Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Excel to Purchase Rival Quintana for $2.45 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- Excel Maritime Carriers Ltd. agreed to buy larger rival Quintana Maritime Ltd. for $2.45 billion, including debt, to become the largest dry-bulk shipper listed in the U.S.

Excel will pay $13 in cash and 0.4084 share for each Quintana share. That equals about $26.48 a share based on yesterday's closing price, Hamilton, Bermuda-based Excel said today in a statement. The price is 57 percent above Quintana's close yesterday.

Quintana in the third-quarter operated 29 ships and is awaiting delivery of eight more over the next two years, which will increase its capacity by 55 percent. Today's purchase will make the combined entity the fourth-largest Panamax-size carrier company in the world, according to Lloyd's Register-Fairplay. Panamax usually haul 75,000-ton cargoes.

``From a strategic standpoint, we like it,'' said Doug Mavrinac, a Houston-based Jeffries & Co. analyst who has a ``buy'' rating on both companies. ``It increases the size of Excel's fleet significantly, lowers its average age, and it increases time-charter coverage, and therefore their cash flow visibility''

Quintana rose $4.78, or 28 percent, to $21.67, at 12:12 p.m. in Nasdaq stock market composite trading. Excel fell $1.20, or 3.6 percent, to $31.80 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.
 

Bank of America Affirms Plan to Acquire Countrywide

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp. said its purchase of Countrywide Financial Corp. is proceeding and the bank doesn't need more capital after last week's preferred stock sale raised almost $13 billion.

``Everything is a `go' to complete this transaction,'' Bank of America Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis said at an investor conference today, referring to Countrywide. The Calabasas, California-based mortgage company rose as much as 8.6 percent today in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

Chief Executive Officer Angelo Mozilo agreed Jan. 11 to sell Countrywide, the biggest U.S. mortgage lender, for about $4 billion in stock to Bank of America, the nation's second- biggest bank by assets. Investors have speculated the bid might be revised if Countrywide didn't fulfill Mozilo's October vow to restore profit by year-end.

Countrywide posted a fourth-quarter net loss of $422 million, or 79 cents a share, compared with a profit of $621.6 million, or $1.01 a share, in the year-earlier period, the company said in a statement today. The loss was more than twice the 28 cents predicted in a Bloomberg survey of analysts.

The home lender rose 20 cents to $6.15 in 12:03 p.m. composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange as investors concluded Bank of America won't renege on the purchase. Bank of America, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, added 67 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $41.87.

Bank of America could have raised 2 1/2 times as much as it sought in last week's share offerings, Lewis told the New York investor conference today. The sale came with some of the highest yields in 15 years.
 

Goldman, Morgan Stanley probed on subprime

(Reuters) - Investigators are seeking information from Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Morgan Stanley (MS.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Wall Street's largest banks by market value, regarding their activities related to subprime mortgages.

In its annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Goldman said it was cooperating with requests from governmental agencies and self-regulatory organizations for information about securitizations, collateralized debt obligations and synthetic products related to subprime mortgages.

Meanwhile, in its annual report filed with the SEC, Morgan Stanley said it was responding to subpoenas and information requests from governments and regulators concerning subprime and non-subprime mortgages.

The SEC filings came on Tuesday.

Morgan Stanley also said it was a defendant in lawsuits over its role as an underwriter of preferred stock offerings for mortgage lenders New Century Financial Corp (NEWCQ.PK: Quote, Profile, Research) and Countrywide Financial Corp (CFC.N: Quote, Profile, Research). New Century is liquidating in bankruptcy, while Countrywide agreed on January 11 to be acquired by Bank of America Corp (BAC.N: Quote, Profile, Research).

Subprime mortgages go to people with poor credit. The U.S. housing crisis has caused dozens of mortgage lenders to go out of the business in the last year, and led to more than $100 billion of write-downs at banks worldwide.

Goldman and Morgan Stanley are among 21 banks sued on January 10 by the city of Cleveland. The city alleges that fee-hungry banks created a foreclosure crisis by offering mortgages that borrowers couldn't afford but which could be packaged into securities that investors could buy.
 

Durable goods orders jump, house prices slump

(Reuters) - Stronger-than-expected orders for U.S.-made durable goods in December suggested the economy retained some life and might not need a heavy dose of interest-rate cuts, even though house prices fell a record amount in November.

New orders for long-lasting goods rose 5.2 percent last month, a Commerce Department report showed on Tuesday, well above the 1.5 percent increase forecast by economists in a Reuters poll.

The surprise surge in durable goods orders helped offset a report that showed home prices in 10 major metropolitan areas fell a record 8.4 percent in the year through November.

U.S. Treasuries fell after the durables report, which contradicted weakness in other areas of the economy and undermined the argument for more aggressive interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. Stocks rose.

A consumer sentiment survey, meanwhile, showed confidence fell in January but by slightly less than economists had expected. The Conference Board's index of consumer sentiment fell to 87.9 from an upwardly revised 90.6 in December.

"Consumers are on the edge but haven't packed it in yet. They are worried about the up-and-down stock market, falling house value and high gasoline prices. But they still have jobs," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania.
 

IMF to world economy: no one escapes U.S. slowdown

(Reuters) - When the U.S. coughs, the whole world still catches cold.

"No one is exempt from a global slowdown. That is why you call it global," International Monetary Fund chief economist Simon Johnson said on Tuesday as he updated the IMF's World Economic Outlook.

"It will be very hard for even the most effective counter-cyclical policy to keep any country from having some slowdown in these circumstances," he said.

The IMF has trimmed its estimate for world growth this year to 4.1 percent from its prior outlook of 4.4 percent, with still-resilient emerging economies seen growing at a rate of 6.9 percent from 7.8 percent last year. Even growth in China will moderate from a thumping 11.4 percent in 2007 to 10 percent.

"There are obviously linkages. I think that reports of decoupling have been greatly exaggerated. It is a question of what kind of linkages," Johnson told a media briefing.

World stock markets have swung wildly since problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market surfaced in August, sparking a global credit crunch that has yet to fully abate. Investors have bet heavily that the United States will tip into recession and drag other economies in its wake.
 

Monday, January 28, 2008

Global Recession Risk Grows as U.S. `Damage' Spreads

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy may already be in recession; other countries might not be far behind.

Japan, Britain, Spain and Singapore, which together represent about 12 percent of the world economy, are vulnerable as fallout from the U.S. worsens their economic weakness. Even emerging markets, including China, are likely to suffer as exports to the U.S. wane.

The result: Global growth may decelerate close to the 3 percent pace economists deem a worldwide recession, from a 4.7 percent rate in 2007. ``Some form'' of global recession ``is inevitable at some point,'' former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in a speech in Vancouver last week.

The developing slump puts pressure on central bankers in Japan, the U.K. and the euro region to follow the lead of Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, who last week accelerated interest- rate cuts in the U.S. with an emergency move to lower the benchmark rate by three-quarters of a percentage point. Policy makers may follow that with another cut of as much as half a point after a two-day meeting that starts tomorrow, futures trading indicates.

``The odds are shifting toward a more significant global monetary easing,'' says Richard Berner, co-head of global economics for Morgan Stanley in New York.

Jim O'Neill, chief economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in London, says growth in the first half of 2008 may be the ``weakest since 2002 and maybe even 2001,'' during the last global downturn. ``The economy is slowing everywhere,'' he says.

Stocks Fall

Stocks retreated in Europe and Asia today, led by commodity producers and banks, on growing concern the global economy is slowing and companies may report more losses linked to subprime mortgages. U.S. index futures dropped and Treasury notes rose for a second day.

A worldwide recession doesn't require a global contraction in output, which rarely happens; economists at the International Monetary Fund say it would take a slowdown in global growth to 3 percent or less. By that measure, three periods since 1985 qualify: 1990-1993, 1998 and 2001-2002.

The contagion from the U.S., which according to the IMF represents about 21 percent of the global economy, is spreading via multiple channels. Less spending by American consumers and companies reduces demand for imported goods. The meltdown of the U.S. subprime-mortgage market has pushed up credit costs worldwide and forced European and Asian banks to write down billions of dollars in holdings. Tumbling U.S. stock prices are dragging down markets elsewhere.
 

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

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.
 

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.
 

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.
 

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.
 

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.
 

Monday, January 21, 2008

Europe Starts to Feel Pinch as U.S. Slowdown Spreads

(Bloomberg) -- The European economy may be starting to suffer collateral damage from the U.S. subprime mortgage slump.

Banks are making borrowing harder, industrial production is shrinking and investor confidence is waning just as the U.S. skirts recession. With the euro's appreciation to a record hurting exports, more economists are betting the European Central Bank will be forced to lower interest rates.

``There is a clear downtrend in the economy now,'' said Michael Schubert, an economist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. He revised his ECB forecast last week and predicts two cuts by October after previously projecting one in the final quarter.

The ECB has so far refused to follow the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England in lowering borrowing costs as contagion from the U.S. housing recession spreads, arguing that inflation pressures are too strong. Government and industry surveys this week may nevertheless show growth risks are mounting and finance ministers meet in Brussels today to discuss the outlook.

Europe's manufacturing and services industries probably expanded at the slowest pace since June 2005 and German business confidence fell to the lowest in two years, according to surveys of economists by Bloomberg News.

Europe's Stoxx 600 index today extended its decline to 20 percent since its 6 1/2-year high on June 1, satisfying the definition of a bear market. The euro fell to a five-month low against the yen after ECB council member Nout Wellink said yesterday that growth may slow more than officials had expected.

Credit Costs

The slowdown is undermining policy makers' hopes that the region will avoid the fallout from the subprime mortgage collapse, which drove up global credit costs.

Luxembourg Finance Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who will chair today's talks, said Jan. 14 the European Commission may lower its growth projection for this year to 1.8 percent from 2.2 percent previously. That would be the slowest pace since 2005.

Industrial output fell enough in November for economists at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc to declare that manufacturing has slipped into its first recession since 2001, while investor confidence in Germany crumbled to the lowest since 1992.

European banks will make it harder for companies and consumers to get loans in the next three months, an ECB survey showed on Jan. 18.

``The days of easy credit appear to be over,'' said Martin van Vliet, an economist at ING Bank in Amsterdam. Royal Bank of Scotland publishes the manufacturing and services reports on Jan. 23 and the Munich-based Ifo institute releases business confidence figures a day later.
 

Across Asia, food is the new oil as prices surge

(Reuters) - From India to Indonesia, governments across Asia are scrambling for solutions as it dawns on them that sky-high food prices might not fall any time soon.

With food accounting for a third of China's consumer price basket and even more in some other countries, the high prices are a ticking time bomb for the region, where fuel increases periodically touch off sometimes violent protests.

"If the inflation problem gets out of hand, it could have devastating implications for not only economic but also political stability," said Yiping Huang, an economist with Citigroup in Hong Kong.

In Pakistan, where the government has blamed a shortage of flour on smugglers and hoarders, paramilitary troops have begun escorting wheat trucks to deter thieves.

Malaysia briefly rationed cooking oil this month before the government boosted supplies of subsidized oil.

In China, where inflation is at an 11-year high, the government has taxed grain exports to boost local supplies and resorted to command economy-style price controls.
 

"Help Wanted" highlights skills drain in U.S

(Reuters) - Only half the machines are running at precision parts maker Hamill Manufacturing, nestled in the Allegheny Mountains just east of Pittsburgh, once the booming center of the U.S. steel industry.

But the factory's overcapacity is the result not of a shortage of business -- it has more orders than it can fill, despite a slowing U.S. economy -- but because of a shortage of skilled workers.

"I'd hire 10 machinists right now if I could," said John Dalrymple, president of the company, which makes high-end parts for military helicopters and nuclear submarines. "That's eight to 10 percent of our workforce."

While millions of jobs making everything from textiles to steel have moved to new powerhouses like China in recent years, precision manufacturing remains a crucial niche in the United States, one that is overworked and chronically understaffed.

And, in a bad sign for the United States and its declining economic might, that shortage of skilled workers is likely to get worse as Baby Boomers retire -- with no younger generation of manufacturing workers to take the baton.

"Our workforce is an aging workforce," said Chief Executive Jeff Kelly, whose father founded Hamill nearly 60 years ago. "There isn't a queue of people lining up to come into the industry."

Some 20 percent of small to medium-sized manufacturers -- those with up to 2,000 workers -- cited retaining or training employees as their No. 1 concern, according to a survey by the National Association of Manufacturers. The survey was carried out in 2007 but has not been published yet.
 

U.S. energy chief pleads for more Saudi, OPEC oil

(Reuters) - U.S. Energy Secretary Sam Bodman repeated his plea on Monday for more oil from top exporter Saudi Arabia, undeterred by OPEC's cautious response to Washington's request so far.

Oil has fallen by more than 10 percent from a record high of $100.09 a barrel hit early this month, easing some of the pressure on OPEC to raise supplies, analysts said.

Bodman told reporters in Abu Dhabi there were short-term concerns about the performance of the U.S. economy and he was hopeful Riyadh would steer a decision to increase oil supplies at OPEC's meeting on February 1 in Vienna.

"I continue to believe in my earlier statement that we are hopeful they will increase supplies," he said. "I am of the view that there needs to be increased supply in order to call the markets of the world well supplied with oil."

Bodman, who met the Saudi oil minister at the weekend, said the United States expected oil inventories to drop in the first half of 2008 but the Saudis held "different views".

The United Arab Emirates Oil Minister Mohammed al-Hamli said OPEC would examine all options when its ministers meet.

"OPEC ... will look then at all the options," Hamli told reporters on the sidelines of a green energy conference. "There is a disconnect between fundamentals and the price."
 

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

U.S. Economy: Inflation Slows, Industrial Production Unchanged

(Bloomberg) -- Consumer prices in the U.S. rose at a slower pace in December and industrial production failed to grow, giving the Federal Reserve the room and reason to cut interest rates at their next meeting on Jan. 30.

The cost of living increased 0.3 percent after a 0.8 percent gain in November, the Labor Department said today in Washington. Output at U.S. factories was unchanged in December as exports helped make up for declines in auto and housing- related production, the Federal Reserve said separately.

Slower growth will make it more difficult for companies to pass on higher costs, suggesting inflation will cool from last year's pace, the fastest in 17 years, economists said. Investors' attention may now shift to Chairman Ben S. Bernanke's testimony on the economy tomorrow at a hearing in Congress.

``With the sluggish growth outlook and rising risk of recession, inflation concerns have receded,'' said Zach Pandl, an economist in New York at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., which correctly forecast the increase in prices. ``The Fed is clearly focusing on growth at this point.''

Economists had anticipated a 0.2 percent increase in consumer prices last month, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.

Prices excluding food and energy advanced 0.2 percent, after a 0.3 percent increase, matching the median estimate.

Treasury notes were little changed after the consumer price report and later slipped. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note was 3.68 percent at 10:33 a.m. in New York, little changed from late yesterday. Stocks dropped after an Intel Corp. sales forecast spurred concern technology profits will weaken.

Capacity Use

Capacity utilization, which measures the proportion of plants in use, fell to 81.4 percent from 81.6 percent in November, indicating greater slack in the economy, the Fed's report showed. Economists had predicted a 0.2 percent drop in output and a capacity-in-use rate of 81.2 percent.

``There is nothing that would keep the Fed from cutting 50 to 75 basis points later this month,'' based on today's data, said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at the Bank of New York Mellon Corp. in New York.

Traders anticipate the Fed will cut its benchmark rate to 3.75 percent, from 4.25 percent, this month, futures prices show. The chance of a 75 basis-point cut was 42 percent. Policy makers are next scheduled to gather Jan. 29-30. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

For all of last year, consumer prices rose 4.1 percent, the most since 1990. The core rate climbed 2.4 percent after a 2.6 percent increase in 2006.

Energy Costs

Energy prices last month rose 0.9 percent, after gaining 5.7 percent the previous month. Fuel costs were up 18 percent in 2007, also the most in 17 years.

Food prices, which account for about one-fifth of the CPI, increased 0.1 percent, the smallest gain of any month in 2007.

The consumer price index is the government's broadest gauge of costs for goods and services. Almost 60 percent of the CPI covers prices that consumers pay for services ranging from medical visits to airline fares and movie tickets.

The government yesterday said producer prices unexpectedly eased 0.1 percent at the end of a year that saw the biggest annual jump in more than a quarter century. The cost of imported goods was unchanged in December, a report last week showed.

PPI and CPI have some differences in timing that may cause discrepancies. In calculating wholesale prices, the government asks survey participants to report costs as of the Tuesday of the week that includes the 13th. Consumer prices are based on average costs over the entire month.

Rents, which make up almost 40 percent of the core CPI, rose 0.3 percent.
 

Ambac Will Cut Dividend, Raise $1 Billion in Capital

(Bloomberg) -- Ambac Financial Group Inc. ousted its chief executive officer, slashed the dividend 67 percent and will raise more than $1 billion to preserve its AAA credit rating after announcing the biggest-ever writedowns by a bond insurer.

The New York-based company fell as much as 28 percent on the New York Stock Exchange, extending a 76 percent decline in the past 12 months. Ambac will report a loss after reducing the value of securities it guarantees by $3.5 billion, according to a statement today.

Chairman and CEO Robert Genader, 60, will leave after presiding over the company's first ever losses and a decline in shares that wiped out $7.8 billion in market value. Ambac's writedowns, which exceeded those announced last week by larger rival MBIA Inc., failed to convince investors that the worst is over. Ambac and MBIA remain under scrutiny by ratings companies and regulators after their guarantees of bonds linked to subprime mortgages began plunging in value.

``The perception is that their underwriting standards were insufficient and they weren't on top of their business,'' Janet Tavakoli, president of Tavakoli Structured Finance in Chicago, said in an interview. ``This announcement still just says `We're a black box. Deal with it'.''

Ambac, which put its AAA stamp on $556 billion of securities, probably will end up needing more capital because the credit quality of the debt it guarantees will decline, Tavakoli said. Standard & Poor's yesterday changed the way it reviews subprime securities to increase its assumptions for losses, indicating it may further lower credit ratings.

Shares Fall

Board member and former Citigroup Inc. executive Michael Callen, 67, will become chairman and interim CEO, Ambac said.

The reduction in the quarterly dividend to 7 cents from 21 cents reverses a commitment made just three weeks ago to retain the payout. Ambac said it will report a net loss of $32.83 a share for the quarter, equating to more than $3 billion based on the company's 101 million shares outstanding.

Ambac declined $5.79 to $15.35 at 10:35 a.m. in New York after earlier falling as low as $15.12. MBIA dropped $1.91, or 12 percent, to $14.14.

``It's one thing to have a plan and another to have a plan that is credible and will be a long-term fix,'' said Donald Light, an analyst with Boston-based consulting firm Celent. ``Is this just a down payment in what's going to be a series of payments of uncertain length?''

`Clock Ticking'

Ambac is under pressure to come up with enough capital to satisfy Fitch Ratings, which threatened to cut the company's AAA rating unless it raised $1 billion. The bond insurers are under scrutiny from Fitch, Moody's Investors Service and S&P to increase their capital after a slide in credit ratings of the debt they guarantee.

The loss of the AAA stamp of Ambac, MBIA, FGIC Corp. and other insurers would throw into doubt the ratings of $2.4 trillion of municipal and structured finance debt that the companies guarantee. It would also cripple their ability to keep underwriting new bonds.

``The clock is ticking for all these companies,'' Robert Haines, an analyst with New York-based bond research firm CreditSights Inc., said in an interview before the announcement.

The infusion of capital, which may include the sale of shares and convertible stock, will satisfy Fitch, Ambac said in the statement today. Ambac said it may also reinsure more of its bonds or sell debt securities to shore up capital.
 

Airbus posts record 2007 orders

(Reuters) - Airbus confirmed 2007 as a record year for planemakers on Wednesday by posting orders for 1,341 aircraft while boosting cost savings aimed at catching archrival Boeing Co.

Boeing took top spot with 1,413 orders and has suffered less from a weakened dollar than Airbus, which has launched its Power8 cost-savings drive in response.

"These are enormous numbers; it was a staggering year. Now it becomes a question of how we manage the backlog," Airbus chief Tom Enders told journalists.

"Power8 delivered cost savings very considerably ahead of schedule in 2007. The official version is more than 300 million euros; I can tell you it is close to 500 million," he said.

The planemaker aims to cut 10,000 jobs and sell plants to lower its costs. It said it had achieved 30 percent of its planned reduction in overhead positions in 2007, or 3,000 jobs, equally split between Airbus and its suppliers.

Yet despite the reductions achieved mainly through attrition, Airbus still needs to hire production workers and skilled engineers to deliver ambitious new projects.

The overall Airbus headcount of around 55,000 fell slightly in 2007, Chief Operating Officer Fabice Bregier said.
 

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Soros Hires BlackRock's Anderson as Investment Chief

(Bloomberg) -- George Soros's hedge-fund firm named BlackRock Inc. co-founder Keith Anderson as its new chief investment officer, according to a letter sent to shareholders.

``Keith will assume responsibility for managing all investment activities at Soros Fund Management,'' said the letter, dated yesterday and signed by Soros's sons Robert, 44, and Jonathan, 37, deputy chairmen of the New York-based fund- management group. Anderson, 48, starts his job next month.

Anderson takes the helm after a year in which the $17 billion fund returned 32 percent, outpacing the average hedge- fund gain of 10.4 percent. In 2007, the senior Soros, 77, was more involved in Quantum Endowment Fund's investments than he has been in years. Money-making trades in the portfolio included investments in China and India and in the currency markets.

Robert, who stepped down at the end of July as chief investment officer but continues to manage money, also contributed to the outsize return.

Anderson is the fourth chief investment officer at Soros since the billionaire philanthropist decided to scale back risk at the Quantum Endowment Fund following the departures of star traders Stanley Druckenmiller and Nicholas Roditi in April 2000.

In addition to Robert, the other investment executives were Robert Bishop, previously a principal at hedge fund Maverick Capital Ltd., and former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. partner Jacob Goldfield.
 
 

Citigroup, Merrill Lynch Get $21 Billion From Outside Investors

(Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co., two of America's largest financial institutions, turned to outside investors for a second time in two months to replenish capital eroded by subprime mortgage losses.

Citigroup, the biggest U.S. bank, is getting $14.5 billion from investors, including the governments of Singapore and Kuwait, former Chairman Sanford Weill, and Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the New York-based company said today in a statement. Merrill, the largest brokerage, said it's receiving $6.6 billion from a group led by Tokyo-based Mizuho Financial Group Inc., the Kuwait Investment Authority and the Korean Investment Corp.

Wall Street banks have now received $59 billion, mostly from investors in the Middle East and Asia, to shore up balance sheets battered by more than $100 billion of writedowns from the declining values of mortgage-related assets. Citigroup was propped up in November by a $7.5 billion investment from the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority. New York-based Merrill was helped by a $5.6 billion cash infusion last month from Singapore's Temasek Holdings Pte. and U.S. fund manager Davis Selected Advisors LP.

``The only reason the banks are raising capital from the Middle East and Asia is because those are the only people who have the excess capital to lend,'' said Jon Fisher, who helps oversee $22 billion at Minneapolis-based Fifth Third Asset Management, which holds shares of Citigroup and Merrill.

Citigroup declined 68 cents to $28.38 and Merrill fell $1.25 to $54.72 in early New York trading.

The writedowns have reduced Citigroup's so-called Tier 1 capital ratio, which regulators monitor to assess a bank's ability to withstand loan losses. With today's capital increase, the Tier 1 ratio would be 8.2 percent, Citigroup said, keeping it above the company's 7.5 percent target.

`Capital at a Cost'

Morgan Stanley, UBS AG, Merrill Lynch & Co. and Bear Stearns Cos. also reached out to sovereign wealth funds or state- controlled investment authorities in Asia for money after bad investments depressed profits.

``It does show that investors aren't completely ignoring the sector,'' said Peter Plaut, a senior credit analyst at Sanno Point Capital Management, a hedge fund based in New York. ``They are putting in capital but it's at a cost. Now it's up to the CEOs to be able to generate returns that exceed that cost of capital.''

The Kuwait Investment Authority, which invested in both Merrill and Citigroup, was formed by the Middle East's fourth- biggest oil producing country in the 1980s to manage the nation's wealth. Kuwait may have as much as $250 billion of assets, compared with about $875 billion for the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, the world's largest sovereign wealth fund, according to an estimate by Morgan Stanley analyst Stephen Jen.

Singapore, Alwaleed

The Government of Singapore Investment Corp. invested almost $7 billion in Citigroup convertible preferred securities and said in a statement today that it will own about 4 percent of the bank if the securities are turned into shares. With a 4 percent stake, Alwaleed has been Citigroup's biggest individual shareholder since the early 1990s, when soured investments in commercial real estate left corporate predecessor Citicorp short of capital.

Singapore and Alwaleed, along with Los Angeles-based Capital Group Cos., the biggest U.S. manager of stock and bond mutual funds, Kuwait, the New Jersey Division of Investment and Weill, will receive a 7 percent annual dividend from the investment in Citigroup.

Merrill's convertible securities will pay a 9 percent annual dividend on the securities until they automatically turn into Merrill shares in 2 3/4 years' time. The group will get fewer shares if Merrill's stock price climbs above $61.31 and more if it drops below $52.40, according to the company's statement.
 

U.S. Retail Sales Unexpectedly Declined in December

(Bloomberg) -- Sales at U.S. retailers unexpectedly fell in December, capping the weakest year since 2002.

Sales dropped 0.4 percent, the first decline since June, following a revised 1 percent gain in November, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Purchases excluding automobiles also decreased 0.4 percent.

Treasury notes rose and stock-index futures dropped as the figures underscored Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke's concern that risks to growth are intensifying. A sustained slump in consumer spending brought on by falling property values and rising unemployment would mean the end of the six-year expansion, economists say.

``Consumer spending slowed down pretty dramatically'' in the fourth quarter, said Brian Bethune, director of financial economics at Global Insight Inc. in Lexington, Massachusetts, who correctly forecast the drop in sales. ``We are kind of flying very close to a stall speed.''

Economists forecast retail sales would be unchanged, according to the median of 74 estimates. Projections ranged from a decline of 0.8 percent to a gain of 0.5 percent.

Yields on benchmark 10-year notes dropped to 3.72 percent at 8:55 a.m. in New York, from 3.77 percent late yesterday. Futures contracts on the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index expiring in March declined 1.1 percent to 1, 404.40.

Producer Prices

Producer prices in the U.S. also dropped in December, against economists' forecasts for an increase. Wholesale prices fell 0.1 percent after a 3.2 percent surge in November that was the biggest in 34 years, a Labor Department report showed.

For all of 2007, retailers posted a 4.2 percent sales increase, the smallest in five years. Purchases rose 5.9 percent in 2006.

``Growth stalled out at the end of the fourth quarter and into the new year,'' Joshua Feinman, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Asset Management in New York, said before the report. ``The economy will narrowly be able to avoid recession.''

Sales excluding automobiles were forecast to decrease 0.1 percent from the prior month, according to the survey median.

The drop in sales was led by a 2.9 percent decline at building-material stores, the biggest since February 2003, reflecting the slump in housing. Sales at clothing, electronics and sporting-goods stores were among those that also decreased.

Gas Stations

Purchases at service stations dropped 1.7 percent, which economists said reflected lower gasoline prices. The price of a gallon of regular gasoline in December averaged $3.01, down from $3.07 the previous month, according to AAA, a group representing motorists. Excluding gas, retail sales fell 0.2 percent.

Auto dealers saw a 0.4 percent decline in sales.

AutoNation Inc., the largest publicly traded U.S. car dealer, doesn't expect the nation's auto market to pull out of its slump until 2009, Chief Executive Officer Michael Jackson said from Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

The drop in housing and the slowing economy usually take ``30 to 40 months to work through,'' Jackson said in a Bloomberg Radio interview yesterday. ``So we've had declines in 2006, 2007 and 2008, but I'm feeling pretty good about 2009.''

Excluding autos, gasoline and building materials, the figures the government uses to calculate gross domestic product, sales increased 0.1 percent, following a 0.7 percent gain the month before. The government uses data from other sources to calculate the contribution from the three categories excluded.

Spending Outlook

Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy, is likely to cool rather than collapse in coming months as the housing slump worsens and hiring slows, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News earlier this month.

Spending will grow at an annual rate of 1.6 percent this quarter, down from an estimated 2.6 percent pace in the last three months of 2007, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month. Spending expanded at an average 3.5 percent pace per quarter over the past decade.

The continued gains, together with increasing exports, will help the economy avoid recession, economists said. Fed rate cuts will ensure a short downturn should one occur, they said.

Bernanke on Jan. 10 pledged ``substantive additional action'' to insure against ``downside risks'' to the economic expansion.

Investors are certain the Fed will lower the benchmark interest rate by at least a half percentage point following two days of meetings of Jan. 29-30.
 

Citigroup Posts Record Loss on $18 Billion Writedown

(Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc. posted the biggest loss in the U.S. bank's 196-year history as surging defaults on home loans forced it to write down the value of subprime-mortgage investments by $18 billion.

The fourth-quarter net loss of $9.83 billion, or $1.99 a share, compared with a profit of $5.1 billion, or $1.03, a year earlier, the largest U.S. bank said today in a statement. New York-based Citigroup also reduced its dividend by 41 percent, cut 4,200 jobs and obtained $14.5 billion from outside investors to shore up depleted capital.

The results are ``unacceptable,'' Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit, who was installed in December after Charles ``Chuck'' Prince stepped down amid mounting subprime losses, said on a conference call with analysts and investors. ``We need to do better, and we will.''

Citigroup fell as much as 3.7 percent in New York trading as the writedown for subprime home loans and related securities was almost double what the company forecast in November and the loss exceeded analysts' estimates. The bank also set aside $5.2 billion to cover lending losses, including credit-card and auto loans where delinquencies increased.

The markdown on subprime securities is the biggest so far, exceeding the $14 billion reported by Zurich-based UBS AG, Europe's biggest bank. Former CEO Sanford I. Weill and Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who is already Citigroup's largest individual shareholder, were among the investors contributing new capital to the bank.

`Deep, Desperate Hole'

``They've got themselves in a deep, desperate hole and it's going to take them all of 2008 to work their way out of it,'' Jon Fisher, who helps manage $22 billion at Minneapolis-based Fifth Third Asset Management, said in an interview on Bloomberg TV. Fifth Third owns shares of Citigroup. ``There are probably issues on their balance sheet that the management team, who's only really been running the company for about a month, doesn't even know about.''

The net loss exceeded analysts' estimates of 97 cents a share, according to a survey by Bloomberg. Citigroup has slumped 47 percent in New York Stock Exchange composite trading during the past year. The shares fell 92 cents, or 3.2 percent, to $28.14 in composite trading at 9:52 a.m.

Standard & Poor's lowered its long-term rating on Citigroup to AA- from AA after the earnings announcement, reflecting the ``severe losses'' and the likelihood that the bank's 2008 performance ``could be rocky.''

Dividend Reduced

Citigroup, founded in 1812 as the City Bank of New York, cut the quarterly dividend to 32 cents a share from 54 cents. The reduction, the first since the merger of Citicorp and Travelers Group Inc. in 1998, will help save the company about $4.4 billion annually. The company said as recently as November that it had no plans to lower the payout to shareholders.

Citigroup also had to turn to outside investors for fresh capital for the second time in two months, bringing to $22 billion the total amount raised. The bank said it generated $6.88 billion by selling convertible preferred shares to an investment fund controlled by the government of Singapore. Similar shares were sold to Capital Research Global Investors, Capital World Investors, the Kuwait Investment Authority, the New Jersey Division of Investment, Prince Alwaleed and Weill.

In November, the bank got a $7.5 billion injection from the ruling family of the Middle Eastern emirate Abu Dhabi. Alwaleed, the 52-year-old billionaire, already owns 4 percent of the company. He has been Citigroup's biggest individual shareholder since the early 1990s, when soured investments in commercial real estate left corporate predecessor Citicorp short of funds.
 

Monday, January 14, 2008

Moody’s downgrades FMR’s senior debt

(Investmentnews) - Moody's Investors Service downgraded the long-term senior unsecured debt rating of FMR LLC, the parent company of Fidelity Investments of Boston, from Aa3 to A1 as of Jan. 11.
 
At the same time, they upgraded the ratings outlook from negative to stable.

The downgrade reflects the loss of the dominating market share lead and a shift in revenue mix toward lower margin defined-contribution plan servicing and higher volatility brokerage businesses, Moody's said in a statement.

The New York-based credit research organization also cited the company's diminished financial flexibility caused by its employee incentive programs.

Approximately $2.1 billion in notes are affected, Moody's reported.

"While Fidelity's recent trends in investment performance show improvement, our action today recognized that the gap between Fidelity and other large mutual fund providers has largely been eliminated," Moody's vice president and senior credit officer Matthew Noll said in the statement.

"Higher financial leverage and thinning profit margins also contributed to the rating pressure."

 

AnGold buys Golden Cycle

(Fin24) - AngloGold Ashanti (ANG), the world's second-largest gold producer, announced on Monday that it had  acquired 100% of Golden Cycle Gold Corporation (GCGC), a US precious metals exploration and development company, for $149m, about R1bn.

The company said in a statement to the JSE that the transaction would be effected through a merger transaction in which GCGC's shareholders will receive consideration consisting of AngloGold Ashanti ADSs.
 

China Zim's biggest investor

(Fin24) - Cash-starved Zimbabwe soaked up $7.8bn in foreign investment last year with China as the biggest investor, state media announced yesterday.


The Zimbabwe Investment Authority (ZIA) approved 98 projects in the agricultural, manufacturing, tourism and mining sectors, said the Sunday Mail newspaper.


Manufacturing projects were worth $3.5bn, while the value of the 20 mining projects approved totalled $2.5bn. Most of the projects are partnerships between local and foreign investors. Exact investment figures for China were not given.
 

Prosecutors raid Samsung office

(Fin24) - Investigators probing alleged corruption at the massive Samsung conglomerate raided an office of Chairperson Lee Kun-hee, an official said on Monday, as part of a special probe reluctantly approved last year by South Korea's president.


Kang Dong-ju, an official with the team carrying out the probe, would say only that a total of eight locations associated with Samsung Group executives were raided. South Korean media said Lee's home was part of the sweep, though Kang only mentioned an office.


Lee, who late last year marked 20 years at the helm of Samsung, is widely reported to mostly work from his residence. Photos and television footage showed what appeared to be prosecutors entering and later leaving his hilltop Seoul home.


Yim Jun-seok, a Samsung spokesperson, said earlier that he could not confirm media reports of the raid and could not be reached later.


Samsung, a conglomerate spanning dozens of companies with interests ranging from construction to shipbuilding, is anchored by Samsung Electronics, South Korea's biggest corporation.
 

Investors brace for bank losses in pivotal week

(Reuters) - Major American banks are expected to unveil substantial losses and secure more cash from abroad in what is shaping up to be a pivotal week for the global credit crisis, with central banks also poised to weigh in again.

Citigroup Inc. (C.N: Quote, Profile, Research) could write off as much as $24 billion and lay off 20,000 workers in a drive to cut costs and boost capital, CNBC said on its Web site in a report dated Sunday.

CNBC said the plans will be unveiled on Tuesday when Citi, the largest U.S. bank by assets, reports fourth quarter results.

Investment bank Merrill Lynch (MER.N: Quote, Profile, Research) is just as troubled.

The Financial Times said on Monday that Merrill was seeking about $4 billion in a second capital raising, and the Kuwait Investment Authority was expected to be a significant investor.

A deal could be announced as soon as midweek, the paper said, citing people familiar with the matter.

The New York Times on Friday reported Merrill was expected to suffer $15 billion in losses stemming from bad mortgage investments, when it releases its results later this week.
 

Apple, China Mobile call off iPhone launch talks

(Reuters) - Apple Inc (AAPL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) and China Mobile have called off talks to launch the U.S. firm's popular iPhones in China, dashing investor speculation that the device will hit store shelves soon and sending China Mobile shares down.

Investors had cheered Apple possibly winning access to China Mobile's 350 million subscribers -- more than the population of the United States -- and news of talks over the device's potential launch in the world's largest telecoms market helped Apple's stock climb more than 10 percent on November 13.

Shares in China Mobile (0941.HK: Quote, Profile, Research), the world's largest mobile phone operator, slid nearly 3 percent after Monday's announcement to HK$130.

Analysts had expected talks to fail at least initially, predicting that both parties would eventually lock horns over revenue sharing and a plethora of technical difficulties.

"It's not a surprise. China Mobile doesn't want to share its non-voice revenue," said Duncan Clark, chairman of BDA China, a Beijing-based telecoms research consultancy. "The two have very strong egos and, as in any relationship, that often doesn't work."

The iPhone, a cellphone that allows Internet access and plays music, sells for about $500 in the United States -- about double the average monthly salary in China.

Experts said last year the iPhone would have to navigate a spate of technical, content and fee issues unique to China, including a standard revenue-sharing agreement that China Mobile would be sure to dislike, before any launch could proceed.
 

Romney, McCain, Huckabee Shift to Economy in Michigan

(Bloomberg) -- Michigan's hard-hit economy occupies center stage as two favorite sons, Mitt Romney and John McCain, square off in a potentially decisive contest for the Republican presidential nomination, with an outsider, Mike Huckabee, gaining ground.

``It's a strong three-man race,'' said Scott Reed, a Republican strategist who isn't affiliated with any candidate. Michigan's primary tomorrow ``is a must-win for Romney, a need- to-win for McCain, and Huckabee just has to do well enough to go on to South Carolina,'' which votes Jan. 19.

Romney, who was born and raised in Michigan, is staking his candidacy on a victory in the state after his second-place showings in Iowa and New Hampshire this month. Even though Romney, 60, hasn't lived in the state for more than three decades, he benefits from high name recognition: His late father, George, was chairman of American Motors Corp., a three- term governor in the 1960s and a presidential candidate.

Michigan's highest-in-the-nation unemployment rate and ballooning home-mortgage foreclosures have forced the candidates to tout their economic remedies.

``When the nation begins to feel a hiccup, we all talk about a stimulus package, the need to put money in the hands of consumers and so forth,'' Romney said in an interview today. ``But when Michigan has been suffering for 10 years, people have sat by and been somewhat idle.''

This weekend, Romney and McCain sparred over who would best be able to address the state's economic woes. Romney, who promises to lower tax rates ``across the board'' to stimulate the economy, criticized McCain for saying some lost jobs would never come back.

`Going Away'

``Some say these are jobs that are just going away and you better get used to it,'' the former Massachusetts governor said at a campaign stop Jan. 12 outside a General Motors Corp. plant in Ypsilanti where the automaker has announced plans to fire 200 workers. ``Are we going to allow the entire domestic automotive manufacturing industry to disappear?''

After losing to Huckabee in Iowa and to McCain in New Hampshire, Romney is relying on a win in Michigan to stay competitive. Last week, his campaign canceled ad purchases in South Carolina and Florida and shifted the money to the Wolverine State.

``Romney's running as someone who really understands Michigan's problems,'' said Tom Rath, one of the candidate's top strategists.

2000 Race

McCain, 71, also is well-known in Michigan, having won the state's Republican primary in 2000, defeating then-Texas Governor George W. Bush.

The Arizona senator is counting on a repeat performance to give him momentum for subsequent primaries. Like Romney, McCain rushed from New Hampshire to Michigan, where he began touting an economic agenda that includes reining in federal spending, shoring up Social Security and Medicare, middle-class tax cuts and job training.

Michigan had a 7.4 percent unemployment rate in November, compared with a national rate of 4.7 percent, according to the U.S. Labor Department. It is also feeling the effects of the credit crisis: In 2007, Michigan accounted for 35,404 of the 588,882 U.S. home-mortgage foreclosures, according to foreclosure.com.

In Livonia on Jan. 12, McCain said training and technological improvements would lead to new, better-paying jobs.

`Bright Future'

``Michigan has a bright future; but it will not be reached attempting to recreate the past,'' McCain said.

Huckabee, 52, has also jumped into the economic debate. In an address at the Detroit Economic Club on Jan. 11, the former Arkansas governor laid out his proposals for a ``fair tax'' based on consumption that would replace federal income and payroll levies.

The state ``helped save America'' during World War II ``and now it may be time for America to help save Michigan,'' he said.

His low-budget campaign is also is running a TV ad that obliquely takes a shot at Romney's background as co-founder of Bain Capital LLC, a Boston buyout firm, suggesting he reminds Americans of ``the guy who laid them off.''

The ordained Baptist minister's appeal goes beyond his economic message. Lower and Western Michigan have blocs of evangelical voters who may turn out for him in large numbers. These voters account for up to 30 percent of the state's Republican electorate, and their support for Huckabee would hurt Romney more than McCain, said Reed, who managed Bob Dole's 1996 presidential campaign.
 

Dollar Falls to Within a Cent of Euro Record on Bets Fed to Cut

(Bloomberg) -- The dollar fell to within a cent of its all-time low versus the euro on speculation U.S. interest rates will drop below those of the 15 nations that share the single European currency for the first time in three years.

The dollar extended three weeks of declines as Federal Reserve officials including Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last week signaled they favor greater ``insurance'' against an economic slowdown amid the slump in the housing market. European Central Bank council member Klaus Liebscher today said he sees ``significant'' upside risks to inflation.

``Interest rates in the U.S. are falling below those in Europe,'' said David Watt, a senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets Inc. in Toronto, a unit of Canada's biggest bank by assets. ``There are few reasons to buy the dollar.''

The dollar fell to as low as $1.4915 against the euro, the weakest since declining to a record low on Nov. 23 of $1.4967, and traded at $1.4888 as of 9:16 a.m. in New York, from $1.4776 on Jan. 11. It depreciated the most against the yen since Jan. 2, to 107.86 from 108.84. Watt said the dollar could weaken to $1.50 per euro this week.

The U.S. currency may fall to $1.55 per euro by the end of the first quarter, said London-based Bilal Hafeez, global head of currency strategy at Deutsche Bank AG, the world's largest foreign-currency trader. That compares with a median forecast of $1.47, compiled by Bloomberg from reports by 45 strategists and economists. Investment banks including UBS AG, the world's second-biggest currency trader, cut their dollar forecasts last week.

Euro Record

The euro rose to a record against the currencies of the region's 24 biggest trading partners on Jan. 11. It advanced against all but five of the 16 most-active currencies today. The single currency also climbed to a record 76.08 British pence and was recently at 76.06 pence, from 75.52 pence on Jan. 11.

The pound declined against 15 of the 16 major currencies even as a report showed U.K. factories increased prices at the fastest annual pace since 1991 in December. Investors are still betting the Bank of England will cut interest rates again later this year.

The common European currency extended gains against the dollar after rising beyond $1.4825 and $1.4850, where orders to buy the euro were placed, said Lee Wai Tuck, a strategist at Forecast Pte Ltd. in Singapore. Traders sometimes use automatic instructions to limit losses in case bets go the wrong way.

The dollar fell against all of the 16 most-active currencies before a Commerce Department report economists in a Bloomberg News survey say will show retail sales were unchanged in December. The data will be released tomorrow. The currency dropped for a third consecutive day against the Swiss franc and was trading at 1.0927 from 1.1014.

Bank Writedowns

The dollar also declined amid speculation U.S. investment banks will announce writedowns of as much as $25 billion worth of assets this week, strategists at UBS wrote in a note to clients. Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Merrill Lynch & Co. may report their worst-ever quarter, beset by $35 billion of writedowns that threaten to crimp profit through 2008.

The euro has risen 15 percent in the past 12 months against the dollar as the Fed cut borrowing costs three times since Sept. 18 to prevent the worst housing slump in 16 years from dragging the economy into recession.

``We're expecting continued U.S. dollar weakness,'' Tobias Davis, senior foreign-exchange dealer at Custom House Global Foreign Exchange in Sydney, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. ``It really is a concern that growth is grinding to a halt faster than some people expect.''

Futures Bets

Fed funds futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade show 58 percent odds the Fed will cut its 4.25 percent target rate for overnight bank loans to 3.75 percent at its Jan. 30 meeting. The odds have risen from no chance a month ago. The odds of a decrease to 3.5 percent were 44 percent, compared with zero a week ago. The ECB kept its benchmark rate unchanged at 4 percent last week.

The yield spread between German two-year notes and same- maturity Treasuries was 1.1 percentage points, near the widest since November 2002.

The ECB is under pressure to keep interest rates unchanged even as inflation stays above its 2 percent ceiling.
 

Friday, January 11, 2008

Euro stocks dive to 13-month low

(Fin24) - European stocks fell to their lowest since December 2006 by midday on Friday, tracking a drop in US futures on renewed worries over the troubled subprime mortgage market, with consumer product shares hurt by brokerage downgrades.


Unilever sank 5% after Morgan Stanley cut its recommendation to "underweight". France's L'Oreal, the world's largest cosmetics group, tumbled 4.8% after Deutsche Bank lowered its rating to "sell", citing mounting pressure on margins from rising commodity prices and risks of a slowdown in consumer spending.


At 1255 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was down 0.5% to 1 429.15, after falling to as low as 1 420.90 - retreating for the sixth time in eight sessions.


After posting a thin 1.6% gain in 2007, its worst annual performance since 2002, the index has already lost 5.1% in 2008, hammered by mounting worries over the prospect of a US recession.


"The market is in the process of pricing in a US recession, turning into bear mode, with more forecast downgrades looming," said Jean-Luc Buchalet, strategist at FactSet in Paris.


"Defensive stocks have been showing some resilience, such as telecoms and pharmaceuticals, while all the other sectors are just sinking," he said.
 
 

No fresh Vodacom bid for GT

(FIN24) - Vodacom, SA's biggest mobile network, operator has not tabled a fresh offer for a controlling stake in Ghana Telecoms (GT) but couldn't rule out adding a sweetener to its initial $500m (R3.5bn) bid.


"I've read reports from Ghana to that effect [of a higher offer]," said Dot Field, head of group communications at Vodacom. "But the fact is that we have not tabled a fresh offer for GT."


She added, however, that Ghana remained a market in which the group was "firmly" interested... as indicated in our annual report".


Initial bids for a 51% stake in GT were rejected by transactional advisors who argued that they were way below the government's asking price. Bidders included Portugal Telecom and France Telecoms.
 
 

Withering food stocks send European shares lower

(Reuters) - European shares ended down on Friday after briefly touching their lowest level since December 2006, led by weaker food and beverage stocks, as concern the U.S. subprime crisis was far from over darkened investors' mood.

Among major movers, Unilever Plc/NV (UNc.AS: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 5 percent following a Morgan Stanley downgrade of the consumer goods giant, dragging down others in the sector.

The DJ Stoxx European food and beverage index fell 3.8 percent, marking its worst sell off since June 2003, with Nestle (NESN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research) declining 4.3 percent, Danone (DANO.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) 3.2 percent lower, and Pernod Ricard ( PERP.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) down 4.1 percent.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index closed down 0.55 percent at 1,428.89 points, regaining some ground after touching the mark of 1,420.90, its lowest since early December 2006. It closed down 1.9 percent on the week.

"We had a year-end party and now we've got a proper hangover," said Susanne Lahmann, equity strategist at German bank Bremer Landesbank.
 

U.S. Stocks Decline; American Express, Tiffany Fall on Outlooks

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell as lower-than- estimated profit forecasts at American Express Co. and Tiffany & Co. heightened concern the economy is shrinking and sent the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to its worst start since 1991.

American Express, the third-largest U.S. credit-card network, fell in New York Stock Exchange trading after its projection for first-quarter earnings trailed analysts' estimates by 3.2 percent. Tiffany, the second-biggest luxury jewelry seller, lost the most in more than three years after holiday sales growth shrank to 8 percent. Countrywide Financial Corp. retreated after Bank of America Corp. agreed to buy the mortgage lender for less than its market value.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index slipped 9.68, or 0.7 percent, to 1,410.73 as of 12:52 p.m. in New York, extending its decline this year to 3.9 percent. The benchmark for U.S. equities has dropped for three straight weeks, the longest streak since August. The Dow Jones Industrial Average decreased 163.79, or 1.3 percent, to 12,689.3. The Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 28.17, or 1.1 percent, to 2,460.35. About two shares declined for every one that rose on the NYSE.

``There was this perception that the upper-end consumer was resistant to the economy, and that may be starting to roll over,'' said Matthew Kaufler, who helps manage $2.6 billion at Clover Capital Management in Rochester, New York. ``Housing has been in recession, the financial institutions are also feeling it, and now you have signs that the consumer is starting to buckle. We seem to be in a rolling recession.''
 

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Bear and T.Rowe vie for China fund firm stake

(Reuters) - Wall Street investment bank Bear Stearns (BSC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) is in talks to buy around 10 percent of China's biggest fund house, looking to tap the country's red-hot mutual fund market, two sources with knowledge of the situation told Reuters on Thursday.

China Asset Management Co, wholly-owned by China's top broker CITIC Securities (600030.SS: Quote, Profile, Research), has been talking to several potential foreign investors including Bear Stearns and U.S. fund manager T. Rowe Price Group ( TROW.O: Quote, Profile, Research), said the sources, who have been briefed on the talks.

The talks between China Asset Management and Bear Stearns follow an announcement in October that the U.S. bank, battered by a mortgage market slump, and Beijing-based CITIC Securities would take investment stakes in each other and form a broad strategic alliance.

However, that announcement didn't include the plan to allow Bear Stearns to invest in CITIC Securities' fund arm.

T. Rowe Price approached China Asset Management earlier than Bear Stearns, but the partnership with CITIC Securities would help Bear Stearns secure its tie-up with China Asset Management, though no agreement has been reached, said the two sources.
 

Wal-Mart Beats Estimates; Limited Brands' Sales Fall

(Bloomberg) -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, said December sales climbed 2.4 percent, higher than analysts' estimates. Limited Brands Inc. cut its fourth-quarter profit forecast after sales declined during what may have been the worst holiday season since 2002.

Women's clothing retailers AnnTaylor Stores Corp., Chico's FAS Inc., and Cato Corp. also projected earnings less than analysts' estimates after December sales at stores open at least a year fell.

A drop in customer visits at American Eagle Outfitters Inc. and other retailers have hurt profit. Consumers facing $3- a-gallon gasoline and the worst housing market in 27 years reined in spending and only bought items on sale. Stores typically count on November and December for about a fifth of their annual sales.

``It's a very challenging period for the retailers,'' Steven Baumgarten, an analyst at PNC Wealth Management in Philadelphia, with $77 billion in assets including retailers' shares, said on Jan. 8. ``The sales numbers obviously don't look that great, and the promotional activity in most cases was above last year, so margins are probably going to suffer.''

The International Council of Shopping Centers on Jan. 8 said same-store sales in November and December probably increased ``a little under'' its 2.5 percent forecast. Same- store sales are considered a key measure of a retailer's performance because they exclude locations that have recently opened or closed.

Food, Drugs

Discounters benefited as cash-strapped consumers sought out lower prices. Wal-Mart's December gains were driven by sales of food, prescription drugs and consumer electronics. The results were within the company's forecast of a 1 percent to 3 percent increase and beat analysts' estimates of a 1.8 percent rise.

Costco Wholesale Corp., the largest U.S. warehouse-club chain, said December sales at stores open at least a year rose 7 percent, exceeding analysts' projections for a 5.5 percent gain. TJX Cos., which sells designer clothes at discounted prices at its Marshalls chain, raised its fourth-quarter forecast.

American Eagle, the U.S. retailer of clothes for 15- to 25-year-olds, fell 6 cents to $17.72 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Limited Brands, based in Columbus, Ohio, dropped 4 cents to $15.69. Wal-Mart, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, climbed 93 cents, or 2 percent, to $46.90.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Retailing Index rose less than 1 percent to 375.15 yesterday. The index has dropped 8.5 percent this year through yesterday following an 18 percent decline in 2007.

Macy's Falls

Macy's Inc., the second-largest department-store company, said sales dropped 7.9 percent, missing analysts' estimate for 6.4 percent fall.

``Macroeconomic trends led customers to spend cautiously for the holiday,'' Chief Executive Officer Terry Lundgren said in a statement.

Gap Inc., the biggest U.S. clothing retailer, said same- store sales fell 6 percent, more than double Retail Metrics LLC's estimate for a 2.4 percent decline. Abercrombie & Fitch Co. said comparable-store sales retreated 2 percent. Analysts estimated a 0.9 percent decline.

December sales may have gained at a pace slower than the council's 1.5 percent estimate as shoppers waiting for discounts spent less at the beginning of the month, Michael Niemira, the ICSC's chief economist, said last week.

A calendar shift moved a week of holiday sales into November from December, hurting last month's results and helping November post a 3.5 percent increase.