-quarter profit rose 85 percent on sales of its fastest-growing product, the MS medicine Tysabri.

Net income rose to $201.2 million, or 67 cents a share, from $108.6 million, or 32 cents, a year earlier, the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company said today in a statement. Profit excluding certain costs beat analysts' estimates by 9 cents a share.

Revenue rose 26 percent from a year earlier to $893 million as worldwide sales of Tysabri quadrupled. Biogen said it expects 100,000 patients will be taking Tysabri by the end of 2010, which could mean $2.8 billion in annual sales at current prices, according to analysts. The MS drug was cleared in the U.S. last month for an expanded use, Crohn's disease, an inflammation of the intestines.

``It was a very good quarter, they deserve credit,'' said Michael King, an analyst with Rodman & Renshaw in New York, in a telephone interview today.

Biogen fell $2.77 cents, or 4.4 percent, to $60.52 yesterday in Nasdaq Stock Market composite trading. The stock has gained 23.7 percent in the 12 months before today.

Tysabri generated $129 million in worldwide sales in the quarter, up from $30 million a year earlier. Worldwide sales are split with Biogen's partner, Irish drugmaker Elan Corp. Biogen recorded $90 million of the Tysabri sales in the fourth quarter, the company said. About 21,000 patients worldwide were taking the drug at the end of December.

Reintroduced

Biogen and Elan pulled the drug from the market in February 2005 after two patients developed rare, fatal brain infections. A month later, the companies disclosed a third case of the disorder, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. The drug was reintroduced in July 2006 after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration decided the benefits for slowing MS relapses outweighed the risk.

In December, Biogen lost more than $5 billion in market value when it abandoned a plan to sell the company, saying it didn't receive any offers. Billionaire investor Carl Icahn criticized the process last week as ``flawed,'' and nominated three people to the company's 12-member board.

Biogen reiterated its forecast annual revenue growth of 15 to 20 percent in 2008, driven by increasing prescriptions of Tysabri. Profit excluding certain costs will be $3.20 to $3.35 a share, said Chief Executive Officer James Mullen, at an investor conference in San Francisco Jan. 7.
 

Recovery for SIVs unlikely given Basel II rules-panel

(Reuters) - The troubled market for so-called structured investment vehicles (SIVs) is effectively dead and likely to stay that way given new international rules for matching banks' reserves to their risks, panelists at a bond industry conference said on Tuesday.

The new Basel II international accord, to be applied to U.S. banks with total assets of $250 billion or more, is likely to make investing through off-balance sheet SIVs less attractive for banks, which are the main sponsors of such vehicles, speakers at the American Securitization Forum conference in Las Vegas said.

SIVs are specialized funds that raise cash by issuing short-term debt and invest the proceeds in longer-dated and higher-yielding assets, including U.S. mortgages. The funds pocket the difference between what they make on their investments and the interest they pay out to investors.

The vehicles have been unable to fund themselves normally for many months amid the U.S. credit crisis and the market value of their investment portfolios has plummeted, prompting ratings downgrades and mass restructuring efforts.

But the market for SIVs may have eventually contracted anyway given the onset of Basel II, which has been seen as offering a way for banks to lower their capital reserves by linking reserve requirements to the credit quality of investments.
 

Chrysler and Plastech reach interim deal

(Reuters) - Chrysler LLC and bankrupt supplier Plastech Engineered Products Inc reached an interim deal that would allow the U.S. automaker to resume production at four idled plants and avoid closing all of its assembly operations, a lawyer for Plastech said on Tuesday.

Gregg Galardi, speaking at a hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Detroit, told the judge a deal has been reached that runs through February 15.

Chrysler closed four assembly plants on Monday and had said more shutdowns could quickly follow because it was no longer receiving parts from Plastech.

"We have made significant progress in a number of areas," said Galardi, who was flanked by Chrysler attorney Michael Hammer.

Galardi said the deal had been presented to Plastech creditors.

"Some are happy, some are not so happy," but all parties had agreed to it, he said.

He said Plastech would resume production of Chrysler parts during the second or third shift at the company's plants on Tuesday. Chrysler said it would resume production at its affected plants during the second shift on Tuesday.
 
 

If recession hits, dollar and Wall St may fare best

(Reuters) - Sticking with equities and buying dollars might be the best way to profit if a U.S. economic recession materializes, as investors may have already discounted the gloomiest scenario for the world's largest economy.

As the chances of a U.S. recession, typically defined as two quarters of economic contraction, increased late last year, investors executed classic investment strategies associated with recession risks -- selling stocks and buying government bonds.

World stocks, measured by MSCI, are down 15 percent from November's record highs. the S&P 500 main U.S. stock index .SPX shed more than 11 percent from all-time highs while benchmark U.S. yields have hit 4-1/2 year lows.

"The text book trade for recession is to sell equities and buy bonds. Sell cyclical and IT and buy pharmaceuticals and other sectors negatively correlated with the economic cycle. But this has been already done," said Luca Paolini, strategist at Credit Suisse in London.

"This time, in terms of equities versus bonds, the valuation story is compelling for equities. So overweighting equities will prove profitable."
 

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Apollo, Bain LBOs Lose Investors' Money, Bonds Show

(Bloomberg) -- Less than a year after Apollo Management LP paid $6.6 billion for real estate broker Realogy Corp., bond prices show the deal may be worthless.

Debt used to finance the April purchase trades at 61 cents on the dollar, and derivatives tied to the securities indicate an 80 percent chance that Parsippany, New Jersey-based Realogy will default. Apollo, the private-equity firm run by Leon Black, put up about $2 billion of cash to buy the owner of Coldwell Banker and Century 21, borrowing the rest.

The bonds show Apollo's equity in Realogy ``has no value right now,'' said Sabur Moini, a money manager in Los Angeles at Payden & Ragel, which oversees $50 billion in fixed-income securities. ``If bonds are trading in the 50s or 60s, the market is saying that these guys are headed toward bankruptcy.''

Falling bond prices are jeopardizing private-equity returns after easy access to cheap debt fueled a record $1.4 trillion of leveraged buyouts in 2006 and 2007. New York-based Morgan Stanley estimates buyout funds raised in 2003 have returned an average of 42 percent, and now Apollo, Bain Capital LLC, Cerberus Capital Management LP and their competitors may face losses.

Twenty-seven percent of the approximately $74 billion in bonds used in LBOs the last two years classify as ``distressed'' because they yield at least 10 percentage points more than Treasuries, Bloomberg data show.

Distressed Defaults

About 19 percent trade at less than 80 cents on the dollar, below the 91-cent average for high-yield bonds, Bloomberg data show. Freescale Semiconductor Inc., an Austin, Texas-based maker of chips for mobile phones, and OSI Restaurant Partners Inc., the Tampa, Florida-based owner of Outback Steakhouse, are in both categories.

Debt is 20 times more likely to default within a year once it's crossed the distressed threshold, according to research by Martin Fridson, chief executive officer of high-yield research firm FridsonVision LLC in New York.

``There's going to be some blow-ups'' as the economy slows, said Eric Bushell, the chief investment officer at Toronto-based Signature Funds, which oversees $17 billion and invests in publicly traded buyout funds. LBO firms ``paid prices that maybe weren't necessary,'' he said.

LBO firms typically seek out investors such as pension funds or university endowments to fund 32 percent of the cost of any buyout on average, according to Standard & Poor's. They borrow the rest through high-yield, or junk, bonds and loans in the target company's name. Junk bonds are rated below Baa3 by Moody's Investors Service and lower than BBB- by S&P.