Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Corn, Soybeans, Wheat Fall as Slumping U.S. Economy Cuts Demand

(Bloomberg) -- Corn and soybeans and wheat fell on speculation the U.S. economy will slide into recession, triggering a global slump and damping demand for grains and other commodities.

The Federal Reserve today cut its benchmark interest rate the most in 23 years in an effort to prevent a recession. Even after the move, U.S. equities and commodities fell. Before today, wheat prices had doubled in the past year and corn and soybean futures reached records last week.

``The projected growth in consumption of grains is in question,'' said Darrell Holaday, president of Advanced Market Concepts in Manhattan, Kansas. ``World economies are going to retract. We thought this could happen, but some thought that the rest of the world is insulated from the U.S. economy. It was a nice theory, but today, you can say that's not true.''

Corn futures for March delivery fell 4.5 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $4.9375 a bushel at 10:58 a.m. on the Chicago Board of Trade, the fifth-straight drop since the most-active futures rose to a record $5.1925 on Jan. 15. Corn gained 17 percent in 2007 after rising 81 percent in 2006 on record demand to produce ethanol and feed livestock.

Soybean futures for March delivery fell 15.75 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $12.4825 a bushel in Chicago, after last week falling for the first time in seven weeks. The price on Jan. 14 reached a record $13.415. Futures gained 78 percent last year after U.S. farmers planted the fewest acres in 12 years to sow the most corn since 1944.

Wheat futures for March delivery fell 7.5 cents, or 0.8 percent, to $9.55 a bushel in Chicago. Even with today's decline, the price has doubled in a year. Wheat reached a record $10.095 a bushel on Dec. 17 as global demand outpaced supply.

Hedge-Fund Bets

Since the end of November, hedge funds as of Jan. 16 increased bets by 44 percent that corn futures would rise, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show. Funds that buy commodities in indexes raised bets 14 percent. Open interest has climbed 8.9 percent to almost 1.41 million contracts since the start of the year, the highest in more than nine months.

Funds that track commodity indexes cut bets on higher soybeans to 176,461 contracts as of Jan. 16, down 5.8 percent from a record net long position a week earlier, according to the CFTC report.
 

Gold Rebounds as Dollar Tumbles After Fed's Interest-Rate Cut

(Bloomberg) -- Gold rose after an emergency cut in U.S. borrowing costs reduced the value of the dollar, boosting the appeal of the precious metal as an alternative investment.

The Federal Reserve slashed its benchmark interest rate 0.75 percentage point to 3.5 percent after global equity markets tumbled on concern the slumping U.S. economy will drag down the growth rates of other nations. Gold rallied 31 percent in 2007 after the Fed cut rates by 1 percentage point, sending the dollar down 9.5 percent against the euro.

``This is a pure dollar play if ever there was one,'' said Jon Nadler, an analyst at Kitco Minerals & Metals Inc. in Montreal.

Gold futures for February delivery climbed $8, or 0.9 percent, to $889.70 an ounce at 11:57 a.m. on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price earlier fell as low as $849.50.

Gold for immediate delivery rose $24.22, or 2.8 percent, to $889.22. The price fell 2.1 percent yesterday, when the Comex was closed for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The rate cut was the biggest single reduction since the Fed began using the benchmark as the principal tool to control monetary policy in 1990. The dollar dropped as much as 1.3 percent against the euro.

``Lower interest rates are very good for gold because the dollar will weaken against other currencies,'' said Marty McNeill, a trader at R.F. Lafferty Inc. in New York.

Policy makers are scheduled to meet on Jan. 30. Interest- rate futures show a 70 percent chance the Fed will cut the benchmark rate 0.25 percentage point to 3.25 percent at that session, compared with no chance a week ago.

`Total Meltdown'

``At this point, the Fed looks like they're asset- senstive,'' said Frank McGhee, head metals trader at Integrated Brokerage Services LLC in Chicago. ``They're going to put liquidity in the market to keep stock prices higher and a total meltdown from happening.''

U.S. stocks tumbled for the fifth session with the Dow Jones Industrial Index plunging as much as 3.8 percent before paring losses. European stocks rose for the first time in six session after the Fed's surprise cut.

``Market participants see weakening economic conditions as the cause of the emergency rate cuts and stronger inflationary pressures as a result,'' said Stuart Flerlage, who helps manage more than $600 million at NuWave Investment Corp. in New York ``This will continue to provide a strong bid for gold.''
 

Oil in N.Y. Falls on Skepticism Rate Cut Will Bolster Economy

(Bloomberg) -- Crude oil dropped to a six-week low in New York on skepticism that an emergency interest rate reduction by the U.S. Federal Reserve will prevent the world's biggest energy consuming country from falling into recession.

The overnight lending rate was lowered to 3.5 percent from 4.25 percent, the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement in Washington. Oil in New York has declined 11 percent since touching a record $100.09 a barrel on Jan. 3 on speculation demand will drop as global economies slow.

``Recessionary fears have spread from the U.S. to overseas markets in a pronounced fashion,'' said Eric Wittenauer, an analyst at A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. in St. Louis. ``The Fed move has given us some support but it's not enough to reverse the downward course of the energy market.''

Crude oil for February delivery fell $1.26, or 1.4 percent, to $89.31 a barrel at 11:45 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices touched $86.11 before the Fed announcement, the lowest since Dec. 6. Prices are up 75 percent from a year ago.

There was no floor trading in New York yesterday because of the Martin Luther King Day holiday. Yesterday's electronic trades will apply toward today's close.

Brent crude for March settlement rose 26 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $87.77 a barrel on London's ICE Futures Europe exchange. Brent touched $85 today, the lowest since Oct. 25. Futures dropped $1.72, or 1.9 percent, yesterday.

Oil would slide to ``the low $80s'' if all outstanding speculative contracts were sold, analysts at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. including London-based Jeffrey Currie, said in a report today. Investment funds have sold oil contracts amounting to as much as 100 million barrels in the past two weeks, Goldman said.
 

Motorola May Face Razr 2 Flop as IPhone Sales Surge

(Bloomberg) -- Motorola Inc.'s Greg Brown, in his first earnings report as chief executive officer, may post disappointing sales of the Razr 2 phone after holiday shoppers flocked to Apple Inc.'s iPhone.

Motorola probably sold 2 million Razr 2s, the slimmer camera phones Brown is relying on to revive revenue, in the fourth quarter, said Lawrence Harris, a former Oppenheimer & Co. analyst in New York. Steve Jobs's Apple may have sold 2.4 million iPhones.

Harris estimated Motorola sold half as many Razr 2s over a similar period compared with the original model, whose 2004 debut started a craze for ever-thinner phones. Motorola, which fell to third place among global phone makers last year, may drop to fourth in 2008.

``The Razr 2 didn't set the world on fire and it won't be a phenomenon like the original one,'' Harris said.

Motorola, based in Schaumburg, Illinois, may say tomorrow that net income fell 59 percent to $257.9 million in the fourth quarter, according to the average of nine estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales probably slid 18 percent to $9.65 billion, the survey showed.

Jennifer Erickson, a spokeswoman for Motorola, declined to comment on sales or earnings before the report.

Motorola shares dropped 22 percent last year on the New York Stock Exchange, while Apple more than doubled. Motorola fell $1.48, or 11 percent, to $11.85 at 9:34 a.m. New York time, the lowest in more than four years. The Standard & Poor's 500 Information Technology Index dropped 4.3 percent.

No. 1 No Longer

The fading popularity of the original Razr probably cost Motorola its position as the top-selling handset at AT&T Inc., the biggest U.S. phone-service company, for the first time since 2004, said Piper Jaffray & Co. analyst Michael Walkley. Motorola probably ceded that spot to Samsung Electronics Co.'s Sync video and camera phone last quarter, he said.

The 47-year-old Brown, who took over as CEO after Ed Zander's Nov. 30 resignation, has to improve marketing to show consumers the new phone is a step up, Walkley said. The $300 Razr 2 is too similar to the first, which is available for free with a contract, said Minneapolis-based Walkley, who called Razr 2 holiday sales ``disappointing.''

Motorola probably sold about 3 million Razr 2s since the debut in the second quarter, Harris said. The original sold almost 6 million over a similar span after its release, and 12 million in the first year, he said.

Too Similar

The Razr 2 is thinner, has a better camera and can store more songs than the original. Consumers haven't bought the phones as quickly as Motorola shipped them, building inventories at carriers and retailers, Walkley said.

``The Razr 2 doesn't stand out the way the original did,'' said Brad Williams, who helps manage $11 billion as an analyst at MTB Investment Advisors in Baltimore. His firm sold its Motorola shares last year. ``You go to a store and there are less-expensive products that look strikingly similar to the Razr 2.''

The $399 iPhone, which blends Apple's best-selling iPod music player with an e-mail-equipped handset, is stealing sales from Motorola. The iPhone broke AT&T's opening-weekend records and sold more in three days after its June 29 debut than the original Razr did in its first month.

Last week, Jobs, 52, said Apple has sold more than 4 million of the phones. Analysts including UBS AG's Benjamin Reitzes in New York said Apple probably sold 2.4 million last quarter.

Nokia Oyj, Samsung and Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Ltd. also introduced phones superior to the Razr 2 in features, according to a Jan. 4 analysis by Cowen & Co. That may help Sony Ericsson overtake Motorola as the No. 3 handset maker in the world this year, according to Cowen analysts including Matthew Hoffman in Boston.
 

ABN Leads Stocks Bears as MFS Sees No Repeat of '03

(Bloomberg) -- The last time the Standard & Poor's 500 Index was at least 10 percent below its previous high, in 2003, the world's biggest stock investors were bullish.

Not this time. Institutions handling $1.5 trillion, including Baring Asset Management's Andrew Cole, ABN Amro Asset Management's Joost van Leenders and MFS Investment Management's James Swanson, are holding or selling. They say stocks are riskier today than they were during that last correction in 2003, even though valuations are half as much.

``It's a much more dangerous game today,'' said Cole, 44, a fund manager who helps invest $48 billion at Baring in London. ``2008 is going to be a year of preservation of capital. We've got a lot of cash and we're not frightened to say so.''

Cole, whose firm favored shares over bonds or cash in 2003, said in an interview he's ``underweight'' equities this year because evidence of a U.S. recession is mounting. January's decline in the S&P 500, the benchmark for American equities, marked the worst start in the index's history.

The Federal Reserve's three interest-rate cuts since September haven't encouraged stock investors about the prospects for the economy. Equities are the cheapest relative to bonds since 1974, and still investors are shifting funds to fixed- income.

Steepest Drop

Stocks got even less expensive as the MSCI World Index dropped 3 percent yesterday, its biggest decline since 2002. The global benchmark slipped 1.1 percent today, its sixth straight decline and the longest stretch of losses since the period ended July 18, 2006.

Benchmark indexes from Hong Kong to London and Brazil retreated yesterday as concern grew that a U.S. recession will weaken global growth. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average dropped today by the most since September 2001, and Australia's All Ordinaries Index tumbled the most since October 1989. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index was headed for its biggest two-day slump in a decade.

Investors pulled money from U.S. stock funds every month between May and November, the longest streak this decade, according to Investment Company Institute, which compiles data from 4,744 equity funds with $6.6 trillion in assets.

Net inflows to fixed-income funds in 2007 were the biggest since the start of the U.S. bull market in 2002, according to data from ICI, the Washington-based trade group for the mutual- fund industry.

``What we've been telling people to do is, `Face reality and take action.''' said David Darst, the New York-based chief investment strategist for Morgan Stanley's private banking unit, which oversees $700 billion.

Recession Forecasts

Last month, Darst recommended clients raise their cash holdings to 16 percent of assets. He told them to move money from equities to hedge funds that use futures to bet on currencies, interest rates and commodities.

ABN Amro Asset's van Leenders, 38, the firm's investment strategist, said he's daunted as earnings fall and predictions from Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., and Merrill Lynch & Co. increase investors' conviction that the country is sliding into a recession.

Profit for S&P 500 members may have tumbled an average of 17 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Bloomberg data. The 2.5 percent drop in the third was the first quarterly decline since 2002.

End of Expansion

A jump in the jobless rate in December signaled that the longest expansion in consumer spending on record will end in the first quarter, Goldman said. The number of Americans who fell behind on mortgage payments rose to a 20-year high in the third quarter and home prices probably fell last year for the first time since the Great Depression.

Economic growth will slow to 1.1 percent in the first quarter, according to the median estimate of 65 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. In 2003, the U.S. grew at an annual rate of 2.5 percent while profits rose 17.4 percent a quarter, on average.

A correction is any time a stock index declines 10 percent or more from peak to trough. The latest for the S&P 500 was reached Nov. 26, when it fell 10 percent from its record in October.

Prior to that, the 15 percent drop in the index between November 2002 and March 2003 was the sixth correction in three years. Those were spurred by the collapse of the technology bubble, the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, a recession in 2001 and the dissolution of Enron Corp.

`Entering Recession'

The S&P 500 rebounded 39 percent between its 2003 low and the end of the year, marking the beginning of a five-year bull market.

``The macro picture right now is much weaker,'' said van Leenders, whose Amsterdam-based firm has $309 billion in assets. ``Then we were recovering from a recession, now we are entering one.''

ABN Amro Asset lowered its allocation to equities last quarter by raising cash and buying government and investment- grade corporate debt, he said. Swanson, the chief investment strategist at Boston-based MFS, sold a third of the shares he owned at the end of the year to boost his holdings in U.S. government bonds.

The S&P 500 fell 9.8 percent in the first 13 trading days of this year for the worst start since the index's inception in 1957. Stocks will drop further as the economy forces more homeowners into default and banks' losses on investments tied to subprime mortgages double to as much as $200 billion, Swanson said.

Benchmarks Drop

MSCI's world index slid 1.1 percent to 1,380.60 as of 3:03 p.m. in Tokyo, extending its decline from an Oct. 31 record to 18 percent. Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 5.7 percent, and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 lost 7.1 percent. Hong Kong's Hang Seng plunged as much as 8.2 percent. India's Sensex index tumbled 12 percent when trading resumed after a halt to avoid breaching limits.

Yesterday, London's FTSE 100 Index dropped 5.5 percent for the steepest loss since September 2001. Brazil's Bovespa index plunged 6.6 percent, the biggest retreat in almost a year.

``Everything is being painted with a `dump-it-now' brush,'' Swanson, 58, said in an interview from Omaha, Nebraska. ``Seeing those red numbers on stock after stock after stock, it changes the psychology. It's very easy to give in to the doom of `Man, this is really now a recession and bear market and it's never going to get better.'''

Banks Extend Decline

Banks and brokerages in the S&P 500, last year's worst- performing industry with a 21 percent decline, have dropped another 13 percent in 2008. Telephone companies, energy producers and computer makers have fallen more than 12 percent since the start of this year.

New York-based Merrill, the biggest U.S. brokerage, had a record loss last week after writing down the value of its subprime-infected assets by $16.7 billion.

The stock-market slump hasn't been limited to the U.S. Benchmarks in more than two dozen countries including Japan, Sweden and Peru have plunged at least 20 percent from their peaks in the past six months, marking the start of so-called bear markets. This month alone, global stocks have lost more than $5 trillion in market capitalization, Bloomberg data show.

Stuart Fraser, who helps manage $42 billion at Brewin Dolphin Securities Ltd. in London, said he purchased inflation- linked government debt because ``central banks will be more concerned about rescuing the economy than worrying about inflation.''

Fraser, 61, also bought futures contracts and exchange- traded funds that track wheat and soybean prices. Wheat reached a record $10.095 a bushel in December and has doubled in the past year. Soybeans set an all-time high of $13.415 a bushel this month after surging 78 percent in 2007.

Long Volatility

Ashburton Ltd.'s Peter Lucas bought futures on the so-called VIX, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index that tracks the price of S&P 500 options. The gauge of stock market price swings almost doubled in 2007.

``Whatever happens this year, volatility will remain elevated,'' said Lucas, 42, who oversees $1.7 billion as chief investment officer at Ashburton in Jersey, Channel Islands. ``Being long volatility is a smart way of hedging equity risk.''

Relative to earnings, stocks are about half as expensive as they were in 2003. Companies in the S&P 500 are valued at an average 17.5 times reported profit, compared with 33 times at the start of 2003, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
 

Ambac, MBIA's Lust for CDO Returns Undermined AAA Profitability

(Bloomberg) -- Municipal bond insurers such as MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc. had a good thing going.

For years, they earned some of the highest profit margins in any industry -- by writing coverage for securities sold by states and cities to build roads, schools and firehouses. During the past five years, MBIA's average profit margin was 39 percent, more than four times the average of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Ambac's average profit margin was 48 percent.

The good times are over, and the culprit isn't municipal bonds; it's subprime debt, a market the insurers waded into in pursuit of even greater profits. Some of the biggest bond insurers are facing potential claims that may deplete their capital. Their share prices have plunged, and credit rating companies are scrutinizing their AAA status. Ambac became the first insurer to lose its triple-A rating, when Fitch Ratings downgraded the company to AA on Jan. 18.

With the main players distracted by subprime woes, billionaire investor Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. is expanding into their core business of insuring bonds in the $2.6 trillion municipal market.

``The good, solid, old-fashioned but profitable business may gravitate over to Berkshire Hathaway,'' says Mark Adelson of Adelson & Jacob Consulting LLC, a New York firm that advises on the structured finance market. ``That was the bond insurers' anchor; that's what saw them through.''

The crisis has been brewing for about six years, ever since the insurers discovered collateralized debt obligations. These securities, part of an area known as structured finance, were created by Wall Street by repackaging assets such as mortgage bonds and buyout loans into new obligations for sale to institutional investors.

Subprime Home Loans

Attracted by top ratings from Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investors Service and Fitch and by lucrative premiums, the insurers agreed to pay CDO holders -- many of them banks that created the securities -- in the event of a default. Insurers backed $127 billion of CDOs that relied at least partly on repayments on subprime home loans, according to a Dec. 19 report by S&P, the No. 1 credit rating company.

``It looked so profitable and so easy that they let the portfolio shift too far toward structured finance,'' says Robert Fuller, who runs Capital Markets Management LLC, a Hopewell, New Jersey-based firm that advises municipalities and nonprofits. ``It morphed into this monster that is devouring them.''

CDO Rating Cuts

The tipping point came last year when the three major rating companies downgraded thousands of CDOs. Ratings on more than 2,000 CDOs were cut in November alone, with Fitch lowering CDOs backed by subprime mortgages 9.6 levels on average, according to a Dec. 13 UBS AG research report.

Rating cuts on CDOs and other securities backed by subprime mortgages and home equity loans led S&P to conclude bond insurers faced potential losses of $19 billion, the rating company said in its December report. That sent insurers scrambling for additional capital to protect their own credit ratings from being cut -- by the same companies whose judgments they had relied on in backing the CDOs.

Fitch Ratings said at the end of December that MBIA, Ambac and FGIC Corp., the fourth largest, had four to six weeks to raise $1 billion each to keep their AAA ratings.

MBIA Raises Capital

Seeking to avert a crippling reduction of its triple-A rating, MBIA, the largest of the companies, said in December that it would raise as much as $1 billion by selling a stake to private equity firm Warburg Pincus LLC. It said Jan. 9 that it will slash its dividend to 13 cents a share from 34 cents, and two days later it paid a yield of 14 percent to sell $1 billion of surplus notes, bonds issued by insurance companies that state regulators consider equity.

Shares of the Armonk, New York-based company fell 86 percent on the New York Stock Exchange to $8.55 on Jan. 18 from $60 on Aug. 31.

Ambac, the second largest, replaced Chief Executive Officer Robert Genader, 60, on Jan. 16, cut its dividend 67 percent and said it would raise more than $1 billion in capital. Two days later, it scrapped the plan to raise capital. The New York-based insurer's shares dropped 90 percent to $6.20 on Jan. 18 from $62.82 on Aug. 31.

Blackstone Group LP, the New York buyout firm run by Stephen Schwarzman, said Jan. 10 that it may write down its stake in FGIC, which it bought from Fairfield, Connecticut-based General Electric Co. in 2003 along with PMI Group Inc. and Cypress Group LLC.

First to Fall

The first to fall was ACA Capital Holdings Inc., whose ACA Financial Guaranty Corp. unit guaranteed $26.6 billion of CDOs backed by subprime mortgages, according to S&P. The New York- based firm was founded in 1997 by H. Russell Fraser, a one-time chairman of Fitch, to insure municipal bonds that triple-A rated insurers wouldn't cover.

S&P slashed ACA Financial's rating to CCC, a low junk level, from A in December and earlier this month suspended ratings on almost 2,150 bonds it insured. ACA Capital shares plunged 93 percent to 48 cents on Jan. 18 in OTC Bulletin Board trading from $6.70 on Aug. 31; the stock was suspended from trading on the New York Stock Exchange before the opening on Dec. 18.

``I knew that if they played with fire long enough, they were going to get burned,'' says Fraser, 66.

He left the company in 2001 over a dispute with the board about insuring CDOs, he says. Back then, it was debt of Enron Corp. and WorldCom Inc. -- companies that later filed the two largest bankruptcies in U.S. history -- that was being shoveled into CDOs.

Old West Museum

``Companies that were having problems or were growing very fast began to turn up in all the deals ACA was offered,'' says Fraser, who moved to Wyoming to run a 12,000-acre (4,856-hectare) ranch and turn a ghost town into a museum of the Old West.

Fraser, who first rated MBIA and Ambac in the 1970s as an analyst at S&P and later helped turn Fitch into one of the three major rating companies, says that while ACA's original mission had been to help finance projects such as nursing homes and rural hospitals, the board didn't want to allocate the capital needed to insure riskier municipal bonds.

Backing CDOs with credit-default-swap contracts was more alluring, Fraser says. Credit-default swaps are financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to speculate on a borrower's ability to repay debt. They pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should the borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements.

Scooping Up Premiums

By using swaps, ACA wasn't limited to guaranteeing only securities with a lower credit rating than its own. It could compete with AAA-rated insurers to back top-rated CDOs while having to maintain less capital than the triple-A companies. The top-rated insurers collected annual premiums for insuring CDOs with swaps that were 50 percent of the capital the rating companies required them to maintain, S&P said in a July 2007 overview of the bond insurance industry. ACA was scooping up premiums that were 130 percent of its required capital.

``ACA has had good success assuming exposure to very low risk supersenior CDO tranches, where the goal of the counterparty is risk transfer and the associated mark-to-market relief,'' S&P said.

By December, after S&P completed a ``stress test,'' it projected more than $3 billion of losses on those low-risk securities. Alan Roseman, ACA's CEO, didn't return a voice mail message seeking comment.

Ridgeway Court Funding

The deals could be complex, sometimes involving layers of potential risk related to the same troubled assets while appearing to offer diversification. As recently as June, Ambac insured $1.9 billion of a CDO called Ridgeway Court Funding II Ltd. whose holdings include other CDOs, some of which contain still more CDOs, according to documents prepared for investment managers that were reviewed by Bloomberg News.

In one case, Ridgeway Court has a direct interest in Carina CDO Ltd., whose assets are being liquidated, according to a statement issued Jan. 7 by its trustee, Bank of New York Mellon Corp. Ridgeway also has an indirect interest through another CDO holding called 888 Tactical Fund Ltd. that has a stake in Carina. And it has still more indirect interest in Carina through two CDOs, Pinnacle Peak CDO Ltd. and Octonion CDO Ltd., that hold interests in 888 Tactical Fund, according to the documents.

Ridgeway Court Funding II experienced a so-called event of default after declines in the creditworthiness of its holdings indicated some senior investors may not be fully repaid, S&P said in a statement on Jan. 18.

Credit-Default Swaps

While the bond insurers made big bets on CDOs using credit- default swaps, others in the market used similar contracts to bet against MBIA and Ambac. Credit-default swaps tied to MBIA's bonds rose to 26 percent upfront and 5 percent a year on Jan. 18, according to CMA Datavision in New York. That meant it would cost $2.6 million initially and $500,000 a year to protect $10 million in MBIA bonds from default for five years. The price implied traders were putting the chance MBIA would default in the next five years at 71 percent, according to a JPMorgan Chase & Co. valuation model. Credit-default swaps on Ambac rose to 26.5 percent upfront and 5 percent a year, implying a 72 percent risk of default within five years.

Two of the seven top-rated municipal bond insurers have so far escaped the deepest pitfalls in the structured finance market: New York-based Financial Security Assurance Holdings Ltd., the third largest, and Bermuda-based Assured Guaranty Ltd. FSA is a unit of Brussels-based Dexia SA, the world's largest lender to local governments. FSA and Assured Guaranty are the only two bond insurers that deserve top credit ratings, says Janet Tavakoli, president of Chicago-based Tavakoli Structured Finance, who has written two books on CDOs.

`Faux Ratings'

``All the AAA ratings are faux ratings at this point, with the exception of FSA and Assured Guaranty,'' she says.

The three major credit rating companies have affirmed FSA's AAA rating with a stable outlook. Assured Guaranty, which earned a Moody's top Aaa rating in July, opened a new office in Sydney and plans to expand into Asia. Dexia shares declined 25 percent to 15.14 euros ($22.14) on Jan. 18 from 20.21 euros on Aug. 31, while Assured Guaranty shares fell 33 percent to $17.46 from $26.07.

The siren call of CDOs was too strong for most insurers to resist. Virtually all of the securities were rated triple A and backing them required very little capital.

``This type of risk is thought to be one of the most profitable for the bond insurers,'' S&P said in a 2007 industry report.

Risk-Adjusted Ratio

Annual premiums on CDOs averaged 50 percent of the capital that the rating companies required the insurers to set aside, according to S&P. That compared with an average risk-adjusted profit ratio of 8 percent for insuring other types of structured- finance securities.

What the insurers hadn't bargained on was that the rating companies themselves, including S&P, had grossly underestimated the risk of CDOs.

``Insurers got into trouble because they charged too little for the risk they took on,'' says Joshua Rosner, managing director of New York-based research firm Graham Fisher & Co. While they shielded banks from taking writedowns on their CDOs, they undermined their own credibility, Rosner says. ``They lost their way out of greed.''

The lack of data on the securities that backed CDOs should have been a red flag. CDO prospectuses warned that reliable default rates for some types of securities backing the CDOs didn't exist, Tavakoli says.

`They Got It Wrong'

Structured-finance adviser Adelson says analysts failed to see that the mortgage market was becoming riskier. They relied instead on models to predict the performance of CDOs based on historical defaults, recovery rates and correlation risks for various credit ratings. They didn't consider how piggyback loans, which are loans used to borrow a down payment, would perform when extended to people with a history of not paying their bills, Adelson says.

``They treated it like a math problem, and they got it wrong.''

That became obvious in October, when New York-based Merrill Lynch & Co., the biggest U.S. brokerage firm, announced $8.4 billion of writedowns on subprime mortgages, asset-backed bonds and bad loans. Analysts used the numbers to shine a light on CDO prices. They began to estimate losses in the billions when the guarantees on securities were marked to reflect the market's view of the CDOs.
 

UBS, Bank of America Recommend Buying U.S. Stocks

(Bloomberg) -- Investors should buy U.S. stocks in the ongoing market selloff, according to UBS AG and Bank of America Corp. strategists, because share prices already reflect a slowdown in earnings growth.

``We understand the macro challenges facing the economy and many uncertainties, but we believe this level of pessimism is unwarranted,'' UBS equity strategist David Bianco wrote in a note to investors today. ``The market is panicked over a substantial and secular drop in earnings power.''

More than half of the world's biggest stock indexes fell into a bear market this week on mounting concern the U.S. is headed for a recession. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 0.7 percent to 1,316.01 as of 11:06 a.m. in New York today, even after the Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark rate in its first emergency move since 2001.

The U.S. index has fallen 16 percent from a record reached on Oct. 9.

``It makes sense for investors to consider increasing their exposure to equities'' after declines in the past 12 months, wrote Thomas McManus, chief investment strategist at Bank of America's securities unit, in a report today. He advised buying ``gingerly or aggressively,'' depending on each investor's goals.
 

Bank of America, Wachovia Profits Slump on Writedowns

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp. and Wachovia Corp., the second- and fourth-largest U.S. banks, said earnings plummeted after more than $6 billion of combined mortgage- related writedowns.

Bank of America's fourth-quarter profit dropped 95 percent to $268 million, while net income at Wachovia was almost wiped out, plunging 98 percent to $51 million. Bank of America gained 15 cents to $36.12 at 10:25 a.m. in New York trading. Wachovia declined $1, or 3.3 percent, to $29.78 after the Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate in an emergency move for the first time since 2001.

Kenneth Lewis, Bank of America's chief executive officer, and Kennedy Thompson, his counterpart at Wachovia, said in separate statements today that the companies were battered by the fixed-income markets. Lewis said he expects economic growth to ``be anemic at best in the first half.'' Bank of America's reserve to cover losses from loans and debt securities doubled to $3.3 billion in the fourth quarter.

Bank of America and Wachovia, both based in Charlotte, North Carolina, reported the lowest quarterly profits in at least six years during the country's worst housing slump in more than two decades. The world's biggest banks and brokerages have disclosed more than $120 billion of writedowns and credit losses since June, mostly caused by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market.

``The revaluation of assets that initially looked like a very exclusive subprime problem is emerging to be something much more,'' Kevin Fitzsimmons, analyst at Sandler O'Neill & Partners in New York, said today in an interview.

Missed Estimates

Bank of America earned 5 cents a share in the fourth quarter, excluding merger and restructuring costs and a gain from the sale of Marsico Capital Management LLC, falling short of the 21-cent average estimate from 21 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Wachovia's profit of 8 cents a share, excluding takeover-related costs, also missed analysts' estimates.

National City Corp., Ohio's largest bank, reported a loss, and Fifth Third Bancorp and KeyCorp, the state's No. 2 and No 3 lenders, said profit declined.

``Our fourth-quarter results were severely impacted by ongoing dislocations in capital markets and the slowing economy,'' Lewis said in today's statement. He added that the company is ``cautiously optimistic about 2008.''

Bank of America increased its bet on the faltering U.S. economy earlier this month by agreeing to acquire Countrywide Financial Corp., the largest U.S. mortgage lender, for about $4 billion in stock.

Countrywide Financial

Countrywide would give Bank of America a 25 percent share of U.S. mortgage originations, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. analyst Jason Goldberg wrote in a Jan. 11 report to clients. Almost two-thirds of Countrywide's loan originations in 2007 came from mortgage brokers and other third parties, a practice that Lewis has said Bank of America expects to curtail.

The corporate and investment bank lost $2.76 billion, compared with a profit of $1.4 billion a year earlier, and earnings at the consumer and small-business banking unit declined 28 percent to $1.87 billion. Lewis has scaled back investment banking by cutting 1,150 jobs since October and putting the hedge-fund brokerage unit up for sale.

First Drop Since 2001

``Investment banking isn't Ken Lewis's core competency and he doesn't need it,'' said Bruce Foerster, a former Lehman Brothers managing director who's now president of the South Beach Capital Markets advisory firm in Miami.

Bank of America's total fourth-quarter revenue fell 31 percent to $12.7 billion, while non-interest costs rose 15 percent to $10.1 billion. Return on equity, a gauge of how effectively the company reinvests profit, declined to 11.1 percent for the year from 16.3 percent in 2006.

Full-year earnings dropped for the first time in Lewis's tenure since the 60-year-old CEO succeeded Hugh McColl Jr. in 2001, with net income sliding 29 percent to $15 billion.

Wachovia's fourth-quarter earnings were the lowest since 2001 after $1.7 billion of writedowns, including $1 billion for subprime mortgage-related holdings. The company's corporate and investment bank had a loss of $596 million after the costs.

``The continued turmoil in the capital markets and the dramatic change in the credit environment diminished our fourth- quarter results substantially,'' Thompson said in the statement.

Fourth-quarter revenue fell 17 percent to $7.2 billion. Return on equity was 0.28 percent, down from 13.1 percent a year earlier. The net interest margin, the difference between what Wachovia pays for deposits and what it charges on loans, narrowed to 2.88 percent from 2.92 percent on Sept. 30.
 

ECB, BOE May Follow U.S. Fed Cut, Economists Say

(Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank and the Bank of England may have to follow the Federal Reserve and cut interest rates as the risk of a U.S. recession threatens to drag down a global expansion, economists said.

``From a European and a U.K. perspective, the Fed cut adds to the risk of more and quicker rate cuts,'' said Amit Kara, an economist at UBS AG in London. Kara, a former economist at the U.K. central bank, predicts four cuts from the Bank of England this year and two by the ECB.

The Fed today lowered its benchmark rate in an emergency move for the first time since 2001 after global stock markets tumbled amid signs the world's largest economy is sliding into recession. The move spurred a rally in European stocks, though failed to stem a decline in U.S. indexes.

The widening interest-rate gap between the U.S. and Europe may spur gains in the euro, worsening the outlook for an economy already showing signs of a slowdown by hobbling exports. German investor confidence dropped to the lowest since 1992 in January and European manufacturing growth slowed in December.

``This market has been calling for help,'' said Alberto Espelosin, who helps to manage about $12 billion at Zaragoza, Spain-based Ibercaja Gestion. ``The ECB should follow suit.''

The Bank of Canada, in a scheduled meeting, lowered its main rate by a quarter point today to 4 percent and signaled it will act again to shield Canada from the U.S. slowdown.

Yields Fall

Investors are increasing bets Europe's two major central banks will cut borrowing costs, interest-rate futures trading shows. The ECB's benchmark rate is currently 4 percent, while the Bank of England's 5.75 percent is the highest among the Group of Seven industrial nations.

The yield on the June ECB contract fell to 3.80 percent today from yesterday's close of 3.94 percent. On the June U.K. contract, the yield fell 3 basis points to 4.89 percent.

The ECB and the U.K. central bank refused to give away their intentions. The Bank of England said it has no plans to bring forward next week's meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee, which is scheduled for Feb. 7. ECB council member Juergen Stark declined to comment on the Fed's decision when questioned by reporters in Brussels.

The Swiss National Bank also declined to comment, as did spokespeople for the central banks of Norway and Sweden.

The euro, which touched a record $1.4967 on Jan. 23, rose 1.1 percent to $1.4619 at 6:08 p.m. Frankfurt time after the Fed's announcement. The pound climbed 0.8 percent to $1.9592.

`Forced to Act'

``If it becomes clear that this is merely a temporary fix, and the situation deteriorates further, then the ECB will be forced to act,'' said Ken Wattret, an economist at BNP Paribas SA in London.

While David Brown, chief European economist at Bear Stearns Cos. in London, predicted the Bank of England will cut its rate next month and the ECB will do so in the second quarter, he ruled out either following the Fed in reducing rates outside their normally scheduled meetings, as they did in September 2001.

``It's not their style,'' said Brown. ``European central banks tend to move by the calendar.''

European inflation at a six-year high of 3.1 percent, breaching the ECB target of just below 2 percent, is limiting policy makers' room for maneuver. President Jean-Claude Trichet said Jan. 10 that the bank is ready to act ``preemptively'' to raise rates to contain consumer prices.
 

Stock Tumble Drives 43 Benchmarks Into Bear Market

(Bloomberg) -- More than half of the world's biggest stock indexes fell into a bear market as mounting concern about a U.S. recession dragged down banking and retail shares across Asia, Europe and Latin America.

The MSCI World Index's 3 percent decline yesterday, the steepest since 2002, left benchmarks in France, Mexico, Italy and 35 other countries at least 20 percent below their recent highs. Declines today turned Greece, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Slovenia, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand into bear markets as well.

U.S. stocks tumbled for a fifth day, the longest stretch of declines in 11 months, after the Federal Reserve's emergency interest-rate cut failed to persuade investors the economy will avert a recession.

UBS AG and Bank of China Ltd. led financial companies lower since October after banks lost more than $100 billion on credit investments. Bang & Olufsen A/S and Wal-Mart de Mexico SAB were among consumer stocks that tumbled amid signs the world's biggest economy is shrinking. Even with MSCI World valuations at the cheapest since at least 1995, some of the biggest investors say stocks may fall further.

``I'm struggling to find a catalyst that will turn this market around,'' Bob Parker, who helps oversee more than $600 billion at Credit Suisse Asset Management in London, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. ``What we need is evidence that the write-offs in the financial-services sector are behind us, and we are probably only going to get that in the second quarter. Clearly the market situation is fairly ugly at the moment.''

Sept. 11

Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slumped the most since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks yesterday, sending it into a bear market, commonly defined as a drop of more than 20 percent in a 12-month period. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average tumbled 5.7 percent today, completing its worst two-day drop in 17 years.

The MSCI World Index of 23 developed markets is down 18 percent from its Oct. 31 record. The MSCI gauge of developing nations also reached a bear market yesterday. Declines in Lima- based Cia. Minera Milpo SA and Tainan, Taiwan-based Catcher Technology Co. led this year's 16 percent retreat.

Japan became the first of the world's 10 biggest stock markets in November to enter a bear market since the summer's U.S. subprime-mortgage collapse. China followed later that month before the benchmark CSI 300 Index recovered and rose 162 percent for the year.

Bear Markets

Among 80 equity national equity benchmarks tracked by Bloomberg, indexes in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Chile, Colombia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Namibia, the Netherlands, Norway, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, Venezuela and Vietnam have also dropped at least 20 percent from recent highs.

The S&P 500 has fallen 11.2 percent so far this year, while declines in the U.K. and Germany yesterday left those countries' benchmark indexes down 12 percent and 16 percent respectively.

``We've seen panic selling,'' said Matthias Jasper, head of equities at WGZ Bank in Dusseldorf, Germany. ``Particularly small investors lost their nerve. These people are selling with conviction.''

The slump has made stocks cheap by historical standards. The 1,953-member MSCI World is now valued at 14 times its companies' profits, the lowest since at least 1995, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Europe's Stoxx 600 has a price-to-earnings ratio of 10.9, the smallest since at least 2002.
 

Corporate Default Risk Soars as Fed Rate Cut Signals Recession

(Bloomberg) -- The risk of companies defaulting soared on concern that an emergency interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve will fail to halt a worsening global economic slowdown, credit-default swaps show.

Contracts on Ambac Financial Group Inc. rose to a record after the second-largest bond insurer reported its biggest-ever loss. Merrill Lynch & Co. increased on concern that ratings downgrades at bond insurers including Ambac will cause losses at financial firms to surge. Benchmark gauges of corporate default risk in the U.S. and Europe climbed to the highest since they were created in 2004.

``The Fed's behind the curve; they had to cut,'' said Mark Kiesel, who oversees $158 billion in corporate bonds as executive vice president at Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California. ``The big question is, `Can the Fed change the willingness to take risk?' I'm not so sure.''

Contracts on the Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index, tied to the bonds of 125 companies in the U.S. and Canada, climbed as much as 16 basis points to 126, before falling back to 117 at 10:45 a.m. in New York, according to Deutsche Bank AG. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Europe index of 125 investment- grade companies rose as much as 10.25 basis points to a record 92.5 today before falling back to 81.75, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

``The issues that plague the markets and the economy aren't necessarily fixed by simple rate cuts, but it helps,'' said Gregory Peters, head of credit strategy at Morgan Stanley in New York. ``The overarching issue is the Fed seems extremely responsive to just the markets, which doesn't engender confidence necessarily.''

Stock Markets Tumble

Credit-default swaps are financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to speculate on a company's ability to repay debt. They pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements. A rise indicates deterioration in the perception of credit quality; a decline, the opposite.

The Fed lowered its benchmark interest rate in an emergency move for the first time since 2001 after stock markets tumbled from Hong Kong to London and amid increasing signs the U.S. economy is headed into a recession. The central bank lowered its target overnight lending rate to 3.5 percent from 4.25 percent.

U.S. stocks declined for a fifth day, the longest stretch of declines in 11 months.

Contracts on Ambac climbed 4 percentage points to 32 percent upfront and 5 percent a year, according to CMA Datavision in London. The New York-based company posted a $3.6 billion loss after writing down the value of guarantees on subprime debt by $5.21 billion. Armonk, New York-based MBIA Inc., the largest bond insurer, climbed 3 percentage points to 29 percent upfront and 5 percent a year, CMA prices show.

Risk of Default

Sellers of credit-default swaps demand upfront payments when they see a high risk of default.

Fitch Ratings cut Ambac's top grade last week and Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's are reviewing the company, along with MBIA, for possible downgrade.

Credit-default swaps on New York-based Merrill Lynch, the biggest U.S. brokerage firm, rose 23 basis points to 190 basis points, prices from broker Phoenix Partners Group and CMA show.

A basis point on a credit-default swap contract protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years is equivalent to $1,000 a year.

Contracts With Insurers

``No one wants to wait to find out how it's all going to end,'' said Nigel Myer, a credit analyst at Dresdner Kleinwort in London. ``They just want to sell, preferably at last week's prices. The general reckoning is that the banks will be taking more charges.''

Banks led by Citigroup Inc. and Merrill Lynch have a net $1 trillion at risk because of contracts with insurers, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association.

Contracts on Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America Corp. rose 6 basis points to 100 basis points, CMA prices show. The second-largest U.S. bank said today earnings dropped 95 percent after at least $5.28 billion of mortgage-related writedowns.

Financial firms have already lost more than $100 billion because of the worst U.S. housing slump for 27 years.

New York-based ACA Capital Holdings Inc., an insurer which guaranteed $26.6 billion of collateralized debt obligations backed by subprime mortgages, had its ratings cut to CCC from A by S&P in December. That prompted Merrill Lynch to announce $2.6 billion of writedowns on securities insured by the company.
 

Ambac Reports Loss, Talks With `Potential Parties'

(Bloomberg) -- Ambac Financial Group Inc., the first bond insurer to be stripped of its AAA credit rating, reported its biggest-ever loss and said it is talking to ``a number of potential parties'' to help overcome a slump in the value of guarantees on subprime-mortgage securities.

New York-based Ambac, the second-largest bond insurer, jumped as much as 37 percent in New York Stock Exchange trading on optimism the company may be sold. Ambac posted a $3.26 billion loss after writing down the value of guarantees on subprime debt by $5.21 billion, according to a statement by the company today.

Ambac said ratings companies are ``underestimating'' its ability to weather the rout in credit markets. Ambac, an underwriter of $556 billion of municipal and structured finance debt, last week scrapped a $1 billion equity sale after a 71 percent drop in the stock and the departure of its chief executive officer, prompting Fitch Ratings to reduce its insurance rating to AA from AAA.

``They can't issue equity and they can't issue debt,'' said Robert Haines, an analyst at bond research firm CreditSights Inc. in New York. ``The new CEO might be prepping the company for a potential sale.''

Michael Callen, who became interim CEO after Robert Genader left last week, said in a statement today that Ambac is ``exploring the attractiveness'' of various alternatives. He wasn't more specific.

The fourth-quarter net loss, which equated to $31.85 a share, took the 2007 deficit to $3.23 billion, the company's first ever annual loss. Ambac on Jan. 16 forecast a fourth- quarter net loss of about $32.83 a share. The company reported an operating loss, excluding writedowns on contracts to guarantee subprime securities, of $6.21 per share.

Hobbled by Expansion

The AAA rated bond insurers place their stamp on $2.4 trillion of debt. Losing those rankings may cost borrowers and investors as much as $200 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The industry guaranteed $127 billion of collateralized debt obligations linked to subprime mortgages that have plunged in value as defaults by borrowers with poor credit soar to records.

Ambac, which pioneered municipal bond insurance in 1971, has been hobbled by its expansion into CDOs, which package pools of debt and slice them into pieces with varying ratings. The CDO declines forced Ambac and others to reduce the value of contracts designed to protect CDO holders from default. Ambac said most of the writedowns aren't necessarily permanent losses and it hasn't paid any claims on its CDO portfolio.

Dividend Cut

Ambac shares rose 99 cents, or 16 percent, to $7.19 at 9:41 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock has tumbled 93 percent in the past year, shaving $8.8 billion from the company's market capitalization.

Ambac on Jan. 16 slashed its dividend 67 percent and said it would sell stock or equity-linked notes to bolster its capital, in part to meet Fitch's demand to raise $1 billion by the end of January. Two days later it scrapped the share sale.

The plan provoked a boardroom dispute that led to the departure of Genader, who disagreed with the capital raising, according to the company's regulatory filings.

Ambac's loss reported today followed the company's first- ever loss in the third quarter. Before 2007, Ambac had reported profit increases every year for the past decade.

``In retrospect, insurers wish they'd never heard the term structured finance, much less written the business,'' said Donald Light, an insurance analyst at Celent, a consulting firm in Boston.

Credit-Default Swaps

Prices for credit-default swaps that pay investors if Ambac can't meet its debt obligations imply a 72 percent chance it will default in the next five years, according to a JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Contracts on Ambac climbed 2.5 percentage points to 30.5 percent upfront and 5 percent a year today, prices from CMA Datavision in London show.

Credit-default swaps are financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to speculate on a company's ability to repay debt. They pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements. A rise indicates deterioration in the perception of credit quality; a decline, the opposite.
 

U.S. Stocks Pare Declines; Exxon Retreats, Financials Gain

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell for a fifth day, the longest streak of declines in 11 months, as growing concern about the slowing economy prompted the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates by the most in two decades.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index pared its worst loss in five years after some investors were persuaded the Fed would continue cutting rates after its emergency reduction today. Exxon Mobil Corp., Microsoft Corp. and AT&T Inc. led declines. Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. helped carry financial shares higher for the first time in three days after the Fed cut its benchmark rate by 0.75 percentage point.

``It shows that they're trying to stem the negative sentiment that's out there that there's a recession under way,'' said Ed Peters, chief investment officer at PanAgora Asset Management in Boston, which manages $25 billion.

The S&P 500 retreated 23, or 1.7 percent, to 1,302.19 at 12 p.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average decreased 179, or 1.5 percent, to 11,920.3. The Nasdaq Composite Index lost 56.66, or 2.4 percent, to 2, 283.36. About three stocks fell for every two that rose on the New York Stock Exchange.

Growing evidence that the U.S. economy is slowing has dragged more than half of the world's biggest stock indexes into a bear market and wiped out $7.3 trillion in global stock-market value this year.

`Increasing Downside Risks'

The Fed cited ``a weakening of the economic outlook and increasing downside risks to growth'' for its first emergency cut since 2001. Policy makers weren't scheduled to gather on rates until Jan. 29-30.

The U.S. market was closed for Martin Luther King Day yesterday. Stocks posted the steepest weekly drop since July 2002 last week after lower-than-estimated home construction, retail sales and manufacturing reinforced speculation that the economy is contracting.

Exxon, the largest U.S. crude producer, decreased $2.48 to $82.60. Chevron Corp., the second biggest, lost $2.96 to $80.50. Crude oil dropped to a six-week low, falling $2.39 to $88.18 a barrel in New York, on concern demand will diminish in an economic slowdown.

Microsoft, the biggest software company, retreated $1.04 to $31.87. AT&T slid 78 cents to $35.33.

Bank of America

Bank of America gained 87 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $36.84 even after reporting earnings that fell 97 percent. Fourth- quarter net income slumped to $268 million, or 5 cents a share, from $5.26 billion, or $1.16, a year earlier the bank said in a statement. Excluding merger and restructuring costs and a gain from the sale of Marsico Capital Management LLC, the company earned 5 cents a share, missing the 21-cent average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Wells Fargo, the biggest bank on the West Coast, rose $1.35 to $26.83. JPMorgan, the third-largest U.S. bank, increased $1.30 to $40.89.

The MSCI World Index fell 0.6 percent. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index of European shares added 2.4 percent.

The Nasdaq Composite today entered a so-called bear market, marked by a decline of at least 20 percent from a high. The S&P 500 and Dow average have both lost about 16 percent from their Oct. 9 records. The Nasdaq reached an almost seven-year high on Oct. 31.

Wachovia Corp., the fourth-largest U.S. bank, said profit fell 98 percent after writedowns for bad loans and mortgage- backed securities. Its shares added 15 cents to $30.95.
 

Fed Cuts Rate 0.75 Percentage Point in Emergency Move

(Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve cut the benchmark interest rate by three quarters of a percentage point, its first emergency reduction since 2001, after stock markets tumbled from Hong Kong to London amid increasing signs of a U.S. recession.

The central bank cut the target overnight lending rate to 3.5 percent from 4.25 percent, the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement in Washington. Policy makers weren't scheduled to gather until next week. It's the biggest single reduction since the Fed began using the rate as the principal tool of monetary policy around 1990.

``Broader financial market conditions have continued to deteriorate and credit has tightened further for some businesses and households,'' the Fed said in a statement in Washington. The FOMC took the action ``in view of a weakening of the economic outlook and increasing downside risks to growth.''

Policy makers set aside concerns about inflation to lower borrowing costs for the fourth time since September after the unemployment rate rose, retail sales fell and stocks slumped. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke shifted the Fed's stance to a more aggressive approach in remarks this month citing a need for ``decisive and timely'' action.

The dollar slid and Treasury securities rallied after the announcement. Stocks slumped as some investors questioned whether the Fed would be able to avert a recession, and then recouped more than half the losses. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 0.5 percent to 1,318.28 at 11:15 a.m. in New York, after dropping as much as 3.8 percent earlier.

Bear Market

Yesterday, almost half of the world's biggest stock indexes fell into a bear market as mounting concern about a U.S. recession dragged down banking and retail shares across Asia, Europe and Latin America.

``The bottom line was that financial conditions were tightening sharply'' and affecting the economic outlook, said former Fed economist Brian Sack, who is now with Macroeconomic Advisers LLC in Washington. ``The view so far has been that they're somewhat behind the curve and needed to adopt a somewhat more aggressive approach.''

The Bank of Canada, in a scheduled meeting, lowered its main interest rate by a quarter point today to 4 percent and signaled it will act again to shield Canada from the U.S. slowdown. The Bank of England said it has no plans to change the date of its next rate decision. The bank's policy makers are due to begin a two-day meeting in London on Feb. 7.

Paulson Reaction

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called the Fed's move ``very constructive'' and a ``confidence builder,'' when asked about the Fed decision after a speech in Washington. He also said it was a sign to the rest of the world that the U.S. central bank is ``nimble.''

Paulson, charged by President George W. Bush last week with negotiating a fiscal stimulus plan with lawmakers, said a package ``must be enacted quickly.'' White House spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters that the administration hasn't ruled out a proposal exceeding $150 billion.

The Fed Board of Governors, in a related move, lowered the so-called discount rate on direct loans to commercial banks by a 0.75 percentage point to 4 percent. The Chicago and Minneapolis district banks had requested the reduction, the Fed said.

``Appreciable downside risks to growth remain,'' the Fed statement said. ``The Committee will continue to assess the effects of financial and other developments on economic prospects and will act in a timely manner as needed to address those risks.''

Futures Contracts

Traders had anticipated 75 basis points of rate cuts this month, according to futures prices on the Chicago Board of Trade.

The FOMC vote was 8-1, with St. Louis Fed President William Poole preferring to wait until the regularly scheduled meeting. Fed Governor Frederic Mishkin was absent and not voting.

Fed officials met by video conference at about 6 p.m. yesterday, spokeswoman Michelle Smith said. Mishkin was traveling and unable to participate, she said. The voting members were the same as in 2007 because the presidents don't rotate in until the first regular meeting, Smith said.

Today's so-called inter-meeting rate cut is the first since Sept. 17, 2001, when the Fed lowered borrowing costs in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks six days before. That was the third emergency reduction in a year which saw the last U.S. recession.
 

SA losing faith in govt

(Fin24) - If the power deadlock within the ANC is perpetuated, a feeding frenzy of opportunistic corruption, near corruption or inertia could follow, according to a researcher from the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR), Susan Brown, who calls this "the worst case".


Brown was speaking during a breakfast briefing to launch the IJR's transformation audit, which she edited, and which showed there has been an alarming slump in public confidence in SA leaders and its representative institutions, including parliament.


The report was conducted between April 2006 and April 2007 among 3 500 respondents.


The Presidency has already received a copy of the report, and according to the IJR it was "receptive", questioned whether a trend was being seen and engaged more openly in dialogue than they would have perhaps a year ago.


IJR researcher Jan Hofmeyr explains that all 23 government performance areas showed significant declines, with seven showing declines of 20% or more.


"This is quite significant," he noted, adding that there was a decline in the trust being placed in national leaders. Added to this were concerns around softer issues, like the integrity of leadership.


Incoming executive director of the IJR (replacing Charles Villa-Vicencio, who remains on the board) Fanie du Toit said: "There are some serious findings here. It speaks of a more systematic failure to take the public into confidence."


He added that there was a "startling gap" between economic growth and the public perception as displayed in the audit.
SA has been enjoying the highest growth in its business cycle since the Second World War, but yet the public was clearly not happy. Some blame must lie somewhere, and as the audit showed, there appeared to be something of a leadership crisis within government institutions and lack of delivery to a wider base.


Brown highlighted inefficiencies in the education system, which she explained fed into unemployment. She said the linkages with tertiary institutions had hardly expanded since 1994.


Du Toit pointed out that SA compared badly with its peers on the education front, and said that the pool of people from which tertiary students were derived was still the same size as it was in 1995.


"It affects the nature of the macroeconomic system we have, and it affects public confidence and the ability to develop a unified society," said Brown.
 

Blackouts a worry: Lehman

(Fin24) - Global analysts Lehman Brothers has expressed concern over the effect of Eskom's blackouts on infrastructure-related work in South Africa.


Wide-scale blackouts continued over the weekend as Eskom could not keep up with demand.


"Of concern are reports in the local press that the power cuts are now affecting infrastructure work related to the World Cup and industry in general," said the analysts in a research note.   


According to the energy supplier, the country needs to reduce its load demand by about 20%.
 

Lekgotla to solve energy crisis

(Fin24) - Eskom CEO Jacob Maroga will face some tough questions from the South African government which will use its two-day Lekgotla, starting January 23, to help solve the country's energy supply shortfall.


Maroga joins the Lekgotla which brings together all ministers and their deputies, premiers, director-generals and representatives of the South African Local Government Association.


Rolling blackouts throughout South Africa have ground business to a halt and severely disrupted roads and other infrastructure, as well as weakened confidence in the country's ability to attract and support future investment.


After the Lekgotla all eyes will be on February 8, when President Thabo Mbeki's state of the nation address in parliament is expected to detail some of the Lekgotla's findings.


A statement released by the cabinet today apologised for the electricity predicament and the impact it has had on the country's citizens, economy and image.
 

JSE boosted by US rates cut

(Fin24) - The JSE turned around on Tuesday afternoon and was trading the black after the US Federal Reserve announced
an emergency rate cut of 75 basis points.

The JSE's all share index fell as low as 24 005.35 at one stage this morning, but recovered to 25 213.200 by noon. Shortly after the Fed's announcement it turned around and was last at 265 615.56 - up 192 points from its previous close.
 
The Fed announced an emergency rate cut of 75 basis points to bring the fed fund rate to 3.5%.
 

Rand climbs after US rate cut

(Fin24) - The rand has climbed against the dollar on Tuesday, after the US Federal Reserve cut its overnight rate, and global stocks pared their losses.