Monday, February 25, 2008

Getty Images to be sold to Hellman & Friedman

(Reuters) - Getty Images Inc (GYI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Monday it agreed to be bought by Hellman & Friedman affiliates for $34 per share in cash, in a deal it said was worth $2.4 billion, including the assumption of debt.
 

Cheap Palm Oil May Overtake Soy on Rising Asia Demand

(Bloomberg) -- Palm oil, the world's most-used cooking oil, is also the cheapest, a discrepancy that won't last long as demand rises across Asia's biggest countries.

An ingredient in curries, stir-fries and Skittles candy, Malaysian palm oil costs 15 percent less than soybean oil on the Chicago Board of Trade. Tobin Gorey, a commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia Ltd. in Sydney, said the two may soon be even money, raising the prospect of at least a $1.5 million profit from a $10 million investment.

Rising incomes mean billions of people in Asia's developing economies seek palm oil for fried and processed foods, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Crude oil at $100 a barrel is boosting demand for alternative fuels such as diesel from vegetable oil. As consumption rises, supply in China may drop after the worst snowstorms in five decades damaged rapeseed crops in January, the government reported.

``We may have a case of mass shortage of vegetable oil in China,'' said Rudolphe Roche, a manager at Schroders Plc's $6 billion agricultural commodities fund in London. ``This means they will continue to import from the rest of the world.'' Palm oil, produced in Malaysia and Indonesia, will benefit the most because its proximity to China lowers shipping costs, he said.

Rising prices will increase expenses at Nissin Food Products Co., Japan's biggest instant-noodle maker, and increase profits at Kuala Lumpur-based Sime Darby Bhd., the world's largest publicly traded owner of palm plantations. About 36 percent of the world's cooking oil comes from oil palm, more than any other plant, USDA data show.

The Precedent

``Ninety-three percent of all the palm oil in the world is going to food demand,'' William Doyle, chief executive officer of fertilizer maker Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc., said in a Feb. 19 interview. ``It's enormously powerful, and we don't see this backing off.''

The last time palm oil was this cheap, in April 2007, prices rallied for two months because of increasing demand, gaining 38 percent to 2,855 ringgit ($889) a metric ton on the Malaysia Derivatives Exchange to reach parity with Chicago prices. Contracts for May delivery ended at 3,698 ringgit a ton (52 U.S. cents a pound) on Feb. 22 in Malaysia. May soybean oil finished at 63.02 cents a pound on the CBOT.

Palm oil and soybean oil reached records today. Palm oil rose as much as 5.8 percent to 3,914 ringgit a ton and closed 4.5 percent higher at 3,866 ringgit, the biggest gain since Dec. 26, 2006. Soybeans advanced as much as 2.4 percent to 64.52 cents a pound and last traded at 64.29. That narrowed palm oil's discount to 16 percent from 17 percent.

Food Inflation

``There is no reason why the price of soybean oil and palm oil cannot be the same,'' said Edgare Kerwijk, chief financial officer for Biox Group BV in Rotterdam, which has put on hold plans for three biodiesel projects in the Netherlands and the U.K. due to higher prices. ``The discount will narrow'' for palm oil, he said.

U.S. manufacturers will increase consumption of soybean oil for energy by 22 percent to 3.4 million pounds in the year ending November, the USDA forecasts. The total equals 16 percent of U.S. use.

Soaring food prices are fueling inflation. China's consumer- price gains accelerated to 7.1 percent in January, the fastest pace in more than 11 years, the statistics bureau said Feb. 19. U.S. inflation quickened to 4.3 percent in January from 4.1 percent in December, the Labor Department said Feb. 20.

China's January snowstorms and rains, the worst in 50 years, affected as much as 48 million mu (7.9 million acres) of rapeseed crops, almost half the total area planted, the China National Grain and Oils Information Center said Feb. 14.

China, U.S.

China, the biggest annual buyer of cooking oils, raised palm oil imports 18 percent in January to 360,000 metric tons, compared with a year earlier, according to customs figures. India boosted imports 75 percent to 366,353 tons that month, and imports of all cooking oils may gain 15 percent to 5.4 million tons in the year ending Oct. 31, according to a Bloomberg News survey of six traders and analysts.

``With the strong demand coming from the substitution effect this year, the discount should narrow further from here,'' said Ben Santoso, a plantations analyst at the brokerage arm of DBS Group Holdings, Singapore's largest bank. He said palm oil may reach the same level as soy by June.

Even the U.S., the world's largest soybean grower and exporter, is buying more palm oil. Soyoil is hydrogenated in some foods to make them last longer on store shelves, a process resulting in trans-fats that may raise the risk of heart disease, according to the Food and Drug Administration.

``Trans-fats are a big reason for more palm oil imports,'' Anne Frick, a senior oilseed analyst for Prudential Financial Inc. in New York, said in a Feb. 20 e-mail.
 

Ambac Rises on $3 Billion Rescue to Avert Downgrade

 (Bloomberg) -- Ambac Financial Group Inc. rose to the highest in two weeks on investor expectations the bond insurer may be rescued from crippling credit-rating downgrades by getting $3 billion in new capital.

Ambac, the second-biggest bond insurer after MBIA Inc., may announce an agreement this week, according to a person with knowledge of the discussions who declined to be named because the details aren't complete. The New York-based company plans to raise $2.5 billion by selling stock at a discount to existing shareholders and $500 million from issuing debt, the Wall Street Journal reported today, citing people familiar with the matter.

``Maybe we'll see light at the end of the tunnel soon,'' said Geraud Charpin, head of European credit strategy at UBS in London. ``That would be good news for banks.''

Citigroup Inc. and seven other banks are working with Ambac to prevent rating cuts that would throw doubt on the credit quality of the $553 billion of municipal and asset-backed securities it guarantees. Banks stand to lose as much as $70 billion from any downgrades to Ambac, MBIA Inc. and FGIC Corp., Oppenheimer & Co. analysts estimated. Ambac rose as much as 6 percent before the official start of trading in New York.

The stock was 69 cents higher at $11.40 at 7:35 a.m., the highest since Feb. 11. Ambac jumped 16 percent in New York Stock Exchange trading on Feb. 22 after CNBC Television said banks and Ambac were preparing a deal.

Ambac spokeswoman Vandana Sharma didn't return a voicemail and e-mail seeking comment before office hours today.

Bank Talks

Rating companies are demanding bond insurers add more capital or face downgrades because of losses on subprime- mortgage securities they guaranteed. Moody's Investors Service indicated it will decide whether to cut Ambac and Armonk, New York-based MBIA by the end of the month. A downgrade of all the firms would cast doubt on $2.4 trillion of securities they back.

New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo last month arranged a meeting with banks to help avoid a downgrade of the bond insurers. Dinallo told a congressional hearing this month that the companies may be forced to separate their municipal insurance business from their asset-backed guarantees.

``Ambac was among the neediest cases, so if they can pull it off, there's hope for the others,'' said Jim Reid, credit strategist at Deutsche Bank AG in London.

CDO Losses

Banks face losses from any rating cuts because they bought bond insurance to hedge the risks of collateralized debt obligations and other asset-backed securities that are now tumbling in value. CDOs package pools of securities then split them into pieces with different ratings.

UBS AG, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, Wachovia Corp., Barclays Plc, Societe Generale SA, BNP Paribas SA and Dresdner Bank AG were also involved in the group discussing a rescue, said the person.

Dresdner, the German banking arm of Allianz SE, will contribute a ``small'' investment of ``two-digit million euros,'' Stefan Jentzsch, head of the Dresdner Kleinwort investment-banking unit, said at a press conference in Frankfurt today.

``We have long been waiting for banks to pay up,'' Philip Gisdakis, a Munich-based credit analyst at UniCredit SpA, Italy's biggest bank, wrote in a note to investors today. A ``solution without their participation would lead to large losses for them.''

Spokespeople for Citigroup, UBS, Wachovia and BNP declined to comment on the rescue plans. Spokespeople for RBS, Barclays and Societe Generale didn't immediately return e-mails or calls seeking comment.

FGIC Split

FGIC, which lost its top rating at Moody's last week, asked to be split into two separate businesses, one that insures municipal bonds and another for asset-backed securities. That would help protect municipal bonds from losses on the asset- backed debt.

Channel Reinsurance Ltd., a reinsurer for MBIA, had its top Aaa credit rating cut by Moody's on Feb. 22 because of a slump in the value of residential mortgage securities.

The rating was cut three levels to Aa3 with a negative outlook, Moody's said in a statement. Channel Re provides more than half the reinsurance bought by MBIA, according to MBIA filings. MBIA said last week all bond insurers must eventually divide their businesses.
 

Visa May Raise as Much as $17 Billion in Initial Sale

(Bloomberg) -- Visa Inc. may raise as much as $17 billion in what would be the biggest U.S. initial public stock offering.

Visa, the world's largest payment-card network, plans to sell 406 million Class A shares for $37 to $42 each, the San Francisco-based company said in a regulatory filing today. Banks have the option of selling an additional 40.6 million shares, pushing the potential size of the deal to $18.8 billion.

The company is trying to replicate the success of its smaller rival, MasterCard Inc., whose shares have surged more than fivefold since a May 2006 IPO. Demand for initial public offerings has waned this year, with 97 companies raising $12 billion, or 43 percent less than in the same period last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

At the high end of the projected range, Visa's transaction would be the world's second-biggest IPO, after the $22 billion raised by Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. in 2006.
 

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Reed to buy ChoicePoint, sell info division

(Reuters) - Reed Elsevier announced the acquisition of U.S. risk-management business ChoicePoint Inc for $4.1 billion including debt alongside its results, as well as a renewed cost-savings drive and the planned sale of an advertising-dependent information business.

Shares in Anglo-Dutch publisher Reed, which have outperformed the DJ Stoxx European media sector by 5 percent over the past year, jumped 6 percent to 619 pence on the news on Thursday.

The $4.1 billion for ChoicePoint comprises $3.5 billion in cash for the equity, at $50 per share, and 600 million pounds in debt. CheckPoint shares closed at $33.66 on Wednesday.

Reed said that combining ChoicePoint with its LexisNexis risk-information and its Analytics group would create a risk-management business with $1.5 billion in revenue and a leading position in a fast-growing market.

The London-based company said buying ChoicePoint had the unanimous backing of the U.S. company's board and now required shareholder and regulatory approval. ChoicePoint is based in Alpharetta, Ga. and employs around 5,500 people.

Reed also announced that it would divest its Reed Business Information (RBI) arm to reduce its exposure to cyclical advertising markets. The Reed exhibitions business will be kept.

Advertising accounts for around 60 percent of revenues at RBI, which itself generates around 20 percent of Reed's 4.6 billion pound group revenues.
 

Auction Debt Succumbs to Bid-Rig Taint as Citi Flees

(Bloomberg) -- The collapse of the auction-rate bond market, where state and local governments go to raise cash, demonstrates that regulators are no match for Wall Street.

Hundreds of auctions have failed this month, sending borrowing costs as high as 20 percent because dealers from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Citigroup Inc., UBS AG and Merrill Lynch & Co. stopped using their own capital to support the sales. Regulators, who allowed the manipulation of bids and lack of information to persist even after two probes in the past 15 years, are now watching a $342 billion market evaporate at the expense of taxpayers.

Inadequate disclosure ``may have masked the impact of broker-dealer bidding on rates and liquidity,'' Martha Haines, head of the Securities and Exchange Commission's municipal office, said in an interview. ``The large numbers of recent auction failures, which are reported to have occurred due to a reduction in bidding by broker-dealers, appears to indicate those concerns were well founded.''

Citizens Property Insurance of Tallahassee, Florida, a state-run insurer that protects homeowners against hurricane losses, is a casualty. The rate Citizens pays on a portion of the $4.75 billion in securities it has sold jumped to 15 percent from 5 percent at an auction run by UBS that failed on Feb. 13.

No `Backstop'

``The banks were the backstop,'' said Sharon Binnun, the chief financial officer of Citizens. ``If you had more sell orders than buy orders, they'd pick up the difference and you wouldn't have a failed auction.''

Officials at Goldman, Citigroup, UBS and Merrill declined to comment. All the firms are based in New York, except UBS, which is located in Zurich. UBS told its brokers this month that it won't buy bonds that fail to attract enough bidders, and Merrill said it was reducing its purchases.

Auction-rate securities are long-term bonds whose interest resets every seven, 28 or 35 days at bidding run by a dealer who collects a fee of about 25 basis points. Unlike Treasuries or stocks, there is no daily source of information about auction- rate bonds. Issuers have relied on banks to be buyers of last resort when bidders couldn't be found at their auctions.

Since the first of the securities were sold in 1984 for American Express Co., the market has expanded as investors sought the bonds as a higher-yielding alternative to money funds.

SEC Fines

Along the way, New York-based Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. was fined $850,000 in 1995 by the SEC for manipulating auctions conducted for American Express. Almost two years ago, 15 securities firms paid the SEC $13 million to settle claims of bid-rigging in auction-rate bonds. The banks neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing.

While the SEC required dealers to disclose that they may use insider knowledge to place bids, they don't have to say how frequently they bid or how much. Dealers also aren't obligated to disclose rates on auction debt when the securities trade.

The settlement didn't go far enough because it still deprives investors of information they need to make informed bids, said Joseph Fichera, chief executive of Saber Partners LLC, an advisory firm in New York.

``Investors aren't sure they can sell the bonds when they want,'' Fichera said.

Aside from the fines, the market worked smoothly until November, when investors began pulling back from all except the safest of government debt as losses on securities tied to subprime mortgages began infecting other parts of the credit market.

Subprime Contagion

Wall Street firms, reeling from $146 billion in losses on their debt holdings, became unwilling to commit their own capital to support auctions that don't attract enough bidders.

``It's more a liquidity issue, I don't think there's a concern here about these entities being able to repay their debts,'' said Tony Crescenzi, chief bond-market strategist in New York at Miller Tabak & Co., in an interview today with Bloomberg Radio. ``These auction-rate securities are proving to no longer be viable, and we'll see them diminish in scope and size as we go forward.''

A month ago, it was ``unthinkable'' that the banks wouldn't intervene to support auctions, said Steven Brooks, executive director of the North Carolina State Education Assistance Agency. ``I had certainly hoped and believed that that liquidity was there and was an important part of why this marketplace was good for investors and good for issuers.''

From 1984 through 2006, only 13 auctions failed, typically because of changes in the credit of the borrower, according to Moody's Investors Service. There were 31 failures in the second half of 2007, and 32 during a two-week period beginning in January.

`Ugly' Market

``It's ugly,'' said Luis I. Alfaro-Martinez, finance director for the Government Development Bank of Puerto Rico, which saw the rate it pays on $62 million of debt rise to the maximum of 12 percent set out in documents governing the bonds, from 4 percent at a Feb. 12 auction handled by Goldman. ``It's getting uglier.''

The average rate for seven-day municipal auction bonds rose to a record 6.59 percent on Feb. 13 from 4.03 percent the previous week, according to indexes compiled by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

The higher rates drove California, the biggest borrower in the municipal bond market, to decide to replace $1.25 billion of auction-rate bonds with traditional debt.
 

Philadelphia Fed February Factory Index Falls to -24

(Bloomberg) -- Manufacturing in the Philadelphia region unexpectedly contracted the most since February 2001, the eve of the last recession, as measures of new orders and shipments reflected weakening demand.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's general economic index declined to a minus 24 from minus 20.9 in January, the bank said today. Readings less than zero signal contraction. The Philadelphia Fed's general economic index averaged 5.1 in 2007.

A two-year housing slump, exacerbated by tighter credit conditions, is spilling over to other industries, pushing the economy to the brink of recession. The Fed, after cutting interest rates at the fastest pace since 1990 last month, has said it is ready to move in a ``timely'' manner to avert a downturn.

``The Philadelphia Fed survey is sending clear signals that the U.S. economy is heading for a recession,'' said Lena Komileva, chief economist at Tullett Prebon in London, who forecast a minus 25 reading. ``The speed and magnitude of the recent decline in the series signals a very sharp deterioration.''

Economists had forecast the Philadelphia manufacturing index would rise to minus 10.0, according to the median of 54 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from 0 to minus 25.0.

New Orders

The Philadelphia Fed's measure of new orders rose to minus 10.9 from minus 15.2 the prior month, and a measure of shipments fell to minus 12.2 from minus 2.3 the prior month.

A gauge of unfilled orders dropped to minus 10.9 from minus 6.2, while the index of inventories declined to minus 13 from minus 11.7 the prior month.

The employment index gained to 2.5 from minus 1.5 a month earlier, the Philadelphia Fed said. An index of prices paid dropped to 46.6 from 49.8, while a gauge of prices received weakened to 24.3 from 32.

The report provides one of the month's earliest clues to the state of manufacturing nationwide. Similar data from the New York Fed released last week showed manufacturing contracted in the New York region in February for the first time in almost three years.

The Philadelphia Fed region, which comprises eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and Delaware, is more vulnerable to the auto slump and less exposed to financial services and trade than the New York region, economists said.

Nationwide Measure

Nationwide, manufacturing grew in January after contracting in December by the most in almost five years, according to a Feb. 1 survey from the Institute for Supply Management. The ISM survey on manufacturing in February is due out March 3.

The index measuring the manufacturing outlook for six months from now fell to minus 16.9 from 5.2, today's report showed.

The Fed's January rate cuts came as rising subprime defaults led to a global tightening of credit standards and declines in equity prices. Investors are betting on a half-point rate reduction, to 2.5 percent, at the March 18 Fed meeting.

The U.S. economy will probably grow at a 0.5 percent pace in the first quarter and a 1 percent rate in the following three months, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists taken the first week of February. Economists surveyed said a recession this year was an even bet.
 

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

AT&T, Verizon May Fall Further as Flat Rates Portend Price War

(Bloomberg) -- AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. declined for the second straight day in New York trading after adopting flat-rate mobile calling plans that could be the opening salvos in a price war.

AT&T and Verizon Wireless, the two top U.S. wireless carriers, announced plans yesterday to sell unlimited calls for a flat fee of $99.99 a month. Credit Suisse cut its ratings on shares of AT&T and Verizon Communications, co-owner of Verizon Wireless. Robert W. Baird & Co. lowered its AT&T rating to match its neutral stance on Verizon Communications.

The unlimited plans, including another announced by T-Mobile USA Inc., pose a competitive challenge as U.S. mobile carriers already struggle to reach the remaining fifth of Americans that don't yet have a wireless phone. While analysts estimated the new rates may not hurt sales, they worried about future price cuts.

``There's no going back,'' said Credit Suisse's Christopher Larsen, who cut AT&T and Verizon shares to a neutral rating from the equivalent of a buy recommendation. ``It's extremely unlikely prices go up from $99, so now you've created a ceiling for what unlimited pricing will be.''

AT&T, based in San Antonio, fell $2.41, or 6.7 percent, to $33.48 at 10:13 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, the biggest drop in five years. The shares lost 5.3 percent yesterday. New York-based Verizon declined $1.60, or 4.5 percent, to $33.74, extending yesterday's 6.6 percent loss.

While the pricing plans may only affect the less than 5 percent of subscribers who pay more than $100 a month, they will convince more customers to replace their home phones with mobile handsets, said Larsen, who is based in New York.

Upper Tier

The plans announced yesterday aim at the upper tier of customers who spend about twice what an average mobile-phone user paid last quarter, as reported by AT&T and Verizon.

The new rate plans reminded Stanford Group Co.'s Michael Nelson of the day the old AT&T Wireless began selling local and long-distance service for one price.

``It turned the wireless industry upside down,'' the New York-based analyst said in an interview yesterday. ``It caused all the carriers to come up with completely new calling plans, to really revisit their entire business models.''

The flat-rate movement ``raises the risk profile for a pricing war across the entire industry,'' said Nelson.

The former AT&T Wireless, which is now part of AT&T's mobile-phone unit, started its Digital One Rate plan in 1998, erasing the distinction between local and long-distance calls on mobile phones, keeping rates flat regardless of the caller's location.
 

Port Authority Auction Bonds Reset at 8% After Surge

(Bloomberg) -- Interest rates on $100 million of bonds issued by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey were set at 8 percent in a weekly auction after surging to 20 percent on Feb. 12.

Rates had soared from 4.3 percent when too few buyers bid for the so-called auction-rate debt and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which runs the auction, refused to put up its own capital to buy unwanted securities. That caused the yield to be set at a level predetermined in bond documents. Rates fell yesterday as the prospect of high yields enticed investors, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Rates in the more than $300 billion market for auction-rate debt are rising after banks including Citigroup Inc. and Goldman stopped bidding for the debt at periodic sales they oversee, prompting hundreds of so-called failures. Some investors, including OppenheimerFunds Inc., see an opportunity in the turmoil and are buying the bonds.

``Twenty percent was such an unusually high number,'' said Judy Wesalo Temel, director of credit research at Samson Capital Advisors LLC, a fixed-income manager in New York. ``I wouldn't say that the whole market has calmed down or has even begun to function normally yet. It hasn't.''

Yesterday, a Citigroup-run auction of $25 million of federally taxable debt issued by Vermont's student loan agency failed, causing the rate to remain at 18 percent for the second week in a row. The debt paid 4.5 percent as recently as Feb. 11.

Port Authority Rates

The 8 percent rate on the federally taxable Port Authority debt is still above the range of 4 percent to 5.70 percent the agency paid until this month. Port Authority Treasurer Anne Marie Mulligan didn't return a call for comment; Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally declined to comment.

Auction-rate bonds are long-term debt with interest rates that reset according to bids submitted through securities firms every seven, 28 or 35 days. When there aren't enough bids, the auction fails and the rate is set at a level spelled out in bond documents. Investors who expected to sell the debt are left holding the securities.

Until the past two weeks, bankers who ran auctions prevented failures by purchasing bonds for their own account, though they weren't required to do so. Investors grew wary of relying on bankers to support auctions as the investment firms reported more than $146 billion of losses and writedowns.

Rising Average

The average rate for seven-day municipal auction bonds rose to a record 6.59 percent on Feb. 13 from 4.03 percent the previous week, according to indexes compiled by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

Regulators allow dealers to bid when they choose, and to control auction information as long as they disclose that they might submit bids. Bankers don't have to say how often they buy or how much, and aren't required to make public the range of bids or when auctions fail.

Last week, New York Governor Eliot Spitzer cited the high rate on the Port Authority's auction-rate bonds in testimony on bond insurers before a House subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance and Government. Insurers such as MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc. that back the debt are struggling to raise capital after taking more than $8 billion in writedowns related to mortgage-linked securities they guaranteed.

``The higher max rate stuff is starting to get some traction,'' said Matt Dalton, chief executive officer of Belle Haven Investments, a money management firm based in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Massachusetts Tolls

Drivers on the Massachusetts Turnpike may face higher tolls after the state was unable to sell auction-rate securities backed by a unit of Ambac, according to state officials. The turnpike is now trying to buy a letter of credit from State Street Bank and Trust Co. and KBC Group NV so it can sell variable-rate demand obligations by mid-March instead of auction-rate securities, an advisor for the Turnpike told the agency's board yesterday.

``That is a very significant financial obligation, probably our biggest short-term problem,'' Alan LeBovidge, the turnpike authority's executive director, said at the state agency's monthly board meeting yesterday.

Auction-Rate Proposal

The Securities and Exchange Commission fined banks in a settlement over bid-rigging two years ago. The U.S. municipal bond market's main regulator, the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, plans to propose rules requiring banks to disclose more, including the rate, bidding details and information about failures.

Auction-rate securities were introduced in the corporate market in 1984, when American Express Co. sold $300 million of auction preferred stock. The securities, devised by Ronald Gallatin, a retired managing director at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., then Shearson Lehman, were used by banks and other companies before auction difficulties prompted many companies to move away from them.

American Express retired its issue in 1991-1992, and in 1995 Lehman was fined $850,000 by the SEC for manipulating auctions conducted for American Express.

The first failed auction in the municipal market occurred in 1990 for bonds issued by the Pima County, Arizona, Industrial Development Authority for Tucson Electric Power Co., now a unit of UniSource Energy Corp., based in Tucson.
 

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

MBIA Former Chief Returns as Credit Rating Cut Looms

(Bloomberg) -- MBIA Inc., the world's largest bond insurer, brought back former Chief Executive Officer Joseph Brown to run the company and expedite talks with regulators to help preserve its AAA credit rating.

Gary Dunton, who succeeded Brown as CEO in 2004 and added the title of chairman last year, will leave the company, Armonk, New York-based MBIA said today in a statement.

Brown, 59, will be tasked with forging a plan to restructure and revive MBIA, which has recorded losses of more than $5 billion on subprime-mortgage securities, threatening its credit rating and sending its shares plunging 83 percent in the past year. New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo said last week bond insurers may need to be split into two businesses to protect more than $1 trillion of insured municipal debt from subprime losses.

``MBIA faces meaningful challenges,'' Brown said in the statement. Brown said he is seeking to ``frame a new model,'' for MBIA.

Brown said he has already discussed MBIA's plans with Dinallo who provided ``helpful guidance.'' Dinallo, who is taking the lead among the nation's insurance regulators, brought in Warren Buffett to start a new insurer and also asked the billionaire investor to value the guarantors' municipal business.

Insurers Splitting

FGIC Corp., the third-largest bond insurer, sought permission to split up last week. Dinallo said MBIA and Ambac Financial Group Inc., the market leaders, may do the same if they can't raise capital.

The companies and Security Capital Assurance Ltd. insure about $580 billion of asset-backed debt, including collateralized debt obligations that package bonds into new securities.

MBIA, New York-based Ambac and FGIC of New York are struggling after more than $8 billion in losses tied to the slumping value of subprime debt.

MBIA rose 53 cents to $12.77 in early New York Stock Exchange trading. Ambac, down 88 percent this year, fell 24 cents to $9.98. FGIC is owned by New York-based leveraged buyout firm Blackstone Group LP and mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc. of Walnut Creek, California.

Under Dunton, 52, MBIA sold about $2.5 billion in the sale of shares and notes in the past three months.
 

Medco profit tops estimates

(Reuters) - Medco Health Solutions Inc (MHS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings on Tuesday, helped by sales of generic drugs, and the pharmacy benefit manager boosted its full-year profit forecast, sending its shares higher.

Medco, which derives more than half its profit from home delivery of generic medicines by mail, said its rosier outlook reflected confidence in its fundamentals, new business, and more generics becoming available sooner than anticipated.

Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), which administer prescription drug benefits for employers and health plans and operate large mail-order pharmacies, have profited from the availability of low-cost generic versions of popular drugs.

Morgan Stanley analyst David Veal said in a research note, "Another quarter of solid growth, when coupled with higher guidance, affirm our positive view of the PBM industry and should offer relief for the high level of investor nervousness around the quarter."

After a huge gain in 2007, Medco shares were down 3 percent this year through Friday's close, compared with a 13 percent drop for rival Express Scripts Inc (ESRX.O: Quote, Profile, Research). Medco shares rose 4 percent to $51 in pre-market trading on Tuesday.

Fourth-quarter net income fell 9 percent to $207.6 million, or 38 cents per share, from $228.8 million, or 39 cents per share, a year earlier.

The latest results were hurt by higher-than-expected costs tied to new clients and expenses related to two acquisitions. The year-earlier earnings were boosted by the temporary availability of a generic version of a popular blood thinner.
 

Penny-pinching shoppers boost Wal-Mart profit

(Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) posted better-than-expected quarterly profit on Tuesday as penny-pinching U.S. shoppers scoured its discount stores for low prices on necessities like food to offset tough economic conditions.

"We know that the economy remains a critical factor in this new fiscal year," said Lee Scott, CEO of the world's largest retailer, in a statement. "Customers were more cautious in their spending in January."

For the first quarter, it forecast sales at its U.S. stores open at least a year, a key retail gauge known as same-store sales, to be flat to up 2 percent, citing the "challenging" economic environment.

Net income rose 4 percent to $4.096 billion, or $1.02 per share, for its fiscal fourth quarter ended January 31, from $3.94 billion, or 95 cents per share, a year earlier.

The most recent quarter's results included charges of 3 cents per share for dropped real estate projects and a restructuring charge for its Japanese operations, and a 1 cent per share benefit from the sale of certain real estate properties.

Excluding the items, Wal-Mart reported earnings of $1.04 per share, above analysts' average estimate of $1.02 per share, according to Reuters Estimates.
 

Monday, February 18, 2008

Euro zone growth may be weaker than hoped: Noyer

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

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

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

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

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

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

Toshiba to give up on HD DVD, end format war: source

(Reuters) - Toshiba Corp (6502.T: Quote, Profile, Research) is planning to give up on its HD DVD format for high definition DVDs, conceding defeat to the competing Blu-Ray technology backed by Sony Corp (6758.T: Quote, Profile, Research), a company source said on Saturday.

The move will likely put an end to a battle that has gone on for several years between consortiums led by Toshiba and Sony vying to set the standard for the next-generation DVD and compatible video equipment.

The format war, often compared to the Betamax-VHS battle in the 1980s, has confused consumers unsure of which DVD or player to buy, slowing the development what is expected to be a multibillion dollar high definition DVD industry.

Toshiba's cause has suffered several setbacks in recent weeks including Friday's announcement by U.S. retailing giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) that it would abandon the HD DVD format and only stock its shelves with Blu-ray movies.

A source at Toshiba confirmed an earlier report by public broadcaster NHK that it was getting ready to pull the plug.

"We have entered the final stage of planning to make our exit from the next generation DVD business," said the source, who asked not to be identified. He added that an official announcement could come as early as next week.

No one answered the phone at Toshiba's public relations office in Tokyo.
 

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

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

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

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

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

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

Operations Ceased

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

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

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

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

Hamburger Patties

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

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

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

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

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

Kidney Exports

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

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

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

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

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

Friday, February 15, 2008

Bond insurer FGIC asks to split in two

(Reuters) - FGIC Corp, a bond insurer whose main unit has lost its top credit ratings from all three agencies, has told New York regulators it wants to split into two companies, New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo said on Friday.
 
The company would be split into a municipal bond insurer and a structured finance insurance company, in a "good-bank/bad-bank" plan that would split off the relatively safe business of insuring municipal debt from the riskier business of guaranteeing repackaged mortgages and other debt.
 

U.S. January Import Prices Rise More Than Forecast

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

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

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

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

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

Treasury Yields

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

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

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

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

Bernanke Message

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

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

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

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

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

Dollar Falls

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

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

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

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

Thursday, February 14, 2008

New York's Dinallo Considers Splitting Bond Insurers

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

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

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

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Cuomo to Sue UnitedHealth, Probe Reimbursement Policy

(Bloomberg) -- New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said he plans to sue UnitedHealth Group Inc. and will issue 16 subpoenas in an industrywide probe of how U.S. insurers compute ``reasonable and customary'' rates to limit payouts.

Cuomo said he plans to sue Minnetonka, Minnesota-based UnitedHealth, the largest U.S. health insurer, over deceptive practices in the reimbursement policy it links to such charges, which he claims seriously shortchange patients and involve a conflict of interest.

``When insurers like United create convoluted and dishonest systems for determining the rate of reimbursement, real people get stuck with excessive bills and are less likely to seek the care they need,'' Cuomo said in a statement today.

Cuomo said he will subpoena UnitedHealth, Aetna Inc., Cigna Corp. and Empire Blue Cross & Blue Shield over their reimbursement practices.

UnitedHealth's Ingenix unit provides data that sets ``reasonable and customary'' rates, which put a ceiling on reimbursement to patients, Cuomo said. When patients go out of network, health insurance companies generally cover only 80 percent of `reasonable and customary' charges.

Cuomo said a six-month investigation showed Ingenix has a ``defective and manipulated'' database that most health insurance companies use to set reimbursement rates for out-of-network expenses. The probe found that two subsidiaries of United ``dramatically under-reimbursed'' patients for out-of-network expenses using information from Ingenix.

United Falls

UnitedHealth fell $2.28, or 4.7 percent, to $45.99 at 12:02 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

``This is obviously going to be a negative for the company,'' said Sheryl Skolnick, an analyst with CRT Capital Group in Stamford, Connecticut, in a telephone interview. ``These things typically take a long time to work their way through. It does make it more difficult for United to argue that they have fixed their challenges.''

UnitedHealth Group Inc., WellPoint Inc., Aetna Inc. and other health insurers fell in New York trading this morning in anticipation of Cuomo's announcement.

Don Nathan, a spokesman for UnitedHealth, had no comment before the announcement.

Ingenix, with $1.3 billion in revenue last year, markets services to detect health-care fraud, identify preferred doctors and hospitals for insurers and help drugmakers run trials of new medicines. The company has said it has contracts with 1,500 health insurers, including rival Aetna Inc., as well as 200,000 doctors, 3,500 hospitals, 140 drug companies and government agencies.
 

U.S. Stocks Advance for Third Day, Led by Tech, Energy Shares

 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks rose for a third day, the longest stretch of gains in 2008, after increased demand at Applied Materials Inc. spurred a technology rally and energy shares climbed on higher gas-station sales.

Applied Materials, the largest maker of semiconductor- production equipment, advanced the most in four years on a surge in orders for machines that make flat screens. Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips led oil companies higher after the Commerce Department said rising prices at filling stations helped boost retail sales last month. Genentech Inc., the biggest U.S. maker of anti-cancer drugs, rallied the most in a month after its Avastin treatment helped slow the spread of breast tumors.

``The rally could last,'' said Eric Green, who helps manage $5 billion as senior managing partner at Penn Capital Management in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. ``We see the market heading higher.''

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index added 8.71 points, or 0.7 percent, to 1,357.57 at 11:31 a.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 89.98, or 0.7 percent, to 12,463.39. The Nasdaq Composite Index increased 31.57, or 1.4 percent, to 2,351.51. About five stocks rose for every two that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. European and Asian benchmarks dropped.

Applied Materials' report of increasing demand spurred speculation that technology companies' earnings will withstand an economic slowdown sparked by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market. The S&P 500 Information Technology Index has lost 14 percent this year, the worst performance among 10 industries.

Applied Materials

Applied Materials rose $1.26, or 7 percent, to $19.33. The company said orders for machines that make flat screens will rise as much as 5 percent this quarter, exceeding some analysts' estimates.

A gauge of computer-chip makers gained 1.8 percent, the second most among 24 industries in the S&P 500, led by Applied Materials, its third-biggest member.

Exxon, the largest U.S. crude producer, climbed $1.16 to $85.54. ConocoPhillips, the third-biggest, rallied 98 cents to $77.38. Energy companies in the S&P 500 climbed 1.4 percent even as oil for March delivery fell 44 cents to $92.34 a barrel in New York.

Filling station sales rose 2 percent in January after remaining unchanged the prior month, the Commerce Department said, as regular gasoline rose as high as $3.11 a gallon in early January. Total retail sales climbed 0.3 percent, compared with economists' forecast for a drop of 0.3 percent. Excluding gas, purchases rose 0.1 percent last month, the Commerce Department said.

Retailers in the S&P 500 fell 0.2 percent as a group after the report.

Genentech Rallies

Genentech added $1.46 to $71.38. The results were from a trial called Avado, which included patients who took Avastin with docetaxel chemotherapy.

Industrial companies also rose, led by Rockwell Automation Inc., the world's largest maker of factory controls, after the report on purchases by consumers bolstered confidence in the sagging economy. Rockwell increased $2.02, or 3.6 percent, to $57.60.

Deere & Co., the world's largest maker of farm tractors and combines, fell 97 cents, or 1.1 percent, to $85.51. Deere's comments that the U.S. housing slump will maintain ``continued pressure'' on sales of construction and forestry equipment overshadowed its increased annual forecast and first-quarter earnings surge.

A survey of Bloomberg users showed benchmarks for the world's biggest stock markets probably will fall for the next six months as economic growth slows, and investors are the most pessimistic in the U.S. and the U.K.
 

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Adcock boss suspended

(Fin24) - Consumer goods giant Tiger Brands says it will be extending its independent investigation into collusion allegations in its healthcaredivision into all its businesses.


"We will extend this investigation into every single business that we areinvolved in," Tiger Brands' non-executivechairperson Lex van Vught said ina statement.

"We are determined to find and root out any anti-competitive
or collusive practices," he said.


Also, the managing executive of Adcock Ingram Critical Care, Arthur Barnett,has been suspended by the board pending the conclusion of the independentinvestigation.


Van Vught said the company was "devastated" at the allegations.
 

Conservationists battle coal firm

(Fin24) - A legal battle is brewing between conservationists and coal exploration company DMC Coal Mining over its plans to prospect for anthracite and torbanite in one of South Africa's most important regions for rare and endangered birds.


DMC Coal Mining has obtained prospecting rights to two properties in the Wakkerstroom region in south-eastern Mpumalanga and is also attempting to get prospecting rights over a further two properties.


This region had been previously examined by another coal exploration group - Keaton Energy - which decided not to apply for prospecting rights because of the sensitivity of the area.


DMC Coal Mining's plans are now being opposed by a number of environmental organisations including Birdlife South Africa, the Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa, WWF-SA, the Endangered Wildlife Trust and the Ekangala Grassland Trust.


Reason is the region's importance as grassland and wetland habitat hosting a number of rare and endangered birds including Wattled Crane, Rudd's Lark, Botha's Lark and Blue Crane.
 
 

AIG Credit-Default Swap Losses Won't Be `Material'

(Bloomberg) -- American International Group Inc., the world's largest insurer by assets, said ``over time'' it may recoup losses in assets that declined by $4.88 billion in value in October and November.

Any losses by the unit that issues so-called credit-default swaps won't be material to AIG, the firm said today in a statement. AIG rebounded in New York trading after falling the most in two decades yesterday on disclosure that writedowns from the contracts, sold to protect fixed-income investors, were four times bigger than a previous estimate.

Chief Executive Officer Martin Sullivan, who manages units that originate, insure and invest in subprime mortgages or securities, assured investors in December that writedowns tied to the U.S. housing market were ``manageable.'' The company, based in New York, has said it doesn't expect to sell mortgage- related investments at a loss when markets are weak.

While AIG ``may have illustrated questionable judgment'' in its accounting lapse, it ``does not necessarily increase the probability of real economic impairment'' on assets held to maturity, said Mark Lane, analyst at William Blair & Co. in Chicago, today in a research note. He rates the company ``outperform.''

AIG advanced $1.45, or 3.2 percent, to $46.19 at 12:48 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The company has lost about 33 percent in the past 12 months, trailing the 5.7 percent decline of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

`Solid Upside'

``For patient investors willing to ride out near-term volatility, we see solid upside in the stock,'' said Morgan Stanley analyst Nigel Dally in a note to investors today. He rates the company ``overweight.''

The insurer's financial products unit issues contracts that promise to reimburse investors for losses tied to $505.5 billion of securities as of Nov. 25, including corporate debt, European mortgages and collateralized debt obligations, which bundle together loans.

AIG's independent auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP found a ``material weakness'' in the company's accounting for the contracts, AIG said yesterday, and the insurer didn't know what they were worth at the end of 2007.
 

Buffett Bids for MBIA, Ambac Municipal Bond Contracts

(Bloomberg) -- Billionaire investor Warren Buffett said he offered to shore up $800 billion of municipal bonds guaranteed by troubled MBIA Inc., Ambac Financial Group Inc. and FGIC Corp. in a bid to gain 33 percent of the debt insurance market.

Buffett's Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire Hathaway Inc. would assume the risk of the debt, he told CNBC television. The offer excludes the bond insurers' subprime-related obligations. One company has already rebuffed the proposal and the two others haven't responded, Buffett said.

The offer drove U.S. stocks higher on optimism the plan would help calm credit markets and prevent a slump in the value of municipal debt. MBIA and Ambac dropped on concern Buffett's proposal would leave them with mortgage securities that caused more than $5 billion of losses last quarter, while Berkshire would gain a municipal guaranty business that has generated profit for more than 14 years.

``He is offering to take the fattest, most profitable part of their business,'' said Jerry Bruni, president and portfolio manager, at J.V. Bruni and Co. in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Bruni has $650 million under management including Berkshire shares. The firm sold MBIA last month. ``I can't imagine why they would want to do that. If I were MBIA or Ambac, this does not sound like a good offer.''

$5 Billion

Berkshire would put up $5 billion as capital for the plan and is offering to insure the municipal debt for 1.5 times the premium charged by the bond insurers to take on the guarantee. The insurers could accept the offer and back out within 30 days for a fee, Buffett said.

Berkshire spokeswoman Jackie Wilson didn't return calls seeking more information on the plan, which Buffett announced during the CNBC interview. Spokespeople for MBIA, Ambac and FGIC didn't return calls seeking comment.

Armonk, New York-based MBIA, the largest bond insurer, Ambac and FGIC are on the verge of losing their AAA credit ratings, potentially crippling their sales to municipalities after losing $5 billion from insuring mortgage-related securities.

The bond insurers lend their AAA stamp to $2.4 trillion of debt, and face potential losses of as much as $41 billion if the value of debt they insure continues to decline, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts.

MBIA, which started as the Municipal Bond Insurance Association in 1974, Ambac and FGIC are reeling from their expansion beyond guaranteeing municipal debt to collateralized debt obligations, which repackage assets such as mortgage bonds and buyout loans into new securities with varying risk. As the value of some CDOs plummets, ratings companies are pressing the insurers to add more capital.

`Ceding the Book'

``If you gave up your entire municipal business, that's the book of business where the value in the companies is right now,'' said Robert Haines an analyst in New York for CreditSights Inc., an independent bond research firm. ``You'd essentially be ceding that whole book to Buffett and what you'd be left with would be the book of business where all the troubles are.''

MBIA's AAA insurance rating is being reviewed by Moody's Investors Service, Standard & Poor's and Fitch Ratings. Ambac's insurance unit had its AAA rating cut to AA by Fitch and is being scrutinized by Moody's and S&P. FGIC's guaranty business had its top rating cut to AA by Fitch and S&P and is being reviewed by Moody's.

MBIA fell $1.86, or 14 percent, to $11.72 at 12:45 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. New York-based Ambac, the second-largest bond insurer, dropped $1.65 to $8.83. Berkshire declined $200 to $139,750.

U.S. Stocks Rise

Fourth-ranked FGIC, based in Stamford, Connecticut, is a closely held company owned in part by New York private-equity firm Blackstone Group LP and mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc. PMI, based in Walnut Creek, California, rose 20 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $8.47, and Blackstone rose 40 cents, or 2.3, to $18.18.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index added 18.6 points, or 1.4 percent, to 1,357.73 on optimism Buffett's plan would protect municipal bonds, even if it comes at the expense of the insurers. Treasuries fell after the plan reduced demand for the safety of government debt.

``This news is encouraging,'' said Michael Ross, a municipal bond analyst at Morgan Keegan & Co. in Memphis, Tennessee. ``For weeks the focus has been on rating reviews and watching bonds tumble and stocks stumble. It tells us that behind the scenes discussions are occurring.''

Credit-Default Swaps

Credit-default swaps on MBIA were trading at 17.5 percent upfront and 5 percent a year, up from 16 percent initially and 5 percent a year yesterday, according to London-based CMA Datavision. That means it costs $1.75 million upfront and $500,000 a year to protect $10 million in MBIA bonds for five years.

Ambac's upfront price rose to 17.5 percent from 15.5 percent yesterday, CMA data 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 worsening perceptions of credit quality; a decline, the opposite.

The threat of downgrades was great enough for New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo to attempt to organize a bank-led rescue of bond insurers.

Bank Rescue

Buffett's proposal ``provides one option to protect municipal issuers and investors,'' Dinallo said in a statement today in response to Buffett's plan.

``It would be a great deal for Berkshire Hathaway and a great deal for the municipal bondholders,'' though not the bond insurers, said David Havens, a credit analyst at UBS AG in Stamford, Connecticut. ``The regulators and the politicians would love to see this happen.''

Eight banks including New York-based Citigroup Inc. and UBS in Zurich are working on financing for Ambac, a person briefed on the plan said two weeks ago. Credit Agricole SA's Paris-based Calyon unit is leading talks to bail out FGIC, the Wall Street Journal reported last week, citing people familiar with the situation.

Buffett, 77, has built Berkshire into a company with a market capitalization of $216 billion by making contrarian bets, purchasing stocks he regards as undervalued and selling insurance on risks that others won't cover.
 

Monday, February 11, 2008

R343.8m shot for local Mittal op

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


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


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


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


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

G7 discussed joint action to calm financial markets

(Reuters) - Finance leaders from the Group of Seven industrialized nations discussed collective action to calm markets if price moves become irrational, Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker was quoted as saying on Monday.

Juncker, who chairs the Eurogroup -- the monthly meetings of euro zone finance ministers and the European Central Bank -- told the Luxemburger Wort newspaper in an interview that turbulence on financial markets could continue for months.

"We are not yet at the end of the market crisis," Juncker was quoted as saying.

"The corrections will drag on for a few weeks, months. We have agreed in Tokyo that if there are irrational price movements in the markets, we will collectively take suitable measures to calm the financial markets," he said.

Asked what form such collective action may take, he said:

"Whoever has a strategy, should not set it out. Otherwise it will lose its effect if it is explained."

Finance ministers and central bankers from the G7 -- the United States, Canada, Japan, Britain, France, Germany and Italy -- said on Saturday in Tokyo that financial market turmoil was serious and persisting.
 

Auto Insurers Boost Premiums on Injury, Crash Costs

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

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

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

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

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

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

Warren Buffett

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

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

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

Yang's $2 Blackjack Limit, EBay Failure Leave Yahoo Unprepared

(Bloomberg) -- Fourteen years after publishing his first guide to the Internet from a Stanford University trailer, Jerry Yang isn't ready to see his creation absorbed by the world's largest software company.

Yahoo! Inc.'s 39-year-old co-founder survived the dot-com bust and weathered failed efforts to challenge EBay Inc. in online auctions and Google Inc. in Web searches. He and the board plan to reject Microsoft Corp.'s $44.6 billion bid today, a person familiar with the decision said, leaving Yang to battle to keep his Sunnyvale, California-based company independent.

While the offer lifted Yang's net worth by more than a half-billion dollars, money means little to Yang, former executives say. He spent his career building the most-visited U.S. Web site. Yang took his first crack at being chief executive officer in June, aiming to reclaim the company's dominance on the Internet.

``It's his baby,'' said Steve Mitgang, a Yahoo senior vice president who left last year to run Web TV company Veoh Networks Inc. in San Diego. ``He wants to win, and he wants to fight to win.''

The board spent a week reviewing the $31-per-share offer before deciding it was too low, said the person, who declined to be identified because the discussions aren't public. Yahoo wants at least $40, the Wall Street Journal reported this weekend.

Yahoo spokeswoman Diana Wong said over the weekend the company doesn't comment on rumors or speculation. Microsoft spokesman Bill Cox declined to comment.

In rejecting the offer, Yang confronts Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Yahoo investors whose stock tumbled by half in the past two years. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft's $31-a- share offer on Feb. 1 was 62 percent higher than Yahoo's price before.

`Uncouth' Name

In an e-mail to his 14,000 employees last week, Yang said Yahoo was weighing its options. Analysts including Gartner Inc.'s Andrew Frank in New York said alternatives like linking up with Google or News Corp. won't work. Investors like Firsthand Capital Management's Kevin Landis said Microsoft made a ``fair offer.''

Born in Taiwan, Yang was brought to the U.S. when he was 10. He worked in the Stanford library to help fund his undergraduate education.

Yang and David Filo cooked up what became Yahoo in 1994 as graduate students. ``Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web,'' used to keep track of their interests on the Internet, became a popular Web page in Silicon Valley. By the end of 1994, the site got more than 1 million hits a day.

Venture capital firm Sequoia Capital invested $2 million to help the duo build Yahoo, a name they picked because of its definition: ``rude, unsophisticated, uncouth.''

``He cares deeply about the thing he created in that trailer with Filo,'' said Rob Solomon, who worked at Yahoo for six years and is now CEO of the travel site SideStep Inc. in Santa Clara, California. ``They thought they could build a really big, new type of company, and they did.''

Too Rich

Yang wasn't available to comment, said spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler. Filo, responsible for the technical aspects of Yahoo's biggest sites, also wasn't available.

After Yahoo's initial public offering in 1996, sales jumped from $20 million to more than $1 billion in 2000 as advertisers rushed to tap the Internet's popularity. Yang and Filo were each worth more than $4 billion, according to Forbes magazine.

Wealth didn't turn Yang into a big spender, said John Cecil, a former Yahoo salesman. At a Las Vegas conference in 1998, the two were playing blackjack with Yahoo employees. Yang refused to bet more than $2 a hand, Cecil said.

``He said, `It's too rich for my blood,''' said Cecil, now president of the online ad company Innovate Media in Costa Mesa, California.

EBay Wins

Three years of surging sales lifted Yahoo's value past $100 billion, then the technology market crashed, wiping out 97 percent of Yahoo's worth. While the collapse sent Pets.com Inc. and Webvan Group Inc. into bankruptcy, Yahoo survived and began growing again in 2002.

Bigger competitors were emerging, crimping Yahoo's ability to expand beyond selling banner ads on Web pages. San Jose, California-based EBay became the dominant auction site. Google's search engine was pulling ad spending to a business that Yahoo lacked.

Solomon, 41, who ran the auction business, told Yang that Yahoo would be better suited investing elsewhere.

``The auction wars were won, and he didn't want to give up,'' Solomon said. ``That's not him being obstinate. It's him pushing us to come back with creative solutions and being tough.'' Yahoo closed the auction site last year.
 

Cheap Gas Seen Returning 20% as Oil Meets Slowdown

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

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

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

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

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

Gas Seen Rising

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

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

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

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

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

XTO's Simpson

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

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

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

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

Hurricane Season Flopped

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

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

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

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

CDO Losses Driving Credit-Default Swaps to Record, Analysts Say

(Bloomberg) -- Banks are driving the cost of protecting corporate bonds from default to the highest on record as they seek to hedge against losses on collateralized debt obligations, according to traders of credit-default swaps.

Contracts on the benchmark Markit iTraxx Crossover Index soared 17 basis points to 547 at 12:50 p.m. in London, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Markit iTraxx Asia Ex-Japan Series 8 Index soared the most in one day, rising 15 basis points to an all-time high of 144.5, according to BNP Paribas SA. The Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index rose 2.5 basis points to 132.25, Deutsche Bank AG prices show.

``Banks have taken losses, spreads are going wider and they are just cutting positions,'' said Andrea Cicione, a senior credit strategist at BNP Paribas in London. ``Lenders are probably reducing risk positions in a deteriorating credit environment by unwinding CDOs.''

Banks are facing mounting writedowns on CDOs, securities that package credit-default swaps, bonds or loans, as the fallout from the collapse of U.S. subprime mortgages spreads across financial markets. The Group of Seven estimates banks worldwide will suffer writedowns of $400 billion on home loans, German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said at a weekend meeting of officials and central bankers in Tokyo.

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 worsening perceptions of credit quality; a decline, the opposite.

CDO Downgrades

Fitch Ratings may downgrade the $220 billion of CDOs it assesses that are based on corporate securities because of rising losses, the New York-based company said last week. CDOs with AAA grades that are based on credit-default swaps and aren't actively managed may face the steepest reductions of as much as five steps, the company said.

Ratings firms are responding to criticism that they failed to react quickly enough as increasing defaults on subprime mortgages caused a plunge in the value of CDOs. Fitch, a unit of Fimalac SA in Paris, lowered $67 billion of mortgage-linked CDOs in November, slashing some top-rated debt to speculative grade, or junk.

LevX Index

Falling prices for leveraged loans may be forcing banks to unwind collateralized loan obligations. UBS AG and Wachovia Corp. are trying to sell $700 million in loans because of the unwinding of their so-called market value CLOs, which package the debt and are based on the net value of the underlying loans, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The Markit iTraxx LevX Senior Index of credit-default swaps on 26 European loans fell to a record of 90.625, according to Bear Stearns Cos. A level below 100 indicates loans are worth less than face value.

The value of the most-traded U.S. leveraged loans plunged to a record low amid reports of forced CLO sales, according to Standard & Poor's.

In the European credit-default swaps market, contracts on Carlsberg A/S in Copenhagen, the largest Nordic brewer, jumped 22 basis points to 157, according to CMA Datavision in London. The company is buying brewer Scottish & Newcastle Plc with Heineken NV.
 

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Regulators should allow bond insurers to fail: Ackman

(Reuters) - Bill Ackman, whose hedge fund has been betting against bond insurers since at least 2002, said in a letter to U.S. regulators that rescuing the bond insurers will only prolong the credit crisis, and the companies should instead be allowed to fail.

In the letter obtained by Reuters, Ackman said bond insurers in recent years have become a means for banks to avoid reporting their full credit exposure and make their capital ratios appear stronger, but that banks should be forced to own up to their full credit risk.

"(W)e understand that the banking industry counterparties to the bond insurers would prefer to avoid taking these ... risks back on balance sheet -- particularly at a time when their balance sheets are strained by subprime and other losses that have not been hedged," Ackman wrote, adding that "there are no such free lunches available in the capital markets."

Bond insurers have in turn been critical of Ackman and other investors betting against the companies. On a recent conference call, MBIA Inc (MBI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) Chief Executive Gary Dunton railed against "the fear mongering and intentional distortions of facts about our business that have been pumped into the market by self-interested parties."

New York State Superintendent Eric Dinallo is working with banks to rescue bond insurers including Ambac Financial Group Inc (ABK.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and FGIC Corp, which face billions of dollars of potential losses after guaranteeing bonds linked to risky subprime mortgages and other debt.
 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Pending Sales of Existing U.S. Homes Fell 1.5% in December

(Bloomberg) -- The number of Americans signing contracts to buy previously owned homes fell in December for a second straight month, signaling the worst housing slump in 25 years will persist well into 2008.

The National Association of Realtors' index of signed purchase agreements decreased 1.5 percent to 85.9, the group said today. The drop follows a revised 3 percent decline for November that was larger than previously reported.

Today's report reinforces concern that the housing recession will linger as foreclosures add to a glut of unsold homes. The housing slump is weighing on the job market and consumer spending, putting pressure on Federal Reserve policy makers to lowering interest rates further to keep the economy out of a recession.

``The housing outlook has deteriorated significantly and I don't see a bottom on sales and starts until the middle of the year at the earliest,'' Scott Anderson, senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co. in Minneapolis, said before the report. ``And our outlook on home prices has gotten worse.''

Economists had forecast the index would fall 1 percent, according to the median of 33 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from a drop of 3 percent to an increase of 1.8 percent.

Compared with a year earlier, the measure was down 24.2 percent.

Forecast Lowered

The Realtors lowered their forecast for existing-home sales in 2008 to 5.38 million from a January forecast of 5.7 million. Last year, 5.65 million homes were sold. Purchases of new homes will decline to 637,000 from 774,000, the group said today.

Pending resales fell in three of four regions. Purchases decreased 3.1 percent in the West, 3 percent in the South and 1.7 percent in the Northeast. They rose 3.4 percent in the Midwest.

The real-estate agents' group began reporting pending home resales in March 2005 and has supplied historical data back to February 2001. The gauge is considered a leading indicator because it tracks contract signings. The Realtors reported Jan. 24 that existing-home purchases, which are compiled from closings, fell 2.2 percent in December, more than economists had forecast.

New-Home Sales

Another leading indicator of the housing market, new-home sales, fell in December to a 12-year low, according to Commerce Department statistics. New home sales also are recorded when a contract is signed.

Homebuilder Pulte Homes Inc. said Jan. 30 that it had its fifth consecutive quarterly loss in the fourth quarter because of falling sales. Chief Executive Officer Richard Dugas forecast there will be a net loss from continuing operations, excluding potential land charges and tax benefits, this quarter.

``Sales levels are still depressed as compared to prior periods,'' even though the company has lowered prices, Dugas said on a conference call on Jan. 31.

Builders have little incentive to start new projects until they see inventories of unsold homes coming down. Both new and existing homes had a 9.6 months supply on the market in December.