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.