... Bank rate cut may not materialize. Asian stock markets tracked the overnight decline in US markets, ... basis points to fight inflationary pressures. The Chinese yuan, which touched a post-revaluation high of ...
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Most Asian currencies down on growth worries, weak stocks
Forex - Dollar extends fall vs yen in afternoon trade on Japan exports, US woes
... Forex - Dollar extends fall vs yen in afternoon trade on Japan exports, US woes HONG KONG (Thomson Financial) ... in afternoon Asian trade on Wednesday after Japanese exports grew at a faster pace last ...
Euro Skyrockets As Trichet Intensifies Hawkish Tone
... European exporters and weakness in the European equities markets. In his testimony before the European Parliament, ... secondary effects of wage increases, particularly in Germany. He warned of downside risks but said ...
Getting Over International Investing
... And yet some of last years biggest winners--Germany, India and especially China--are deep in bear ... gasoline approaches $4 a gallon. Either the equity markets are in complete denial, and U.S. markets ...
Egypts Suez Cement 2007 net jumps 43 percent
... news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Reuters ...
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Three big headaches
... East, where the oil comes from, the Iraq war has been going on for five ... of life. Watch the Asian and European stock markets reel and rock as a result of ...
The "Isms" That Bedevil Bush
... is to remain always a child." With Iraq entering its sixth year, the dollar sinking ... a Nobel Prize for proving, when the stock market bubble, caused by the Feds easy money ...
Currency: Dollar closes higher on equities
... selling," said Minoru Shioiri, chief manager of forex trading at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities. "Those who ... dlr/stg 40.26p 40.47p NZ TWI 71.63 71.36 Australian dollar US91.08c US91.55c Euro/US dollar 1.5548 1.5599 ...
PM: we want cooperation with Moscow
... week with the inauguration of a new stock exchange system in Baghdad. 24 March 2008 (Iraq ... Cairo International Industrial Exhibition, organized by the Egyptian Ministry of Trade and Industry from (18 ...
Research Now - AGM Statement
... Spain, USA, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Switzerland, Republic of Ireland, Austria, Sweden, Poland, Denmark, ... on the AIM market of the London Stock Exchange (AIM: RNOW) This information is provided by ...
Automaker Tatas presence already felt
... platform from the ground up for a Chinese automaker. Incats engineers in Michigan work with ... company is listed on the New York Stock Exchange and traces its origins to the 1860s, ... automakers from Detroit, Europe, India, Japan and China. Employment at Incats Novi headquarters and Troy ...
McVicar Product Chosen By National Torch Plan Of China - Quick Facts
... Product Chosen By National Torch Plan Of China - Quick Facts MCV.V McVicar Resources Inc. ... one of the chemical products from its Chinese subsidiary Zhejiang Hongbo Chemical Co. Ltd. has ... of 2.54 million shares on the Toronto stock exchange. BBD-A.TO is currently trading at C$5.57, down ...
Albanese sees the Chinese link as Rios
... Chinalco could use the global fall in equity markets to increase its 9 per cent stake ... should be welcomed not blocked, just as Japanese investment was welcomed in the 1970 and ...
BRICs catch the wind of prosperity
... have become the hot investment story. Their stock markets have beaten the rest of the world ... credit squeezes, subprime housing collapses, assassinations in Pakistan or other factors preoccupying western investors, though ...
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Isolagen sells its Swiss facility
... said today that it has sold its Switzerland facility for $6.4 million. About $5.85 million ... that it was notified by the American Stock Exchange that it no longer meets the exchanges ...
Ithmaar Bank lists on the Kuwait Stock Exchange
... of Bahrain and listed on the Bahrain Stock Exchange (ITHMR). It has a paid-up capital of ... company, headquartered in Bahrain), Faisal Private Bank (Switzerland), Faysal Bank Limited (Pakistan), First Leasing Bank ...
Stocks May Open Modestly Lower Ahead Of Consumer Confidence Report - U.S. Commentary
... Report - U.S. Commentary (RTTNews) - The stock markets are looking to open modestly lower on ... which coincided with the start of the Iraqi war. Economist had been expecting a less ...
Anadolu Cam to Start Building Glass Factory in Russia in April
... Cam to Start Building Glass Factory in Russia in April Anadolu Cam Sanayii AS, a ... said in a filing with the Istanbul Stock Exchange late yesterday. The new plant will have ...
GOIC and Fincorp team up in GCC venture
... Gulf Organisation for Industrial Consulting (GOIC) and Egypt-based Fincorp Investment Holding have agreed to set ... these companies for public subscription through the stock market at a later stage. The agreement follows ...
Cancellation of the Trading Facility on the AIM market
... in President Steyn Gold Mines (Free State) (Pty) Ltd to Pamodzi Gold Limited ("Pamodzi") (JSE: PZG) under the terms of a Sale of Shares and Claims Agreement dated 29 ...
Monday, March 24, 2008
Company Upgrade: Introduces Victory Energy to our Small Cap Portfolio
... world renowned independent research firm, based in Johannesburg, South Africa. Along with walking investors through ... of 1933 and Sections 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and are subject to ...
Investec banks on minor sub-prime risk
... executive Stephen Koseff that the groups sub-prime exposure was relatively insignificant resulted in both JSE-listed Investec and LSE-listed Investec plcs shares bucking the pre- Easter weekend slump. Investec gained ...
Silver Market Update - Mar 23
Although it may retreat a little more over the next week or two, Silver is now at/close to buying territory after its violent correction last week. Much of what has been written in the Gold Market update applies equally to silver and so readers
Volatility continues in commodities
By Jon NadlerSilver lost another $1.48 or 8.5%, falling to $16.94 per ounce. Platinum dropped $39 to $1865.00 per ounce and palladium lost $18 to $438.00 as the entire complex was battered by the freefall in gold
Saudi Arabia says working to ensure oil supply
RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia, the worlds largest oil exporter, said on Sunday it was working to expand its oil production and refinery capacity in order to maintain world economic growth.
Saturday, March 22, 2008
China Feb FX reserves hit $1.65 trillion
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinas foreign exchange reserves jumped $57.3 billion in February to $1.6471 trillion, almost matching Januarys surprising leap of $61.6 billion, two sources familiar with the data told Reuters on Friday.
Surprise! Dow scores a win after Bears fall
But markets experience big gyrations after Sundays fire sale of Bear Stearns to JPMorgan Chase. Gold closes above $1,000 for the first time. After offering aid to banks over the weekend, the Fed is expected to cut key rates on Tuesday.
Making sense of this bizarre market
Any hint of trouble these days sends Wall Street into a new round of panic selling and a rush to pile up the cash that might be needed to stave off lenders.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Humana, Following WellPoint, Cuts Earnings Forecast
Humana's revised forecast stems from ``updated projections'' for the company's Medicare prescription drug plans, a stand-alone drug benefit sold to Americans age 65 and older. Humana has been racing UnitedHealth Group Inc., the largest seller of Medicare drug plans, to gain more members and has lowered some prices as a result, analysts said.
Humana, of Louisville, Kentucky, fell 26 percent, or $12.14, to $35.24 at 9:37 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. It dropped 24 percent yesterday. The industry selloff that began two days ago continued as WellPoint, UnitedHealth and Aetna Inc. also declined. Investors yesterday cut $24 billion in value from the four biggest U.S. insurers.
``Humana priced their drug plan too low in order to gain market share, and we're seeing the result of that today,'' said Sheryl Skolnick, a CRT Capital Group analyst in Stamford, Connecticut, in a telephone interview. ``They are offering a plan with zero co-pays for a 90-day supply of generics through RightSource, their mail-order. And when you tell seniors something is free, they keep coming back again and again.''
House's Frank Says Muni-Bond Ratings Are `Ridiculous'
California Treasurer Bill Lockyer and other state officials are calling for Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investors Service, and Fitch Ratings to change a system they say costs taxpayers by exaggerating the risk that states and cities will default on their debts. Every state except Louisiana would be AAA if measured by the scale used for corporate borrowers, according to research by Moody's Investors Service.
``This notion of having a separate standard for the municipals because they would do too well on the other standard is ridiculous,'' Frank, the Democrat who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, told reporters in Washington yesterday.
Frank's committee today opens a hearing into how states, local governments and other tax-exempt borrowers, which have $2.6 trillion of debt outstanding, are being hurt by the crisis in confidence in U.S. financial markets. The interest costs on auction-rate securities, a type of debt used by municipalities, has almost doubled since January and investors have also demanded higher yields on tax-exempt bonds backed by insurers that are struggling to maintain their own credit ratings.
Insurers' Investments
``The bad investments they have made have dragged down the value of the municipal issuers and cost money for people who want to build schools and roads,'' Frank said in a Bloomberg Television interview today.
Lockyer at today's hearing plans to ask Congress to pressure the rating companies to change their system, spokesman Tom Dresslar said. Other witnesses set to testify include Ajit Jain, the chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Assurance Corp., Laura Levenstein, a senior managing director for Moody's, and New York's superintendent of insurance, Eric Dinallo.
``The current system makes no sense,'' said Dresslar. ``Taxpayers wind up paying billions of dollars in higher interest rates and insurance premiums.''
Monday, March 10, 2008
Market slips on economic fears, McDonald's gains
TIPS' Yields Show Fed Has Lost Control of Inflation
The yield on the five-year Treasury Inflation-Protected Security due in 2012 has been negative since Feb. 29, and traded today at minus 0.17 percent. The notes, which were first sold in 1997, have never before traded below zero. Even so, firms from Deutsche Asset Management to Vanguard Group Inc., the second- biggest U.S. mutual fund company, say TIPS are a bargain.
For the first time in a generation, money managers must come to grips with a central bank that's more intent on spurring the economy than restraining price increases. With oil above $100 a barrel, gold approaching $1,000 an ounce and the dollar at a record low against the euro, TIPS show investors aren't convinced Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will be able to tame inflation once policy makers stop cutting interest rates.
``The way TIPS are trading now, investors believe headline inflation will stay lofty and are willing to give up the real yield for that,'' said Brian Brennan, a money manager who helps oversee $11 billion in fixed-income assets at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. based in Baltimore. Prices for the securities indicate ``a real concern of a recession and high headline inflation,'' he said.
Because TIPS pay a principal amount that rises in tandem with the consumer price index, buyers accept lower yields in a bet the inflation adjustment will make up the difference.
Volcker Fed
Investors typically determine what they are willing to receive in interest by deducting the rate of inflation expected over the life of the securities from the rate on a comparable Treasury. Investors can still earn money from TIPS with sub-zero rates because the principal rises with the CPI.
Five-year TIPS yielded 2.36 percentage points less than similar-maturity Treasuries as of 9:14 a.m. in New York. The so- called breakeven rate has risen from a four-and-a-half-month low of 1.89 percent on Jan. 23, the day after policy makers cut their target lending rate by three-quarters of a point to 3.50 percent in an emergency move.
The last time investors were so worried about faster inflation amid slowing growth, Paul A. Volcker presided over a Fed that would raise rates as high as 20 percent to end the stagflation crisis of the 1970s, according to Seth Plunkett, a bond fund manager at American Century Investment Management in Mountain View, California. The firm manages $20 billion.
Fed Forecast
Inflation ``is going to be higher than the Fed's targeted area,'' said Plunkett, whose fund owns a greater percentage of TIPS than contained in the index he uses to measure performance.
In forecasts released last month, the Fed said it expects inflation to accelerate 2.1 percent to 2.4 percent this year, and 1.7 percent to 2 percent in 2009.
TIPS have returned 6.2 percent this year, compared with 3.7 percent from regular Treasuries, according to indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch & Co. Mutual funds that specialize in inflation-linked debt attracted a net $2.87 billion in January, boosting their assets to $47.6 billion, according the latest data available from Financial Research Corp. in Boston. In all of 2007, the funds added a net $3.54 billion.
ECB's Trichet `Concerned' About Euro's Appreciation
``We're concerned about excessive exchange-rate moves in the present circumstances,'' Trichet told reporters in Basel, Switzerland today. It's the first time Trichet has specifically expressed worry about the currency since November, when he opposed ``brutal'' moves.
The euro fell as much as 0.3 percent after the comments before rebounding, as investors decided Trichet's ability to weaken the currency is limited. The strongest European inflation in 14 years is preventing the ECB from cutting interest rates while the Federal Reserve is slashing borrowing costs to stave off recession in the world's largest economy.
``Trichet is making a distinct change in emphasis,'' said Lee Hardman, a currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in London. Still, ``while the ECB is on hold and the Fed is cutting rates, rate differentials will continue to move in support for the euro.''
The euro rose to a record $1.5459 on March 7, a day after Trichet declined to sound a warning following the ECB's decision to leave its key rate unchanged at 4 percent.
`Strong Dollar'
On that occasion Trichet noted only that U.S. authorities support a ``strong dollar,'' an observation he repeated today with ``extreme attention.'' U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said March 7 that a strong dollar is ``in our nation's interest.''
Unlike the Fed, which has cut its benchmark interest rate 2.25 percentage points since September, Trichet's ECB has refused to reduce rates with inflation in breach of its 2 percent goal.
By signaling an unwillingness to take action, the ECB is indicating ``tacit support for its record-high euro as it uses currency policy to contain inflationary pressures rather than monetary policy,'' said Ashraf Laidi, a currency analyst at CMC Markets in New York.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
ECB holds rates, seen forecasting lower growth
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet is due to comment on the competing threats of high euro zone inflation and slower growth at 1330 GMT when he holds his monthly news conference and delivers a quarterly update to the bank's economic projections.
All 72 economists polled by Reuters last week expected the ECB to keep rates on hold this month for a ninth month in a row <ECB/INT>, and the euro was little moved versus the dollar <EUR=>, despite hitting a record high of $1.5349 earlier in the day.
Economists expect ECB staff to forecast lower growth but higher inflation for this year and possibly for 2009, highlighting the Governing Council's dilemma as food and energy prices climb. It is not helped by the strong euro, which holds back inflation but also hampers growth.
Annual inflation in the 15-nation region hit a record high of 3.2 percent in January and February, dampening expectations that the ECB would soon follow other major central banks and loosen monetary policy.
Many economists believe the inflation projections will be revised up. BNP Paribas economist Ken Wattret said he expected the 2009 forecast to be raised to 1.9 or 2.0 percent from the current midpoint forecast of 1.8 percent.
Wal-Mart's February Sales Rise; Gap, AnnTaylor Fall
Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, said today in a statement that sales at stores open at least a year rose 2.6 percent last month, beating its estimate for a gain of 2 percent or less.
Shoppers headed to discounters and warehouse clubs to stock up on food and necessities, shunning lightweight jackets and sweaters at department stores and mall-based retailers. A decline in jobs, gasoline costing more than $3 a gallon and the continued erosion of the housing market have caused consumers to limit spending.
``We are seeing the consumer trading down,'' Fred Crawford, managing director at AlixPartners LLP, a Southfield, Michigan-based consulting firm, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview. ``You've got a large swing set in Middle America. In good times, they buy up into department store categories, and in tougher times, they buy down into mass categories.''
U.S. retailers' same-store sales may have risen 0.5 percent to 1 percent last month, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers. The New York-based trade organization reports monthly results later today.
Companies in the U.S. unexpectedly lost 23,000 jobs in February, the first decline in almost five years, according to a private report based on payroll data from ADP Employer Services released yesterday. The University of Michigan/Reuters index of consumer confidence fell last month to its lowest level since 1992.
Retail Shares
Wal-Mart climbed 55 cents, or 1.1 percent, to $50.10 at 8:19 a.m. in trading before the New York Stock Exchange opened. Gap fell 4.7 percent.
The 31-member Standard & Poor's 500 Retailing Index has dropped 5.2 percent this year before today, compared with a 9.2 percent decline for the S&P 500 Index.
Limited Brands, the owner of the Victoria's Secret lingerie chain, said February same-store sales dropped 9 percent, better than analyst estimates for a 10.9 percent drop.
Staples Inc., the world's largest office-supplies retailer, reduced its full-year profit and sales forecast March 4 as customers at its North American retail stores reduced purchases of copiers and desks.
``The core economy, the part that's really relevant to Staples and Staples' customers, is declining,'' Staples Chief Financial Officer John Mahoney said in a telephone interview. ``From the perspective of our customers and our business, this is a recession now.''
February Sales
February tends to be the least important sales month in the first quarter for many retailers, comprising about 30 percent of discounters' quarterly revenue, according to Christine Augustine, a retail analyst at Bear Stearns Cos.
With ``sluggish'' traffic, most retailers may be ``playing defense'' by managing inventory and cutting costs, she wrote in a Feb. 29 research note.
``Aside from Valentine's Day and President's Day, and the demand for consumables and other necessities, we think consumers had few reasons to shop in February, particularly given the tough economic backdrop,'' Augustine wrote.
Oil Advances to Record $105.97 as Dollar Drops to All-Time Low
Gold and copper also advanced to all-time highs as the sinking dollar made commodities priced in the U.S. currency cheaper. Oil closed at a record yesterday after U.S. crude inventories fell for the first time in eight weeks and OPEC refrained from raising production.
``The reason we've gone above $105 is that the market is still focused on the weakness of the dollar,'' Olivier Jakob, managing director of Petromatrix Gmbh in Zug, Switzerland, said. ``It's going to take more signs of demand destruction around the world before oil stops gaining on the dollar.''
Crude oil for April delivery rose as much as $1.45, or 1.4 percent, to a $105.97 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest since futures began trading in 1983. The contract traded for $105.15 at 1:11 p.m. in London.
Brent crude for April settlement rose as much as $1.31, or 1.3 percent, to match the $102.95 a barrel record previously set on March 3. The contract was at $102 on London's ICE Futures Europe exchange at 1:14 p.m. local time.
The euro climbed to $1.5347, the highest level since the single currency's debut in 1999, on speculation the European Central Bank will hold its key interest rate at a more than six- year high as the Federal Reserve keeps cutting its benchmark rate.
Carlyle Fund Gets Default Notice After Margin Calls
Carlyle Capital Corp. missed four of seven margin calls yesterday totaling more than $37 million, the Guernsey, U.K.- based fund said today in a statement. The fund expects to get at least one more notice of default related to the margin calls.
The collapse of the subprime mortgage market has prompted investors to flee all but the safest forms of debt, leading to the failure of hedge funds including Peloton Partners LLP. The Carlyle fund raised $300 million in July and used loans to buy about $22 billion of AAA rated so-called agency mortgage securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
``The credit crisis is spilling over to the next asset class, agency bonds,'' said Philip Gisdakis, senior credit strategist at UniCredit SpA in Munich. ``There's never just one cockroach. If you see one highly leveraged hedge fund going bust, then there's another on the way.''
Peloton, the London-based hedge-fund firm run by former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. partners, announced plans last week to liquidate its ABS Fund after ``severe'' losses on mortgage-backed debt and demands from banks to repay loans. Thornburg Mortgage Inc. in Santa Fe, New Mexico, plummeted 62 percent in New York trading this week after the home lender received a default notice on a $320 million loan.
Widening Spreads
Carlyle Capital, run by John Stomber, fell 1.7 percent in Amsterdam trading today to $11.80. The fund originally sold shares at $19 each. Emma Thorpe, a London-based spokeswoman for U.S. private-equity firm Carlyle Group, declined to comment.
The agency mortgage-bond market has about $4.5 trillion of securities, according to estimates from UniCredit. The spread between 30-year agency mortgage bonds and 10-year U.S. Treasuries widened to more than 200 basis points yesterday, the highest since 1986, according to Bloomberg data cited by UniCredit today.
At the same time, money-market rates for euros and pounds climbed to the highest since mid-January, signaling the global squeeze on short-term bank lending may be returning. The three- month London interbank offered rate, or Libor, for euros advanced 1 basis point to 4.4 percent yesterday, the highest since Jan. 18, according to the British Bankers' Association.
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Porsche Profit Rises on Cayenne SUV, Volkswagen Stake
Net income in the six months ended Jan. 31 rose to 1.3 billion euros ($1.97 billion) from 897 million euros a year earlier, the Stuttgart, Germany-based company said in a statement today. Pretax profit increased 24 percent to 1.66 billion euros.
Porsche doubled first-half sales of the Cayenne to 20,340 SUVs, boosting overall deliveries 19 percent, even as demand for the 911 and the Boxster roadster waned. The company has been raising its stake in Volkswagen, Europe's biggest carmaker, since buying a holding in September 2005. Porsche said yesterday that it plans to own a stake exceeding 50 percent.
First-half revenue increased 14 percent to 3.49 billion euros, Porsche said today, reiterating figures announced in January. Earnings figures were adjusted to take account of the effects of the expanding stake in Volkswagen as well as by hedging transactions related to the stock purchases, it said.