Wednesday, May 20, 2009

China’s Record Lending Will Lead to Bank Losses, Fitch Says

(Bloomberg) -- China’s record lending growth and weaker corporate profits will lead to credit losses for banks, according to Fitch Ratings, which is “growing increasingly wary” about the nation’s banking industry.

“At the heart of these concerns is the recent steep rise in corporate exposure amid concurrent decline in enterprise profits,” Fitch analysts led by Charlene Chu said in a report today. “This means that each CNY invested or lent is unlikely to generate the same return as before, which over time will take its toll on corporate borrowers’ ability to repay and lead to credit losses for banks.”

Corporate loans accounted for more than 90 percent of the record 5.17 trillion yuan ($758 billion) of loans Chinese banks offered in the first four months of this year, almost triple the amount granted in the same period a year earlier. The nation’s state-owned companies posted a 32 percent decline in profit in the same period.

China is battling a global recession that choked off export demand, dragging economic growth to 6.1 percent in the first quarter, the slowest pace in almost a decade. Overseas shipments declined 22.6 percent in April from a year earlier.

Premier Wen Jiabao told lenders to boost loans by at least 5 trillion yuan in 2009 to support the nation’s 4 trillion yuan stimulus plan, triggering an explosion in credit, which has added to the risk of bad loans and asset bubbles. Banks face “significant” pressure on profits this year, Liu Mingkang, the head of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said last week.

‘Excessive Risk-Taking’

Total lending may top 8 trillion yuan in 2009, Xiao Gang, chairman of Bank of China Ltd., the nation’s third-largest, said on May 15.

An emphasis on meeting loan targets and short-term profit may be contributing to “excessive risk-taking” by banks, Fitch said. The slow recognition of credit losses by lenders in China not only leads to “under-capturing” of nonperforming loans and delayed credit costs, but also inflated capital, it added.

Bad loans at Chinese banks fell by 10.7 billion yuan in the first quarter to 549.5 billion yuan, according to the country’s banking regulator. The ratio of soured debt relative to the total declined 0.38 percentage point to 2.04 percent.

The drop came at a time when at least 7.5 percent of the country’s 42 million small and medium-size enterprises had closed or suspended operations by the end of last year and about 30 million migrant workers have lost their jobs, according to official statistics.

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

AT&T mulls cheaper data plans for phones

(Reuters) - AT&T Inc is considering offering cheaper data service plans with limited Web surfing for advanced cell phones including Apple Inc's iPhone.

Ralph de la Vega, the head of AT&T's mobility and consumer business, also told the Reuters Global Technology Summit in New York on Tuesday that he sees a gradual economic recovery.

The executive said it would be costly for AT&T to cut the price of its unlimited Web surfing service. The minimum plan for iPhone users is $70 a month, which includes unlimited Web surfing and a certain amount of voice calls.

Instead, AT&T could offer more limited Web surfing on cell phones for a lower fee, similar to its trial offer of 200 megabytes of data downloads for wireless netbook users for $40 a month in Atlanta and in Philadelphia.

"Right now we continue to study what is the best thing that is available, not just from an iPhone point of view, but what you can do to stimulate additional demand," said de la Vega, who is responsible for all of AT&T's consumer sales along with his role as chief executive of the mobile business.

He also announced at the summit that AT&T will expand sales of netbook computers from Dell Inc, Acer Inc and Lenovo Group Ltd to all AT&T stores this summer. It currently sells netbooks only through retail partners and in AT&T stores in Atlanta and Philadelphia.

NEW DATA FEE OPTIONS

Some analysts expect AT&T to offer an iPhone without a data plan in future but de la Vega dismissed the suggestion, saying it would not be a very good business plan for AT&T, which is very dependent on data services for future growth.

"Our business is to sell services," he said, adding that AT&T doesn't make money from the sale of devices like the iPhone, which it subsidizes heavily.

He declined to comment on negotiations with Apple for the extension of its exclusive U.S. agreement to sell the iPhone. Bigger rival Verizon Wireless, a venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group Plc, has said it has also had talks with Apple about wireless devices.

"We view Apple as a strategic partner for us, a very good partner to have now and into the future," de la Vega said.

When AT&T launched the latest iPhone last year, the operator's mobile profit margins fell for a few quarters due to big subsidies it offered for the Apple phone.

De la Vega said AT&T expects wireless profit margins in the range of 40 percent to 45 percent in the next few years.

"I think that we will continue to see gradual improvement, but small improvement, over a long period of time," he said, adding that the recovery would not be a sharp return to growth, often described as a V shape recovery.

"I think it will be between the V and the L, if you ask me. I think it will be more of a gradual, slanted U," he said.

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Sunday, May 17, 2009

Temasek Sells Bank of America Stake, Looks to China

(Bloomberg) -- Temasek Holdings Pte sold its 3.8 percent stake in Bank of America Corp. at a loss that may total $4.6 billion, as the Singapore state-owned fund shifts bets from Wall Street to emerging markets.

The sale may have raised about $1.27 billion, based on the average price of Bank of America stock in the first quarter. The divestment was completed by March 31, according to a U.S. filing. Temasek declined to comment on the price.

Temasek, whose investments shrank 31 percent in the eight months through Nov. 30, raised its stake in China Construction Bank Corp. this week, and Chief Executive Officer Ho Ching said yesterday the fund would reduce exposure to developed economies. Temasek had spent about $5.9 billion since 2007 buying shares in Merrill Lynch & Co., acquired by Bank of America on Jan. 1 after the stock slid 78 percent last year.

“The belief now is that the world is not so American- centric anymore,” said Melvyn Teo, associate professor of finance at the Singapore Management University. “It’s going to be driven more and more by the Chinese economy and consumer so might as well load up more on Chinese banks than American banks.”

The value of Temasek’s assets fell to S$127 billion ($87 billion) in the eight months to Nov. 30 as the credit crisis drove down the value of stakes in Merrill Lynch, Barclays Plc and Standard Chartered Plc. The drop in the portfolio tracked a 38 percent retreat in the MSCI World Index.

Bank of America Stake

Ho, wife of Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, drove an expansion outside Singapore and increased financial assets to 40 percent of the company’s portfolio. Charles ‘Chip’ Goodyear, the 51-year-old former head of BHP Billiton Ltd. who oversaw a fourfold increase in the company’s stock during his almost five- year tenure as CEO, will replace Ho in October.

A Form 13F filing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday from Temasek indicates that the fund no longer held shares in Bank of America or Merrill Lynch as of March 31. An earlier filing showed that the Singapore firm owned 219.7 million Merrill Lynch shares at the end of 2008.

At the average price of $6.73 for the first quarter, the stake would have been valued at $1.27 billion. The sale would have been worth $2.14 billion at yesterday’s closing price.

Since the end of March, when Temasek completed the sale, Bank of America has risen 66 percent. The stock dropped 52 percent in the first quarter.

Temasek confirmed it sold its Bank of America shares in an e-mailed response to Bloomberg News queries today. The company declined to say how much it sold the stake for or when the sale was conducted. Mark Tsang, a Hong Kong spokesman at Bank of America, declined to comment.

Raising Capital

“They probably want to turn the page on this one and move on,” said David Cohen, an economist with Action Economics in Singapore. “I suspect they’re telling themselves they should have focused on Asian investments, particularly China. You can’t fault them now. The financial crisis blind-sided a lot of investors.”

Merrill Lynch investors received 0.8595 Bank of America stock for each share held in the U.S. brokerage in the acquisition. The deal meant Temasek received about 188.8 million Bank of America shares, the equivalent of a 3.8 percent stake in the company, according to calculations by Bloomberg.

Bank of America Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis has said he was pressured in December by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to complete the Merrill Lynch acquisition amid mounting losses at the brokerage firm.

The Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank has to raise $33.9 billion to boost capital after U.S. regulator stress tests. Its shares have tumbled 69 percent in the past year, outpacing the 37 percent decline in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Chrysler Dealers Hunt for Answers After Shutdown News

(Bloomberg) -- A half-century of Chrysler car sales ended when Eldon Howe received a delivery from United Parcel Service Inc.

That’s how Howe learned that his Beacon Sales Inc. in Charlotte, Michigan, was among the dealers targeted to be shuttered as bankrupt Chrysler LLC prunes its retail outlets in a restructuring led by Italy’s Fiat SpA.

“We got the letter today from UPS,” said Howe, 78, who founded Beacon 55 years ago in the central Michigan city about 110 miles (177 kilometers) west of Detroit. “I’ve done this all my life,” he added. “I haven’t done anything else.”

From Virginia to California, Chrysler’s decision to cancel 789 dealership agreements forced franchisees to assess what they’ll do next, prepare to dismiss employees and ponder how to wind down decades-long relationships with their customers.

The reductions represent about 25 percent of the 3,200 Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep-brand dealers. Those who survive stand to gain business as their ranks are thinned. Those on the cut list will be gone by about June 9, Chrysler said.

“I’m worried about the people in this town, they don’t want to go somewhere else to buy their cars,” Howe said. “And what about the people who have already bought cars from us? We won’t be able to take care of the service for them.”

In Seaside, California, fourth-generation dealer Donald Butts will lose the Jeep brand from his Pontiac-Cadillac-Jeep store on June 9.

‘Walking Away’

“I cannot see how this will help them recover, walking away from entire markets,” Butts said in a telephone interview. Butts, who declined to give his age, said his family began selling General Motors Corp.’s Buicks in 1907 and took on Jeep about 25 years ago.

Shrinking the number of dealers is intended to ensure profitability for the remainder, President Jim Press said on a conference call. Stronger dealers help Auburn Hills, Michigan- based Chrysler by investing their properties, selling more vehicles and satisfying buyers with well-run service departments, Press said.

Chrysler culled mostly among retailers that had annual sales of 100 or fewer vehicles; sold just one Chrysler brand; or carried Chrysler vehicles along with those of other automakers, he said.

Buying Inventory

Surviving dealers will be urged to purchase autos and supplies of replacement parts from those being closed, Press said. Dealers on the list collectively accounted for 14 percent of the company’s sales, Press said.

Job losses, which Chrysler said it didn’t estimate, will be part of the fallout.

In Michigan, Howe said he planned to tell his 14 employees today about the company’s announcement. Butts, the California dealer, said at least three service technicians would have to find work elsewhere. He owns another dealership selling Honda Motor Co.’s Acura brand and wouldn’t say how many of his 39 employees would be affected.

John Gunning, 69, was among the dealers on the shutdown list who said he saw the move coming because his Manassas Dodge in Virginia sells only one of Chrysler’s three brands.

“There are still a lot of things up in the air,” said Gunning. “Obviously I am disappointed, but I’m not amazed.”

Gunning used to be on Chrysler’s national dealer advisory board. Last month, his dealership was the top-selling Dodge outlet in Northern Virginia. He also owns a dealership for Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd.’s Subaru, which he will keep open, he said.

“I’m not convinced Chrysler is going to make it anyway,” he said. “I just want to try to save my Subaru franchise.”

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Fed Views Jump in Yields as Sign of Better Outlook

(Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve considers the recent jump in Treasury yields more as a reflection of a better economic outlook than a signal it needs to step up purchases of U.S. government debt, according to central bank officials who declined to be identified.

It’s too early to judge the effectiveness of the Fed’s $300 billion plan to buy Treasuries even after 10-year yields climbed 0.65 percentage point since the initiative began in March, the officials said. They added that the goal is to stimulate private lending, rather than to target government-bond rates.

The Fed officials’ stance contradicts the view of firms including BlackRock Inc. that have predicted the rise in yields will prompt the central bank to announce an increase in the size of the program as soon as next month.

“It would be very different if the economy still appeared to be in freefall and yields were backing up, but it’s not,” said John Ryding, founder of RDQ Economics LLC in New York and a former Fed researcher. Increasing Treasury purchases would “fight against what is in my opinion a recovery signal, or a signal that the recession is drawing to a close.”

Deflation Risk

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said May 11 that the danger of deflation, or prolonged declines in consumer prices, is “receding” and earlier this month cited evidence the economy’s contraction is easing. The Treasuries market, along with stocks and some commodities, have reflected those shifts.

Ten-year note yields closed at 3.18 percent late yesterday, up from as low as 2.46 percent after the March 18 announcement of the plan to buy long-term government debt. The gap in yields between the notes and 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, a gauge of the inflation rate expected by investors, hit a seven-month high of 1.64 percentage points last week.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index closed at 908.35 yesterday in New York, up 21 percent from two months before. Crude-oil futures reached $60.08 yesterday, the highest level since November.

Fed policy makers committed to buy as much as $300 billion of Treasuries over a six-month period in their March 18 Open Market Committee statement. The aim was “to help improve conditions in private credit markets,” the FOMC said.

‘Pretty Clear’

“The statement is pretty clear,” Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker, who was the first FOMC member to vote for buying Treasuries this year, told reporters May 8. “It doesn’t say anything about a U.S. Treasury yield” as a target, he said after a Washington speech. “I would urge people to take it at face value.”

The Fed has bought $101.7 billion under the initiative so far, part of its campaign to cut borrowing costs by purchasing assets with the benchmark interest rate near zero. Policy makers in March also decided to boost purchases of mortgage securities this year to $1.25 trillion from $500 billion and buy $200 billion, double the previous amount, of federal agency debt.

Stuart Spodek, BlackRock’s co-head of U.S. bonds in New York, said in an interview last week the Fed “needs to consider increasing its purchases of Treasuries” to “stabilize” long- term yields. He told Bloomberg Television May 11 officials may announce an increase as soon as the June 23-24 meeting. Spokeswoman Melissa Garville declined to comment further.

American Century

Another fund manager, James Platz of Mountain View, California-based American Century Investments, expects the Fed to announce further purchases “at some point.”

Should the rise in yields cause mortgage rates to surge, that may prove to be a trigger for a stronger Fed response, said Richard Clarida, a strategic adviser at Pacific Investment Management Co., the world’s biggest bond-fund manager. “That’s going to really, really, really hurt the economy,” Clarida said in a Bloomberg Television interview this week.

Last week, fixed mortgage rates rose for the first time in four weeks, with the average cost of a 30-year home loan climbing to 4.84 percent from 4.78 percent, which was the lowest level in Freddie Mac data going back to 1970.

The increase in Treasury yields, coupled with a drop in consumer prices, is increasing real interest rates for companies. Real investment-grade corporate borrowing costs climbed to 8.34 percent in March, the highest level since 1985, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and Merrill Lynch & Co.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Toyota to Cut 2009 Output to Lowest in Seven Years

(Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s biggest automaker, will slash global vehicle production by 28 percent in 2009 to the lowest in seven years as worldwide vehicle demand plummets.

Global output will fall to 6.68 million vehicles from 9.24 million in 2008, Hideaki Homma, a company spokesman, said today by phone. Sales will drop 18 percent to 7.34 million vehicles, he said. The figures include the carmaker’s Daihatsu Motor Co. and Hino Motors Ltd. subsidiaries.

Toyota, which has enough capacity to build 10 million vehicles a year, has slashed production as rising unemployment and falling wages sap demand in the U.S. and Japan, its two biggest markets. Auto sales in the U.S. have dropped to the lowest volumes in about 30 years.

“The U.S. market slump is having a huge impact on Toyota,” said Hitoshi Yamamoto, chief executive officer of Tokyo-based Fortis Asset Management Japan Co., which manages $5.5 billion in Japanese equities. “Toyota’s forecast looks pessimistic.”

The carmaker fell 3.2 percent to 3,620 yen, at the 11 a.m. trading break on the Tokyo stock exchange. It has risen 27 percent this year.

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Monday, May 11, 2009

Ford to sell 300 million common shares

(Reuters) - Ford Motor Co said on Monday that it would sell 300 million common shares and use part of the proceeds to pay off its healthcare obligations to the United Auto Workers under the terms of a recently concluded deal with the union.

Ford also said it expects to grant to the underwriters -- Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley -- a 30-day option to buy up to 45 million shares of common stock.

Ford shares fell 4.6 percent to $5.80 in after-market trade following the stock offering. At that price, the new shares would raise about $1.7 billion for Ford.

Ford is the only U.S. automaker that has not sought government aid.

Ford's stock offering comes on the heels of a successful debt exchange. Ford shares have had a four-fold rise in price since hitting a low of $1.50 on February 20.

Ford said net proceeds from the stock offering would also be used for general corporate purposes.

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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Satyam Fake Profits May Have Earned Chairman Raju $600 Million

(Bloomberg) -- B. Ramalinga Raju, accused of committing India’s biggest corporate fraud, and associates may have made as much as 30 billion rupees ($605 million) from transactions in shares of Satyam Computer Services Ltd. as the price soared on fake profits, an official at the Ministry of Corporate Affairs said.

Raju, 54, and the others slashed their combined holding in the software company, once India’s fourth-largest, to 1.5 percent last year from 25 percent in 2001, according to the official, who has seen the 14,000-page report on Satyam by the government’s Serious Fraud Investigation Office. The person declined to be identified because the report isn’t yet public.

If prosecutors can prove he forged documents and profited from increased share prices fueled by fraudulent accounting, Raju may face life in prison, the official said. The former Satyam chairman was arrested in January after saying he falsified accounts that went undetected for years. His revelation led to lawsuits from investors in the U.S. and new disclosure rules by Indian regulators.

“Where has the money gone? We need to know the real beneficiaries,” said Prakash Shah, secretary of the Mumbai- based Investor Education and Welfare Association, a not-for- profit organization set up in the wake of a 1992 securities scandal. “The small investors, the innocent persons, have been duped.”

Raju and associates may have gained from stock sales and pledging some equity holdings as collateral, the ministry official said.

Board Dismissed

Satyam shares more than doubled in the 7 1/2 years to Sept. 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. They have plunged 75 percent since Raju’s Jan. 7 statement, filed with the Bombay Stock Exchange, that he reported more than $1 billion of cash and assets in Satyam’s accounts that didn’t exist.

Raju is being held in a Hyderabad jail following his arrest on Jan. 9.

After Raju’s disclosures, India’s government dismissed Satyam’s board and appointed new directors to find a buyer for the software exporter, whose clients include Cisco Systems Inc. and Nestle SA. Tech Mahindra Ltd., the Pune, India-based software company partly owned by BT Group Plc, bought a 31 percent stake in Satyam last month.

Other charges Raju faces carry a maximum penalty of seven years in jail under the Indian Penal Code.

Raju hasn’t been given a copy of the SFIO’s findings, S. Bharat Kumar, his lawyer, said in a telephone interview on May 4 from Hyderabad, where Satyam is based and Raju lives.

‘Out of Context’

“They are selectively leaking the information to the press,” he said. “The matter is being quoted out of context, and it’s defamatory.”

Archana Muthappa, a spokeswoman for Satyam, declined to comment on the investigations. K.K. Pant, spokesman for the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, wouldn’t comment on the SFIO report.

The SFIO submitted its findings to the ministry last month. It is one of the government agencies inquiring into Satyam, along with the Central Bureau of Investigation and the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the market regulator. The CBI filed eight charges in a Hyderabad court on April 7 against Raju and eight other people, including his younger brother Rama Raju, 50, and former Chief Financial Officer Srinivas Vadlamani.

R.S. Rahul, the lawyer for Vadlamani, said he couldn’t comment without seeing the SFIO report. K. Ravindra Reddy, the lawyer for Rama Raju, declined to comment.

U.S. Lawsuits

A hearing will be held tomorrow on a CBI petition seeking permission to conduct lie detector tests on Raju and the others who were accused, Kumar said. Lawyers in the U.S. are following the investigations into Satyam, which faces at least a dozen lawsuits from investors who bought American depositary receipts issued by the company on the New York Stock Exchange.

“These investigations are giving everybody a road map as to what avenues to pursue,” said Robert Harwood, a partner at Harwood Feffer LLP in New York, a law firm that filed one of the suits on behalf of Hossein Momenzadeh, who bought Satyam ADRs in July 2007. “It funnels in quite significantly.”

The U.S. lawsuits have been consolidated with U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones in New York, who has scheduled a hearing today on who should lead the litigation, according to a court docket.

Satyam was set up in June 1987 as a closely held company to write software code and run electronic data processing centers. It held an initial public offering in 1992.

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Noe’s Pinton Is Forced Into Receivership by Creditors

(Bloomberg) -- Pinton Estates Plc, a U.K. property company controlled by Leo Noe, was forced into receivership by its creditors after failing to collect enough rent to make bond payments.

Deloitte LLP was appointed as the company’s joint receiver and manager by at least 20 percent of Pinton’s bondholders, the required minimum, Nigel Letheren, a spokesman for the bond’s trustee Prudential Assurance Co. Ltd., said by telephone yesterday. “Discussions are continuing and we are hoping to be able to resolve this matter quickly,” Shimon Cohen, a spokesman for Noe, said in an e-mail.

Estates & General Plc and Ashpol Plc, two other companies controlled by Noe’s family investment company, also have breached bond terms, according to Regulatory News Service statements. Noe, 55, used debt and equity to acquire real estate companies and individual properties worth more than 3 billion pounds ($4.5 billion) over the last decade. Some of the assets were linked to debentures, bonds that allow properties to be removed from the secured asset pool and sold as values rise.

“We’re seeing commercial property stressed to the point where some of these debentures are starting to default,” said Richard Smith, a credit strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. “They made it through the last downturn largely unscathed. Obviously, you could argue we’re in the kind of market that’s unprecedented.”

Boom and Bust

U.K. commercial property values almost doubled in the five years through mid-2007. Those gains have since been wiped out.

Pinton Estates, which has a 70 million pound debenture, couldn’t pay the whole of its half-year coupon in March because it failed to collect rent from some tenants, according to a May 1 statement.

Estates & General, which Noe bought in 2004 for 71 million pounds, is trying to refinance a 3 million pound debenture that expired on 31 December, according to a Regulatory News Service statement on Jan. 16.

Ashpol breached the terms of its 75 million pound debenture after the properties it was secured against fell in value, according to a Jan. 23 statement. The debenture’s trustee, Law Debenture Trustees Ltd, asked Ashpol to provide more equity to meet the terms of its agreement.

Noe is chairman and part owner of F&C Reit Asset Management Ltd., a London-based company that owns real estate worth 8.5 billion pounds, according to its Web site.

Family Owners

Trafalgar Overseas Ltd, a company registered in Gibraltar, is the parent of Pinton, Estates & General and Ashpol, according to Companies House, where U.K. private companies are required to file their accounts. Trafalgar is controlled by Leo Noe’s family, according to F&C’s Web Site. The debentures pay interest of 10.75 percent to 12.4 percent.

Pinton reported a 6.1 million-pound loss and Ashpol an 11.3 million-pound loss for the year ended March 31, 2008, according to accounts filed at Companies House. A director of both companies withdrew 1.5 million pounds from each one for charitable donations that period, according to the accounts.

Noe was a director of all three companies until he resigned from their boards in the last quarter of 2008, according to Companies House accounts. Noe is a philanthropist and founder of the Rachel Charitable Trust.

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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

U.S. Banks Must Raise Debt Without FDIC to Repay TARP

(Bloomberg) -- Banks that want to exit from the U.S. government’s capital injections must demonstrate they can issue debt to private investors without a Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. guarantee, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Treasury will unveil conditions for repaying the Troubled Asset Relief Program money as soon as tomorrow, the people said on condition of anonymity. Banks generally must apply to the Treasury and secure permission from their bank supervisor in order to pay back the government; so far only a handful of small banks have done so.

The new guidance would come before the Federal Reserve’s May 7 publication of results of stress tests on U.S. banks. People familiar with the matter said yesterday that about 10 of the firms will be deemed to need additional capital.

Firms that don’t need stronger buffers may seek to quickly retire existing government stakes. Banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Northern Trust Corp. have said they want to repay the money. Both New York-based companies sold debt without FDIC guarantees in the past month, as has Chicago-based Northern Trust.

“My hope is this helps with clarity on who are the winners and who are the losers,” said Joel Conn, president of Lakeshore Capital Inc., which invests $90 million.

Bank of New York

Earlier today, Bank of New York Mellon, another bank taking part in the stress tests, raised $1.5 billion of debt, without FDIC backing. The bank said proceeds from the sale will be used to help repay the $3 billion capital injection it got from the TARP last year.

FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair has said banks need to wean themselves off the debt guarantees as financial markets heal from last year’s crisis. In March, the FDIC extended the time in which banks could issue government-guaranteed debt, while also announcing plans to raise fees on the program. FDIC spokesman Andrew Gray declined to comment today on the Treasury’s repayment policy.

The Treasury’s requirement is that banks must demonstrate an ability to borrow without the government guarantee and does not affect outstanding debt, the people familiar with the matter said. On April 14, a Goldman Sachs executive said the bank did not see a direct link between the debt guarantees and the Treasury’s capital injections.

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Monday, May 4, 2009

Bonds Show Lehman Fades in History as Spreads Narrow

(Bloomberg) -- From Frankfurt to London to New York to Tokyo, bond traders say the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bankruptcy is fading into history as the cost of credit retreats throughout the Group of Seven industrialized nations.

The shock to financial markets from Lehman’s collapse in September sent the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to its biggest annual decline since 1938, froze credit markets, drove Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to seek $5 billion from Warren Buffett and sparked a run on Treasuries that caused bill rates to fall below zero for the first time.

Now, the record pace of corporate bond sales, declining money market rates and a drop in mortgage costs all suggest the global economy is on the mend. In the government debt market, yields on 10-year notes exceed those of two-year securities by at least 1 percentage point in all the G-7 nations for the first time since before 1991, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The so-called yield curve typically steepens when traders anticipate a recovery.

The gap “is likely to get steeper still,” said Paul McCulley, a managing director at Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., which oversees the world’s biggest bond fund. “When policy stimulation gets traction in the real economy,” investors will begin to anticipate higher yields, he wrote in a May 1 e-mail.

Keeping Rates Low

Central banks show no inclination of raising interest rates until the housing market recovers, restraining short-term bond yields. Federal Reserve policy makers said March 18 that they are prepared to keep benchmark rates “exceptionally low” for “an extended period.” Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney said he intends to leave the central bank’s main rate at a record low 0.25 percent until the end of June 2010.

At the same time, the flood of money being pumped into the economy by policy makers, including $12.8 trillion in the U.S., will ward off deflation and cause longer-term yields to increase, traders say.

“Inflation threats are increasing the longer you pump cash into the system,” said David Keeble, head of fixed-income strategy in London at Calyon, the investment-banking unit of Credit Agricole SA. Subsequent steepening “will be more of a sell-off from the longer-end of the curve,” he said.

The U.S. Treasury yield curve has widened to 2.22 percentage points from 1.25 percentage points in December. It averaged less than zero in 2006 as traders correctly anticipated that the economy would enter a recession, causing inflation, which erodes the value of fixed-rate securities, to slow.

Steepest Curves

Curves in the U.K. and Italy are near the steepest levels in about 17 years, at 2.47 and 2.40 percentage points, respectively. Canada’s curve is 2.07 points, near the most since 2002.

The shift accelerated as Japan, U.K. and U.S. central bankers cut short-term interest rates to near zero and embraced so-called quantitative easing policies by buying debt assets to keep rates down after exhausting other tools.

Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes show sovereign debt issued by the G-7 has lost 1.07 percent this year, including reinvested interest, amid a surge in government borrowing to finance the rise in spending needed to prop up contracting economies. That compares with a return of 14 percent in 2008 for Treasuries, the best annual performance since gaining 18 percent in 1995, the indexes show.

Deflation Concern

Government coupon securities issued by the G-7 and maturing in five years or less gained 0.52 percent this year, compared with losses of 0.74 percent for securities maturing in five years or more, according to Merrill. Among the 26 largest sovereign debt markets, the U.S., U.K. and Canada lost the most in April, Bloomberg data shows.

Deflation was the concern last year as U.S. bond yields fell to historic lows, the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of commodities tumbled 36 percent and U.S. home prices plunged 19 percent, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index. The consumer price index fell to minus 0.4 percent in March from a year before, the first annualized decline since 1955, the Labor Department said April 15.

The Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, which tracks consumer spending and excludes food and fuel costs, rose at a 1.5 percent annual pace last quarter, the Commerce Department said April 29, approaching the lower end of central bankers’ longer-term forecasts.

‘Not Enough’

The difference between yields on Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, or TIPS, due in 10 years and notes that aren’t indexed to inflation was 1.43 percentage points. The so- called breakeven rate, which reflects traders’ outlook for consumer prices over the life of the debt, was negative 0.08 percent Nov. 20. Among the G-7, U.K. 10-year gilts have the highest breakeven rate at 2.20 percentage points.

President Barack Obama signed a $787 billion, two-year economic stimulus plan in February. Prime Minister Taro Aso of Japan unveiled a 25,400 yen ($255 billion) plan to stimulate growth. Germany, France and Italy have pledged a combined 107 billion euros ($142 billion) and the U.K. has promised 25 billion pounds ($37 billion).

Even with those measures, the global economy will contract 1.3 percent this year, according to the International Monetary Fund. While the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee said April 29 that the contraction has slowed and the outlook “improved modestly,” the economy may suffer as job losses and restricted credit inhibit consumer spending.

“The stimulus is not enough,” said Kevin Gaynor, head of economics and interest-rate strategy at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. “It’s more about absorbing cyclical damage and bailing out the banking sector rather than starting a path toward economic growth.”

Lending Again

Banks curtailed lending to each other in August 2007, when losses from subprime mortgages left the world’s largest financial institutions with securities and financial contracts they couldn’t value. Markets froze in the wake of New York-based Lehman’s bankruptcy on Sept. 15, as traders speculated that if the 158-year-old firm could fail, so could any company.

Now, lending has resumed. The London interbank offered rate for three-month dollar loans fell to 1.01 percent, the lowest since June 2003.

The TED spread measuring the difference between Libor and Treasury bill rates, which rose as high as 4.64 percentage points on Oct. 10, narrowed to 0.83 percentage point today. The Libor-OIS premium that indicates banks’ reluctance to lend to each other fell to 0.79 percentage point, the lowest level since before Lehman’s collapse, from 3.64 percent on Oct. 10.

Bond Sales

Companies have sold about $477 billion of bonds this year in the U.S., compared with $354 billion during the same period of 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The extra yield investors demand to buy U.S. corporate debt instead of Treasuries narrowed to 6.4 percentage points on May 1 from 8.96 percentage points on Dec. 15, according to Merrill Lynch’s U.S. Corporate & High Yield Master Index.

Rates on 30-year fixed mortgages averaged 1.76 percentage points more than 10-year Treasuries last week, down from 3.07 points on Dec. 19, the highest level since 1986, according to Bloomberg data.

“There will be a recovery and our view is we want to be ready to play that recovery,” said Michael Atkin, who helps oversee $12 billion in fixed-income assets as head of sovereign research at Putnam Investments in Boston.

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Sunday, May 3, 2009

Berkshire expects first-quarter profit

(Fortune) -- Berkshire Hathaway expects to report a first-quarter operating profit next week, CEO Warren Buffett said Saturday. However, he added that the firm's net worth continues to decline under the weight of losses from investments and derivatives bets.

At Berkshire's annual meeting Saturday, Buffett said that the firm expects to post an operating profit - excluding investment gains and losses - of $1.7 billion for the quarter, down from $1.9 billion a year ago.

The quarter featured solid gains in Berkshire's utilities and insurance operations and less favorable performances from its more economically sensitive businesses, such as furniture and jewelry stores, he explained.

In recent years Berkshire has typically filed its first-quarter report on the eve of the annual meeting. But Berkshire said this past week that it wouldn't have numbers ready this weekend. Instead, it expects to announce the results the afternoon of Fri., May 8.

The delay gave rise to some speculation about what the first-quarter report would show. Buffett said Saturday that the decision was driven largely by a quirk of the calendar - not by any change in policy.

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Sinopec Expects Higher Profit on Eased Price Controls

(Bloomberg) -- China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., Asia’s biggest refiner, said profit may grow more than 50 percent in the first half after the government eased fuel-price controls and crude oil costs dropped from a record.

First-quarter net income jumped 85 percent to 11.2 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) from a year earlier, the Beijing-based company known as Sinopec said in a statement to the Shanghai stock exchange yesterday. Operating profit from refining was 7.3 billion yuan compared with a 25 billion-yuan loss a year earlier.

The Chinese government in December revised a fuel-pricing system to allow refiners to pass on increases in crude oil costs to consumers. China’s economy has shown signs of recovery, helping to boost fuel demand and brighten the company’s prospects, Chief Financial Officer Dai Houliang said today.

“The key question now for the whole of the second quarter is whether the government will allow oil product prices to rise further to reflect crude prices,” said Wang Aochao, an energy analyst at UOB-Kay Hian in Shanghai. “We think demand for gasoline and diesel will pick up in the second quarter as the Chinese economy picks up.”

Sinopec gained as much as 3.8 percent in Hong Kong trading and the stock stood at HK$5.75, a 2.7 percent increase at 10:35 a.m. The Hang Seng Index was up 1.4 percent. The shares have advanced 22 percent since March 29, when the refiner posted 2008 earnings that beat estimates. PetroChina Co., China’s biggest oil company, gained 6 percent in the period.

Oil Exploration

Sinopec will step oil exploration as oil prices may rise later this year, Dai told analysts on a conference call today.

Virtually all of Sinopec’s revenue comes from refining, petroleum products sales and petrochemicals. Only 3 percent is generated by oil and gas exploration and production.

By contrast, about 55 percent of the income of PetroChina was from exploration last year, according to its annual report. PetroChina’s first-quarter profit fell 35 percent after oil prices declined.

Sinopec’s profit fell 47 percent last year before the pricing changes were introduced and it was unable to pass on soaring oil costs to customers. Crude rose to a record $147.27 a barrel last July and has since fallen 66 percent. Fourth-quarter profit gained 98 percent to 13.3 billion yuan.

“Due to the changes in the pricing mechanism our refining business is now making a profit,” Dai said. “This is a dramatic change from last year.”

Sinopec’s net income may rise 59 percent to 47.5 billion yuan this year, according to the median of eight analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg, as China’s stimulus measures help boost economic growth and revive oil demand.

China’s Economy

The nation’s economy is showing signs of recovery after growing at the weakest pace in nearly a decade in the first quarter, as a 4 trillion-yuan stimulus plan spurs factory production and investment. Urban fixed-asset investment surged by almost a third in March and industrial-output growth accelerated, according to government reports on April 16.

Sinopec’s capital expenditure will increase 4 percent this year, with spending on refining rising about 35 percent, the company said last month.

Expenditure was about 15.3 billion yuan in the first quarter, of which exploration and development accounted for 7.8 billion yuan and refining 1.6 billion yuan, according to yesterday’s statement. No comparative numbers were given.

Sinopec will be able to take advantage of its strength in marketing and management to turn its refining operations into a major profit contributor, it said last month. The growth of the Chinese economy is only partially influenced by the global slowdown and domestic demand for oil and petrochemical products remains robust, the company said.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

The tale of Steve Jobs, an old house and preservationists

(MarketWatch) -- This is a story that normally wouldn't get a lot of attention here, but this yarn involving a high-powered tech chieftain, a kowtowing Silicon Valley township, an old house and a clash of wills is worth telling.

The house is a 1920s-era mansion. On one side of the clash is a group of historical preservationists who want to keep the house for posterity. The chieftain? None other than Apple Inc.'s Steve Jobs.

More than four years ago, the town of Woodside -- a bucolic Silicon Valley enclave known to occasionally toady to the region's high-tech billionaires -- approved an application by the Apple co-founder and chief executive to tear down his Spanish Colonial Revival estate.

But the sprawling 1925 home remains standing today because a group of preservationists intervened, and after a lawsuit and appeal, Jobs lost.
Now, Jobs is trying again to demolish the estate, which he purchased in the early 1980s and lived in for about 10 years. Known to be obsessive about the design of Apple's products, Jobs wants to build a smaller, brand new single-family house on the site of the once-elegant estate. (No doubt one of those sleek numbers with clean white spaces and free of any buttons. Sort of like a giant iPod or Mac cube?)
A new application will be heard on Tuesday evening, in what may be a lively and contentious meeting. No decisions are expected Tuesday, but based on their past actions and some documents on their Web site, the town of Woodside seems all but ready to grant Jobs another demo permit.

"The question now is whether the evidence he is submitting will let them legally permit the demolition," said Brian Turner, an attorney for the western office of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a non-profit created by Congress in 1949 to promote the public participation of the preservation of historic resources in the U.S.

(Full disclosure: I've watched this episode with interest because I'm a member of this preservation group and I've also written a book on San Francisco architecture.)
The house Jobs wants to destroy has been deemed historic for both its architectural style, as well as for its former tenant.

The 17,250-square-foot estate was designed by architect George Washington Smith, renowned among architectural historians as an early and notable purveyor of the Spanish Colonial Revival style in Southern California. The house, designed for copper magnate Daniel Jackling, is one of Smith's rare works in Northern California and is replete with unique copper fixtures, evocative of his client's occupation at the time.

Jobs has been making an effort to give his house away, a condition specified in the original 2004 demolition permit.

The Apple chief is required by the town to market the estate at his own expense. He then could donate the house to anyone who had the financial wherewithal to relocate and restore it, which has sat empty and unoccupied for more than a decade.
Jobs would donate a "reasonable amount, as determined by the town manager, to the cost of moving the massive house to a new location." It is not clear what Susan George, Woodside's town manager, has deemed "reasonable." George did not respond to a request for comment.

Howard Ellman, Jobs' attorney, said in a memo to the town of Woodside in September that after spending more than 100 hours to market the Jackling house, "there are no persons or entities of which we are aware seriously considering the possibility of moving and restoring the Jackling Estate." He added that two financially strong parties are still considering the matter but that they had yet to present any proposal in writing.

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Stocks stage late advance

(CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks staged a late-session rally at the end of a turbulent day, influenced by a weak housing market report, a mix of corporate results and the latest for the automakers.

The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) added 70 points, or 0.9%. The S&P 500 (SPX) index gained 8 points or 1%. The Nasdaq composite (COMP) gained 6 points, or 0.4%.

After the close, Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) reported lower-than-expected quarterly sales on weaker earnings that met estimates.

Dow component American Express (AXP, Fortune 500) reported weaker quarterly earnings that topped estimates, sending shares almost 7% higher in extended-hours trading.

Biotech Amgen (AMGN, Fortune 500) reported weaker-than-expected quarterly sales and earnings after the close. Amazon.com (AMZN, Fortune 500) reported higher quarterly sales and earnings that topped estimates.

Dow component 3M (MMM, Fortune 500) is due to report results before the start of trade Friday. Honeywell (HON, Fortune 500), Schlumberger (SLB) and Xerox (XRX, Fortune 500) are also due to report.

Also Friday, the Commerce Department releases the March durable goods orders report and the Census Bureau releases the March new home sales report.

Stocks are down for the week as investors have retreated after a six-week advance that propelled the S&P 500 nearly 29%. Stocks zigzagged Thursday as investors sorted through the profit reports and economic news.

"The market is trying to determine whether we've come too far, too fast and it's been getting some mixed signals," said Christopher Colarik, portfolio manager at Glendmede.

"Incrementally, we are getting some economic and earnings reports that are less bad, if not good," he said. "But it might be a two-steps-forward, one-step-back kind of thing, like with the housing data."

Automakers: General Motors (GM, Fortune 500) said in the afternoon that it plans to temporarily shut down 13 of 20 North American plants this summer in order to reduce its inventory. The company has been hit hard by the recession and slowdown in auto demand and has until June 1 to cut its debt and labor costs or face Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Shares fell 4%.

Chrysler is reportedly set to enter Chapter 11 as soon as next week, The New York Times reported Thursday. The Treasury Department is overseeing the process, which will reportedly protect union members' pensions and retiree health care benefits.

Italian carmaker Fiat will complete its acquisition of a 20% stake in the company while it is under bankruptcy protection.

Housing: March existing home sales fell to a 4.57 million unit annual rate from a 4.71 million rate in February, the National Association of Realtors said. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com thought sales would fall to a 4.65 million unit annual rate.

The report countered bets that the housing market is nearing a bottom. Such bets were sparked by February housing market reports that showed smaller-than-expected declines in sales and productions.

Movers: Chevron, Exxon Mobil and McDonald's were among the Dow advancers. IBM (IBM, Fortune 500), Home Depot (HD, Fortune 500) and DuPont (DD, Fortune 500) were among the losers.

Chipmakers Intel (INTC, Fortune 500), Applied Materials (AMAT, Fortune 500) and Xilinx (XLNX) dragged on the Nasdaq, while eBay and Fifth Third Bancorp were among the advancers.

Market breadth was mixed. On the New York Stock Exchange, winners topped losers three to two on volume of 1.57 billion shares. On the Nasdaq, decliners topped advancers eight to five on volume of 2.49 billion shares.

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Freddie Mac acting CFO found dead in apparent suicide

(MarketWatch) -- The acting chief financial officer of Freddie Mac was found dead at his home Wednesday morning in an apparent suicide.
David Kellermann, acting chief financial officer at the government-controlled mortgage company, was found dead at his home in Fairfax County, Va.

Kellermann was named acting CFO in late September, three weeks after the government took charge of Freddie Mac. He had previously been senior vice president and corporate controller there.
His death came as staff from the Securities and Exchange Commission and Justice Department were probing the home-finance company about issues including possible accounting violations.

Freddie disclosed the investigation in a March 11 filing, and the firm said it was "cooperating fully in these matters."
According to the SEC filing, Freddie said it received a federal grand jury subpoena Sept. 26 from the U.S. attorney's office for the southern district of New York. The subpoena sought documents related to accounting, disclosure and corporate-governance matters, according to the filing.

But that subpoena was later withdrawn and the investigation was taken over by the U.S. attorney for the eastern district of Virginia.
According to the filing, on Oct. 21, Freddie said the SEC had begun its own investigation, asking Freddie for documents. Specifically, on Jan. 23, Jan. 30 and Feb. 25, the SEC issued subpoenas for documents. The agency also began its own interviews of company employees, Freddie said in the filing.
In addition to the investigation, Freddie Mac received a request from the House Committee on Oversight and Investigations on Oct. 20 seeking documents for a hearing it held on Dec. 9.

Freddie Mac has received more than $30 billion in government support as the mortgage and credit crisis intensified.
Kellermann's apparent suicide surprised some key regulators in Washington, who expressed their condolences.

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Regulators Give Greater Weight to Loan Quality in U.S. Tests

(Bloomberg) -- Regulators conducting the stress tests on the 19 largest U.S. banks are increasingly focusing on the quality of loans the companies made after finding wide variations in underwriting standards, a regulatory official said.

Supervisors concluded that banks’ lending practices would need to be given as much weight as macroeconomic scenarios after finding a wide variation in standards for mortgages and other loans as about 200 examiners poured through the portfolios, the official said.

The expanded criteria for the assessments will allow regulators to identify how much of each bank’s vulnerabilities stem from the economy’s deterioration, and how much comes from management decisions. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has said he’s prepared to make management changes in any firms requiring “exceptional” amounts of fresh taxpayer funding.

“There was a heavy assumption” that soaring loan defaults in recent months were caused by the recession, said Kevin Petrasic, who served at the Office of Thrift Supervision from 1989 to 2008 and is now an attorney at law firm Paul Hastings in Washington. “If they find out that these were business decisions, that, in an odd way, is probably a good sign because you can fix this. There are very hard lessons to be learned.”

The official’s remarks provide insight into the release April 24 on the regulator’s methodology for the tests. Supervisors are addressing an error made two years ago when basing foreclosure projections on economic assumptions and concluding that poorly written loans may default regardless of the economy’s performance.

Capital Assessments

The person also said the tests don’t amount to solvency judgments, noting that estimates of each bank’s losses over the coming two years won’t necessarily equal the amount of new capital it needs to raise.

The goal of the reviews is to keep the major financial institutions lending over the next two years, and to determine how much capital they might need should the economic downturn worsen. Assumptions about capital will be forward-looking, the official said.

Supervisors will take into account how much capital each company now has, the ability to retain earnings over the next few years, access to private capital in the future and how aggressively they have already written down some assets.

Federal Reserve officials are coordinating the exams, dedicating a staff of about 140 people to the effort. All told about 200 regulatory officials are involved, with information percolating up from front-line bank examiners.

Bank Regulators

While the tests are a central element of the Obama administration’s financial rescue plan, the Treasury charged the Fed, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., and Office of Thrift Supervision to conduct them.

Some of the findings on how portfolio quality varied will be revealed April 24 when supervisors release the white paper on the methodology. Final results of the tests will be released May 4. No decision has been made yet on how to publish the results, with some regulators concerned about a lack of uniformity in the releases if each firm discloses its own results, the official said.

The methodology paper will discuss what supervisors describe as a propensity for loss among loan portfolios. Some categories of lending, such as credit cards, are highly correlated with macroeconomic data such as rising unemployment.

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Thursday, April 16, 2009

Nasdaq hits 5-month high

(CNNMoney.com) -- Wall Street recharged the advance Thursday, with the major gauges touching multi-month highs on JPMorgan Chase's better-than-expected results and anticipation about Google's profit report.

After the close, Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) posted quarterly earnings that rose from a year ago and topped estimates on revenue that rose from a year ago but was shy of forecasts. Shares slipped in after-hours trading after initially spiking.

The Nasdaq composite (COMP) added 44 points, or 2.7%, ending at the highest point since Nov. 5, 2008.

The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) added 96 points or 1.2% and the S&P 500 (SPX) index added 13 points, or 1.6%. Both closed at their highest points since Feb. 9.

After seesawing through the morning, stocks began making a bigger move higher in the afternoon, before spiking near the close.

Stocks gained Wednesday after a Federal Reserve report on the economy added to hopes that the pace of the slowdown is easing. Such hopes have helped bolster the market for nearly six weeks. Since hitting 12-1/2 year lows on March 9, the S&P 500 has risen 25% as of Wednesday's close.

But gains this week have been minimal as investors have kept an eye on the first big batch of quarterly reports and the latest on the economy.

"The market has clearly surprised everyone to the upside and I think people have to be impressed by the way its been holding on to gains this week," said David Kreinces, portfolio manager at brokerage ETF PM.

"We should see a pretty good continuation of the rally with people buying on the dips," he said. "But that's going to depend on investors grappling with the continued weakness in housing and questions about further bank writedowns."

Friday brings quarterly results from Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) and General Electric (GE, Fortune 500), both Dow components.

Also Friday, the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index is due for release shortly after the start of trading.

Company news: JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) reported a higher-than-expected profit of $2.1 billion, although results were weaker than a year earlier. The company benefited from strength in its investment and consumer banking divisions, but also posted $10 billion in credit costs. JPMorgan shares gained 2%.

Earlier in the week, Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500) also reported weaker quarterly results that nonetheless topped estimates. Wells Fargo (WFC, Fortune 500) last week forecast that it would report a $3 billion profit.

While these reports are seen as encouraging, some analysts are concerned about the fuzzy math banks are using to report results.

Nokia (NOK) reported a more than 90% drop in operating profit versus a year ago amid the global slowdown in the mobile phone market. However, results were expected to be worse and shares rallied 11.4%.

AIG (AIG, Fortune 500) said it will sell its U.S. car insurance business to a unit of Zurich Financial Services for $2 billion, as it begins the process of paying back the billions its received in federal aid. Shares gained 5.6%.

Economy: New home construction slumped almost 11% last month, falling to the second lowest level on record, indicating that the housing market has not yet bottomed.

March housing starts fell to an annual rate of 510,000 units versus a revised 572,000 units in the previous month. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com thought starts would rise to 540,000 units.

Building permits, a measure of builder confidence, fell to a 513,000 annual unit rate from a revised 564,000 unit rate in the previous month. Economists expected 549,000 permits.

The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment fell to 610,000 last week from a revised 663,000 the previous week. Economists expected 658,000 new claims. Continuing claims, the number of people seeking benefits for a week or more, rose to 6.02 million, an all-time high.

The April Philadelphia Fed index improved to a decline of negative 24.4 from negative 35.0, versus forecasts for a reading of negative 32.

Bonds: Treasury prices slumped, raising the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to 2.83% from 2.76% Wednesday. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

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Oil Set for Biggest Weekly Decline Since February on Recession

(Bloomberg) -- Crude oil fell, poised for the biggest weekly decline since February, amid forecasts the recession will curb demand at a time when U.S. inventories are already at their highest in almost 19 years.

U.S. crude-oil inventories rose 5.67 million barrels to 366.7 million last week, the highest since September 1990, the Energy Department said April 15. The International Energy Agency reported April 10 that worldwide consumption will shrink by 2.8 percent in 2009 as the global economy contracts.

“The demand outlook continues to look quite bleak,” said Toby Hassall, an analyst at Commodity Warrants Australia Ltd. in Sydney. “The fundamentals of the oil market haven’t really shown any signs of improvement.”

Crude oil for May delivery fell as much as 48 cents, or 1 percent, to $49.50 a barrel, and traded at $49.68 at 11:36 a.m. Singapore time on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil has dropped 4.9 percent this week, set for its sharpest decline since the week ended Feb. 13.

Oil in New York has tumbled 66 percent from a record $147.27 a barrel in July as the recession in major consuming countries curbed fuel demand.

U.S. fuel demand in the first quarter fell to the lowest for the period in 11 years, the American Petroleum Institute said in a monthly report yesterday. Deliveries of petroleum products, a measure of consumption, averaged 19.2 million barrels a day, 3.4 percent less than during the same period in 2008, the industry-funded API said.

Jobless Claims

Oil futures are up 12 percent so far this year. Crude climbed as much as 2.5 percent yesterday after the Labor Department reported that claims decreased by 53,000 to 610,000 in the week ended April 11, the fewest since January.

Chinese industrial production expanded by 8.3 percent in March from a year earlier, up from 3.8 percent in the first two months, the statistics bureau said yesterday in Beijing.

“It’s sort of a contest between hope and reality,” said Tim Evans, an energy analyst with Citi Futures Perspective in New York. “A lot of these numbers that have bounced have bounced from extremely low levels, and so it only makes the markets a little less bearish. It doesn’t necessarily make them bullish.”

The Federal Reserve said in its Beige Book business survey April 15 that economic contractions were slowing or stabilizing in San Francisco, the largest district, as well as in New York, Chicago, Kansas City and Dallas.

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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

EBay Offers to Buy Korea’s Gmarket for $1.2 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- EBay Inc., operator of the most visited U.S. e-commerce site, offered to buy South Korea’s Gmarket Inc. for $1.2 billion to expand overseas.

EBay will make a cash offer to buy all outstanding shares of Gmarket for $24 apiece, the San Jose, California-based company said in a Business Wire statement. Under an agreement with Gmarket’s management and investors, the U.S. company will own at least 67 percent of the South Korean company, it said.

The purchase may help EBay, whose sales declined for the first time last quarter, more than double revenue in South Korea. EBay said it plans to combine operations at Gmarket, which generated revenue of about $220.8 million last year, with those of Seoul-based EBay subsidiary Internet Auction Co.

Yahoo! Inc. said it agreed to sell its stake of about 10 percent to EBay, while Seoul-based Interpark Corp. said in a regulatory filing it sold 14.6 million shares of Gmarket for $350 million. Other investors that have agreed to sell include Interpark Chief Executive Officer Lee Ki Hyung, EBay said.

EBay fell 0.4 percent to $14.32 yesterday in trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Gmarket rose 3.2 percent to $19.96.

Read more at Bloomberg

Rough start seen for stocks

(CNNMoney.com) -- U.S. stock futures wavered Wednesday as investors digested results from Intel and awaited a wave of economic readings.

At 5:06 a.m. ET, Dow Jones industrial average, Standard & Poor's 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures were pointing to a mixed start for Wall Street.

Futures measure current index values against perceived future performance and give an indication of how markets may open when trading begins in New York.

Intel: The chipmaker posted a drop in quarterly profit after U.S. markets closed Tuesday. The results topped Wall Street's estimates, but shares fell in after-hours trading after Intel (INTC, Fortune 500) chose to not issue a formal sales guidance.

Economy: Reports on consumer prices and manufacturing activity in New York come at 8:30 a.m. ET. A report on industrial production and capacity utilization is due out at 9:15 a.m. ET. After the market opens, investors will take in the Fed's beige book of economic conditions.

Read more at CNNMoney

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Cathay, Singapore Air Face Tough Decisions as Qantas Cuts Jobs

(Bloomberg) -- Qantas Airways Ltd., Australia’s largest carrier, will cut about five percent of its staff in anticipation of a record loss caused by a drop in business class travel. Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. and Singapore Airlines Ltd. may be next.

“All airlines in Asia will have to make similar tough decisions,” said Jim Eckes, managing director of industry adviser Indoswiss Aviation. “With traffic falling so rapidly, it’s going to be difficult for many airlines to make a profit.”

Traffic for Asia-Pacific carriers sank almost 13 percent in February, the steepest decline since June, according to the International Air Transport Association. Qantas Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce is examining measures such as passengers tagging their bags or checking in via mobile phone, while Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific will ask staff to take mandatory unpaid leave, a company official said.

The airline industry globally may lose as much as $4.7 billion this year as the deepening recession wipes out $62 billion of revenue. Carriers in Asia-Pacific are expected to post combined losses of $1.7 billion, the biggest of any region.

“If your top line has fallen off the cliff, then you have to adjust your costs,” said Christopher Wong, a fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management Asia Ltd. in Singapore, which oversees $20 billion. “Whether it’s cutting headcount or reducing working hours, that’s the only thing airlines can adjust.”

Read more at Bloomberg