Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Societe Generale Shares Rise on Takeover Report

(Bloomberg) -- Societe Generale SA, France's second-biggest bank, rose the most in five years in Paris trading on speculation that BNP Paribas SA is considering a takeover.

BNP, the country's largest bank, is holding preliminary internal discussions about a possible bid after Societe Generale's announcement last week of 4.9 billion euros ($7.2 billion) of losses from unauthorized bets, the Wall Street Journal reported. BNP said it does not comment on market rumors.

Traders speculated that President Nicolas Sarkozy's government is seeking a French partner for the bank to ward off any potential foreign bids. Prime Minister Francois Fillon told Parliament today that the government will ensure that Societe Generale remains in French hands.

``There's rumor of a bid by BNP on Societe Generale for 92 euros,'' said Constantin Salagaras, a trader at Aurel Leven Securities in Paris. ``The market is speculating on the will of Sarkozy to create a national champion.''

Societe Generale rose 10 percent to 78.45 euros in Paris, marking its biggest gain since Dec. 16, 2002 and valuing the bank at 36.3 billion euros. Societe Generale shares, down 21 percent since the start of the year, yesterday had a lower market value than Credit Agricole SA before rebounding today.

``Societe Generale is a great French bank and Societe Generale will remain a great French bank,'' Fillon told lawmakers in Paris today.

Trading Losses

Societe Generale's employee Jerome Kerviel, 31, was charged yesterday with falsifying documents, computer hacking and breach of trust by French judges.

Kerviel's unauthorized bets led to the biggest trading losses in banking history. Societe Generale said Kerviel amassed 50 billion euros in positions in European stock index futures, an amount that exceeded the company's market value.

``A takeover of Societe Generale is not impossible,'' Guillaume Tiberghien, an analyst at Credit Suisse, said in a report to clients. ``Any potential bidder would have to assess Societe Generale's risk control, assess the risk that the equity derivatives business might be damaged for the long term, assess the political and regulatory consequences of recent events for the entire banking sector.''
 

Bank of America Affirms Plan to Acquire Countrywide

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

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

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

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

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

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

Goldman, Morgan Stanley probed on subprime

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

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

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

The SEC filings came on Tuesday.

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

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

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

NY Gov working on fix for bond insurers

(Reuters) - New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer said on Tuesday he was working "extraordinarily hard" to aid troubled bond insurers, adding that he would do what is appropriate for the bond market, and the municipal market in particular.

U.S. states, counties and cities buy insurance from bond guarantors because it makes it easier for the tax-free issuers to sell their debt. The insurance companies guarantee that if there is a default, investors will be paid all the principal and interest they are owed.

But bond insurers' expansion into the now-melting subprime mortgage sector threatens the companies' top "AAA" ratings their business requires.

As a result, tax-free issuers around the nation are increasingly skipping insurance or having to pay unusually high interest rates on some types of short-term notes whose liquidity partly depended on insurance.

New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo has been trying to help the bond insurers raise capital to strengthen their balance sheets, but has warned this will take time.

The Democratic governor told reporters: "We are deeply immersed in this to do what we think is appropriate for the marketplace and for the bond market and ... for the municipal market in particular."
 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Monday, January 28, 2008

Verizon Profit Rises on Wireless; Sales Miss Estimate

(Bloomberg) -- Verizon Communications Inc., the second-largest U.S. phone company, said fourth-quarter profit rose 3.9 percent, driven by new wireless subscribers. Sales missed estimates after home-phone users defected to cable rivals.

Net income climbed to $1.07 billion, or 37 cents a share, from $1.03 billion, or 35 cents, a year ago, the New York-based company said today in a statement. Sales rose 5.5 percent to $23.8 billion, below the $24 billion average estimate of analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

Chief Executive Officer Ivan Seidenberg is spending $23 billion over seven years to offer TV service and higher Internet speeds, to compete with cable companies that sell phone plans. Verizon lost 875,000 phone lines in the quarter, an 8.1 percent drop from a year ago, compared with an 8 percent decline in the previous quarter.

``Line losses accelerated again,'' said Todd Rosenbluth, an equity analyst at Standard & Poor's in New York. ``That's a trend we expected, given cable competition.'' He recommends holding the shares.

Profit excluding items such as severance pay for fired workers was 62 cents a share, meeting the average estimate of 21 analysts in the Bloomberg survey. The wireless unit's operating margin, the percentage of sales remaining after deducting the costs of providing the service, expanded to 26.2 percent from 25 percent a year ago.

Verizon fell $1.02, or 2.7 percent, to $36.74 at 9:37 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock was little changed in the 12 months before today.

Job Cuts

The company said it began cutting jobs in the fourth quarter and plans to continue firing workers this year. Spokesman Bob Varettoni declined to say how many positions the company will eliminate.

Verizon's larger rival, AT&T Inc., also reported fourth- quarter revenue that fell short of analysts' estimates. While AT&T blamed the results on shutting off service to nonpaying customers, Verizon pointed to competition from cable companies such as Comcast Corp.

Seidenberg, 61, has been shedding businesses to focus on Verizon's fiber-optic network and wireless unit. Verizon is awaiting regulatory approval for a $2.72 billion deal to hand over about 1.6 million phone lines in the northeastern U.S. to FairPoint Communications Inc.

Spinoff, Sale

Fourth-quarter results last year included expenses of 22 cents a share for taxes on the sale of assets in the Dominican Republic and the cost of spinning off a directories unit.

Verizon added 226,000 TV subscribers to its fiber-optic network, less than the 234,000 projected by UBS AG analyst John Hodulik in New York. The company also recruited 245,000 fiber Internet customers, missing Hodulik's 284,000 estimate.

The fiber-optic network, called FiOS, is available in parts of 16 states. Verizon plans to make it available to 18 million homes by the end of 2010, up from about 9 million last year.

Verizon Wireless, jointly owned by Verizon and Vodafone Group Plc, added 2 million wireless customers, including 1.6 million on long-term contracts. Verizon Wireless took subscribers from smaller rival Sprint Nextel Corp., which lost 683,000 contract customers last quarter. AT&T, owner of the biggest U.S. mobile-phone service, added 2.7 million users in the quarter, including 1.2 million on contracts.
 

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Motorola May Face Razr 2 Flop as IPhone Sales Surge

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

No. 1 No Longer

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

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

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

Too Similar

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Bank of America, Wachovia Profits Slump on Writedowns

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

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

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

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

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

Missed Estimates

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

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

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

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

Countrywide Financial

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

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

First Drop Since 2001

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

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

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

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

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

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

Corporate Default Risk Soars as Fed Rate Cut Signals Recession

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

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

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

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

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

Stock Markets Tumble

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

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

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

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

Risk of Default

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

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

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

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

Contracts With Insurers

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

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

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

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

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

Ambac Reports Loss, Talks With `Potential Parties'

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

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

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

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

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

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

Hobbled by Expansion

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

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

Dividend Cut

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

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

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

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

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

Credit-Default Swaps

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

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

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

SA losing faith in govt

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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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

Monday, January 21, 2008

Business asked to cut power use

(Fin24) - Eskom has requested that business cut its energy usage by 10% to 15%, the energy supplier said on Monday.


Speaking to reporters after meeting in Midrand with top business leaders about the energy crisis in SA, Eskom CEO Jacob Maroga said "the biggest lever we can pull is reducing demand and the discussion this morning with the key customers is how we can collaborate in reducing demand".


Maroga said "voluntary saving targets" had been discussed with the 131 executives representing 38 companies present at the meeting.


He said Eskom had been talking with business about voluntarily reductions for some time.


"In some cases we've had some support where they've voluntarily reduced where they can"


He said: "We've put to them that where it's possible they can help us in reducing voluntarily.


"The quantum we are looking at is between 10% to 15%."


Maroga said he would aspire to a 20% reduction; "but anything between 10% and 15% is something we need to aspire to in terms of reduction.


"That reduction will relieve and reduce the probability of loadshedding."


 

Iron ore supply deficit seen in 2008: report

(Reuters) - A worldwide iron ore supply deficit of between 20 million and 25 million tonnes is likely in 2008, Credit Suisse forecast in a report on Monday, on the back of high demand from steel mills.

Iron ore miners are earmarking billions of dollars to expand mines, build new ore freighters and automate operations to dig faster and deeper to satisfy steel mills hungry for more ore.

Credit Suisse also said it expects annual term iron ore prices to rise by 55 percent versus a consensus forecast of a 35 percent hike.

Iron ore prices are set annually by the big three mining companies, Vale (VALE5.SA: Quote, Profile, Research)(RIO.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Rio Tinto Ltd./Plc. (RIO.AX: Quote, Profile, Research)(RIO.L: Quote, Profile, Research) and BHP Billiton Ltd./Plc. (BHP.AX: Quote, Profile, Research)(BLT.L: Quote, Profile, Research), after closed negotiations with big steel producers in Europe, Japan and more recently China.

Demand for iron ore has taken off in recent years, led by rising steel production in China, now the world's top importer.

"Despite the expected slowdowns in the U.S. and credit tightening in China, 2008 will look very similar to 2007," Credit Suisse said in a report.

It said 2007 was one of the tightest markets ever for iron ore, leaving some steel makers short of the raw material.

"We are estimating another deficit of about 20 million-25 million tonnes against seaborne trade of about 870 million tonnes," it said.
 

L.A. Times editor fired, "significant changes" ahead

(Reuters) - The editor of the Los Angeles Times, James O'Shea, has been fired over a budgetary dispute only 14 months after he took over the post, the newspaper said on Sunday.

O'Shea, a veteran of the Chicago Tribune who was hired by the Times in November 2006, was fired by publisher David Hiller after he refused to carry out some $4 million in cuts, said the newspaper on its Web site, citing an unnamed source. The news was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

In a separate statement late on Sunday, the newspaper said that like all newspaper companies, it was "facing major challenges in charting a course that will be successful for the future".

"In that vein, we will be making several significant organizational changes to put us in the best position to succeed."

It said as a result of these changes, O'Shea would be leaving the newspaper, and did not elaborate further.

O'Shea's firing comes one month after the paper's parent, Tribune Co, completed an $8.2 billion buyout led by Chicago real estate tycoon Sam Zell.

The deal restructured Tribune as an employee-owned company funded largely by debt.

The Times has struggled along with other media companies in an adverse newspaper advertising environment, and has cut staff and editorial resources in recent years.
 

BHP Billiton reportedly taps more banks for Rio bid

(Reuters) - BHP Billiton(BHP.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) has brought in more banks to help it find the $70 billion it needs to fund its planned takeover of Rio Tinto (RIO.AX: Quote, Profile, Research), Britain's Sunday Times newspaper reported.

Citing no sources, the paper said BHP has tapped Barclays (BARC.L: Quote, Profile , Research), UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research), Goldman Sachs (GS.N: Quote, Profile, Research), HSBC (HSBA.L: Quote, Profile, Research), BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) and Santander (SAN.MC: Quote, Profile, Research) to work alongside original banker Citigroup on the funding.

Merrill Lynch, originally the other provider of finance alongside Citi, will remain as broker to BHP but will not provide any money, the paper said.

The new financing arrangements, which come as a global credit crunch makes raising money more difficult, will give BHP the flexibility to execute a $30 billion share buyback proposed as part of the deal, or add cash to the current around $130 billion all-share offer, the paper said.

BHP, the world's biggest miner, must make a formal offer by February 6 or leave Rio alone for at least six months under a deadline imposed by the UK Takeover Panel.
 

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

U.S. Stocks Fall on Intel Forecast, Extending Global Tumble

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks declined after Intel Corp.'s sales forecast stoked concern over technology profits and deepened a decline in global markets that's wiped out $2.58 trillion in value this year.

Intel, the world's largest computer-chip maker, dropped the most in five years in Nasdaq Stock Market trading after saying first-quarter sales will be as much as 6.9 percent below analysts' estimates. Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp. led energy shares lower on the New York Stock Exchange as oil prices retreated below $90 a barrel for the first time in four weeks.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 12.7, or 0.9 percent, to 1,368.25 at 11:04 a.m. in New York, below its Aug. 16 trading low. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 75.43, or 0.6 percent, to 12,425.68. The Nasdaq Composite Index sank 47.9, or 2 percent, to 2,369.69. Asia's regional benchmark fell to its lowest since August, while European shares slid to a 16-month low. Indexes in Russia, Japan and Hong Kong all dropped by more than 3 percent.

``It's obviously treacherous out there, and Intel did no favors with their earnings announcement,'' said Kurt Brunner, who helps manage $1.5 billion at Swarthmore Group Inc. in Philadelphia. ``There's not a whole lot of places to hide, and the consumer looks weak right now.''

The S&P 500 has dropped 6.8 percent so far this year, while the Dow average is down 6.3 percent and the Nasdaq Composite has lost 11 percent. Technology shares, which helped lead the market higher last year, have retreated 12 percent as a group in 2008 for the worst performance among 10 industries.

Losses were limited today as JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. posted results that topped analysts' estimates and Oracle Corp. agreed to buy BEA Systems. Four stocks retreated for every three that rose on the NYSE.

Consumer prices rose at a slower pace in December, signaling inflation may decelerate after rising in 2007 by the most in 17 years.

Intel Forecast

Intel tumbled $2.86, or 13 percent, to $19.83. First- quarter sales will rise to as little as $9.4 billion, the chipmaker said yesterday after the close of trading, less than the $10.1 billion estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Lehman Brothers slashed its price estimate on the stock by 23 percent to $23.

Advanced Micro Devices Inc., the second-largest maker of computer processors, lost 16 cents to $5.96.

Apple Inc. dropped $10.23 to $158.81. The shares slumped for a second day after new products failed to impress investors yesterday.

Oil fell below $90 a barrel for the first time in four weeks in New York after a Energy Department report showed supplies rose more than expected.

Oil Drops

Exxon, the largest U.S. oil company, declined $2.79 to $86.23. Chevron Corp., the second-biggest, lost $2.74 to $85.53. ConocoPhillips, the second-largest U.S. refiner, retreated $2.66 to $77.95.

Ambac Financial Group Inc. plunged $6.05, or 29 percent, to $15.09. The second-largest bond insurer will slash its dividend 67 percent and raise more than $1 billion in new capital to preserve its AAA credit rating. Ambac and rival MBIA Inc. are under scrutiny by ratings companies and regulators after their guarantees on collateralized debt obligations and bonds linked to subprime mortgages began plunging in value.

Oracle Corp., the world's third-biggest software maker, slid 4 cents to $21.27 after agreeing to buy BEA Systems Inc. for $8.5 billion. Oracle will buy the San Jose, California-based software maker for $19.38 a share in cash, 24 percent above yesterday's closing price. Oracle capitulated to BEA's board's demands for a higher price after BEA rejected a $17 bid in October. BEA added $2.97 to $18.55.
 

Wells Fargo profit falls

(Reuters) - Wells Fargo & Co (WFC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Wednesday said its fourth-quarter profit fell 38 percent, the first decline in more than six years, hurt by rising losses from home equity loans.

However, the decline was smaller than expected, and shares of the financial company were up 41 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $26.90 in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange after climbing to a session high of $28.11.

The weaker results reflect how the housing slump and tight credit markets have affected even mortgage providers such as Wells Fargo, whose lending practices are considered conservative.

"Except for the admitted slip of getting involved in third-party home equity loans, they've done a fine job in a challenging market in avoiding credit missteps," said Thomas Russo, who helps invest more than $3 billion at Gardner, Russo & Gardner in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, including 4 percent in Wells Fargo. "They're not immune, but have less exposure."

Net income for the San Francisco-based bank, which is the nation's fifth-largest bank and second-largest mortgage lender, fell to $1.36 billion, or 41 cents per share, from $2.18 billion, or 64 cents, a year earlier. Revenue increased 8 percent to $10.21 billion.

Analysts on average expected a profit of 39 cents per share on revenue of $10 billion, according to Reuters Estimates.

Wells Fargo said it tripled the amount set aside for loan losses to $2.6 billion, including $1.4 billion tied to home equity loans. The latter reduced after-tax profit by 27 cents per share. In November, the bank significantly scaled back offering home equity loans through brokers.
 

Load shedding inquiry looms

(Fin24) - The public protector is considering whether or not to mount an investigation into the load shedding currently being experienced by South Africans, which, he says "is having a devastating effect ... on service delivery by government, is causing serious prejudice to the private sector and negatively affects the lives of many of the people."


In a letter to the chief executive of Eskom, Jacob Maroga, the public protector, Lawrence Mushwana, on Wednesday said that he is mandated to investigate on his own initiative or on receipt of a complaint, conduct by public entities that causes unlawful or improper prejudice to any person.


He poses a series of questions to the Eskom chief to help him decide whether to proceed.

He asks Maroga to explain the reasons for the load shedding, the measures that were put in place by Eskom to prevent what is causing the load shedding and the expected duration of the load shedding practice.

He also asks for detailed information "as a matter of urgency" on steps that have been taken by Eskom to address the reasons for the load shedding and the time frames within which the problems will be resolved.
 

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

State Street's Earnings Fall 28% on Legal Fund Costs

(Bloomberg) -- State Street Corp., the world's largest money manager for institutions, said fourth-quarter earnings fell 28 percent after setting aside $618 million to settle legal claims stemming from losses on subprime mortgages.

Net income declined to $223 million, or 57 cents a share, from $309 million, or 91 cents, a year earlier, the Boston-based company said today in a statement. State Street dropped 5.5 percent in New York composite trading after the company said 2008 growth will be at the lower end of its target ranges.

State Street faces at least three class-action lawsuits from investors claiming its funds made inappropriate bets on subprime-backed securities. It disclosed the legal reserve Jan. 3 and replaced William Hunt, its chief investment officer for the past three years. State Street's 2008 forecast follows a year in which the company exceeded analysts' estimates.

``People are trying to figure out just how much of the strength State Street showed in 2007 is truly sustainable,'' Thomas McCrohan, an analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC in Philadelphia, said in an interview today.

State Street fell $4.03 to $80.83 at 9:38 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading after declining to as low as $80.20. Before today, the stock had risen 19 percent in the past year, compared with the 4.9 percent gain by the Standard & Poor's Supercomposite Asset Management and Custody Banks Index.

Excluding the legal reserve of $279 million after tax, or 71 cents a share, profit was $1.38 a share, beating the $1.35 average estimate of 15 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. State Street's earnings for 2007 were $4.57 a share, outpacing the $4.55 estimate of the 15 analysts.
 

Citigroup, Merrill Lynch Get $21 Billion From Outside Investors

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

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

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

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

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

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

`Capital at a Cost'

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

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

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

Singapore, Alwaleed

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

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

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

Monday, January 14, 2008

Street Talk: How Far Will Bernanke Go?

(Businessweek) - What leading economists and market strategists are saying about the Fed's next moves
 

What will Ben Bernanke & Co. do next in the face of a weakening economy and volatile financial markets? Here's a roundup of Jan. 11 comments from Wall Street economists and market strategists on their Federal Reserve policy expectations, as compiled by Standard & Poor's and BusinessWeek editors:

Ben States His Case

David Wyss, chief economist, Standard & Poor's

[In his Jan. 10 speech] Bernanke's worries about inflation were cited with uncharacteristic clarity: "[I]nflation expectations appear to have remained reasonably well-anchored, and pressures on resource utilization have diminished a bit." However, to make sure we didn't think that the Fed was getting too complacent, he also said that, "the increase in oil prices…is also lifting overall consumer prices and probably putting upward pressure on core inflation."

But the speech stressed the risk to growth much more than inflation. "The baseline outlook for real activity in 2008 has worsened and the downside risks to growth have become much more pronounced." The bottom line is that, "we stand ready to take substantive additional action as needed to support growth and provide adequate insurance against downside risks." Markets interpret this statement to mean that the Fed will start to cut rates more aggressively, beginning with a half-point cut in January. Another cut, perhaps another half-point, is likely at the March meeting and again in April. The federal funds rate seems likely to fall to 3% by midyear, rather than the 3.5% we had been assuming.

Less Moz miners in SA

(Fin24) - Fewer Mozambican workers were hired by South African mines in 2007, indicating a move away from the former
migrant labour system of old.


According to recruiting agency Teba, South Africa's mining industry recruited 44 849 Mozambican workers in 2007 - 3.6% fewer than the 46 528 recruited in 2006.


Of the total number of miners recruited last year, 36 702 were contract renewals, 7 950 were new hires with experience in the mining sector, and just 227 were cases of individuals who had never previously worked in mines.


José Carimo, regional director for Teba in Mozambique and Swaziland, this week told Mozambican newspaper Notícias, that the lower number of
Mozambicans recruited by South Africa's mines was primarily the result of South Africa's new migrant labour laws, which among other things restrict access to employment by non-qualified foreign workers.
 

Canada lifts SA steel duties

(Fin24) - The Canadian International Trade Tribunal, an independent quasi-judicial body, has lifted anti-dumping duties
on hot-rolled steel plate from South Africa and Russia, saying they aren't likely to harm Canadian steel producers.


However, the tribunal ruled that anti-dumping duties would continue on hot-rolled steel plate from China.


It stated that the "dumping of hot-rolled steel plate from South Africa and Russia is unlikely to result in injury or
retardation."


"The Canada Border Services Agency will therefore no longer impose anti-dumping duties on these products," the tribunal added.


Dumping not on


Under international trade rules, dumping occurs when products are exported or sold in another country at prices below their cost in the producer's home market.


The Canadian press said the anti-dumping duties were imposed after Hamilton-based Stelco, backed by other Canadian steel producers, brought a complaint in 1997 against several countries comprising South Africa, Russia and China, Mexico and Poland.


Since then, all of Canada's major publicly traded steel producers - Stelco, Ipsco, Algoma and Dofasco - have been bought by foreign companies and taken private, although they continue to operate.


Hot-rolled carbon steel is used in making such things as rail cars, fuel storage tanks, construction machinery, agricultural equipment, bridges, industrial buildings, high-rise office towers, automobiles and truck parts and ships.


Read more at Fin24

Sarkozy slams oil prices

(Fin24) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy, on a visit to Saudi Arabia, has said that he is worried about the "brutality" of recent oil price increases which "are affecting growth and purchasing power."
 

Gulf funds eyed for further U.S. bank bailouts

(Reuters) - The sovereign funds of Kuwait and other Gulf states were in the spotlight on Monday as Citigroup sought extra emergency funding and its fellow U.S. bank Merrill Lynch was said to want more cash too.

The moves came as one newspaper report raised questions over whether previously agreed Chinese funding for Citigroup may fall through.

Citigroup, the largest U.S. bank by assets, is looking for more funds to help it through losses from the subprime crisis after securing $7.5 billion from the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority in November, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters in New York.

Merrill is seeking about $4 billion from the Kuwait Investment Authority and others as it faces as much as $15 billion in credit market losses, The Financial Times newspaper reported.

The newspaper said a Merrill deal could be announced as soon as midweek, and that other investors could come from Europe.

A public relations official for the KIA, which manages funds for Kuwait, referred calls to Managing Director Bader al-Sa'ad, who could not be reached in his office or on his mobile phone.

In December, Merrill shored up its capital base by as much as $7.5 billion after selling a stake to Singapore state fund Temasek and asset manager Davis Selected Advisers.
 

Natural Gas Windfall Seen in Pricey ICE, Cheap Nymex

(Bloomberg) -- The smartest money in natural gas may get its best trade this year by exploiting the difference between London, where prices are the highest in almost two years, and New York, where the market is cheapest.

Investors should sell natural gas in London and buy contracts in New York for the summer, where prices are ``the lowest in the world,'' Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts wrote Jan. 11. The opportunity may become more lucrative because London gas will drop 50 percent to $4.88 per million British thermal units as imports rise and demand slows, said Jason Kenney, an energy analyst at ING Wholesale Banking in Edinburgh.

``Towards the end of the month, gas prices will start to come off,'' said John Fahy, managing director at Eras Ltd. in London, which advises energy producers including the United Arab Emirates. He expects a 50 percent decline in U.K. gas prices, similar to last year.

A drop in London would reduce power costs for consumers across Europe, where natural gas represents about one-third of all energy, estimates BP Plc. It would save money for buyers such as Ineos Group Holdings Plc, the world's third-biggest chemical company, while hurting profit at producers including BP, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc.

U.K. summer natural gas, for delivery in the six months through September this year, fell 1.5 percent to 49.75 pence a therm today, according to broker ICAP Plc. That's equivalent to $9.76 a million British thermal units. A therm is 100,000 Btus.

Exxon, BG

Exxon Mobil and BG Group Plc plan to open two liquefied natural gas terminals in the U.K. capable of increasing the nation's supply 15 percent by the end of the year. Norway's StatoilHydro ASA is working to fix the Kvitebjoern and Ormen Lange gas fields to boost shipments to England.

The end of winter will sap demand. The U.K.'s summer consumption of natural gas bottomed at 169 million cubic meters last year, 61 percent lower than the wintertime peak, data from National Grid Plc show. Average London temperatures of 16.8 degrees Celsius (62.2 Fahrenheit) in June do little to spur need for air conditioning.

Futures traders have wrongly expected London's summertime prices to be higher than New York's before. The last time was in 2002, when gas for June delivery instead plunged 39 percent on the ICE Futures Europe exchange to the equivalent of $1.73 per million British thermal units. Natural gas rose 41 percent to $3.623 on the New York Mercantile Exchange in the same period. A $10 million bet against them made a $4 million profit.

British Benchmark

British prices are the benchmark for Europe, the source of one-third of global gas production for Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil, the world's largest oil company, and 30 percent of supplies for The Hague-based Shell, Europe's biggest producer. Lower commodity prices reduce earnings from pumping oil and gas, Exxon's most profitable unit. Exxon made $18.3 billion from exploration and production in the first nine months of 2007, or 63 percent of its total.

Centrica Plc, the U.K.'s biggest energy supplier, benefits when falling gas prices lower the cost of generating power at the Windsor-based company. Winners also include Ineos, of Lyndhurst, England, and the British unit of Terra Industries Inc., a fertilizer maker in Sioux City, Iowa. Gas represents more than half of the raw materials used to make chemicals, according to the American Chemistry Council.

By selling gas in London and buying it in New York, investors can speculate on changes in the value of the two contracts. ICE's natural gas futures for June delivery have never expired at prices above comparable contracts in New York, Bloomberg data show. U.K. contracts, introduced in 1997, are now $1.45 per million British thermal units higher than in New York.

LNG Terminals

U.K. gas is ``overvalued,'' said Sam Shoro, a senior analyst in Sittingbourne, England, at McKinnon and Clarke Ltd., which helps advise energy buyers including Microsoft Corp. As summer approaches, the country will get more gas from Norway and Wales, where the two liquefied natural gas terminals are being completed. The plant from Reading, U.K.-based BG is slated to start imports by June 30, taking in natural gas that's been cooled to a liquid and shipped in tankers.

LNG supplies to the U.S. are declining because Asian and European customers are paying higher prices, according to the U.S. Energy Department. Asian buyers are paying more than $15 per million British thermal units this winter for LNG cargoes, Fahy said.

U.S. LNG imports in December were 0.9 billion cubic feet a day, down 47 percent from 1.7 billion a year earlier, according to Stacy Nieuwoudt, an analyst at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities Inc. of Houston.
 

IBM Beats Estimates on Emerging Markets; Shares Climb

(Bloomberg) -- International Business Machines Corp., the world's biggest computer-services company, posted earnings and sales that topped analysts' projections as orders from Asia and Europe bolstered results.

IBM advanced 8 percent in early trading, which would be the most in more than five years if it holds when U.S. markets open. Fourth-quarter profit climbed to $2.80 a share and sales rose to $28.9 billion, exceeding predictions by more than $1 billion.

Business in Asia, Europe and developing countries drove results, Chief Executive Officer Samuel Palmisano said today in a statement. The remarks eased concern that slowing economic growth in the U.S. will drag down technology company profits and marked a reversal from the previous quarter, when IBM disappointed investors with slack hardware sales.

IBM rose $7.85 to $105.52 in early trading after closing at $97.67 on Jan. 11 on the New York Stock Exchange. The Armonk, New York-based company's shares climbed 11 percent last year.

Analysts anticipated profit from continuing operations of $2.60 a share and revenue of $27.7 billion, according to the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

The company plans to report full results on Jan. 17.
 

Friday, January 11, 2008

Mine go ahead for Uranium One

(FIN24) - Uranium One, the Canada-based uranium producer with a secondary listing on the JSE, on Friday received Australian governmental approval to proceed with the establishment of a new uranium mine.


The mine will be developed at Uranium One's Honeymoon Uranium Project, near Broken Hill in South Australia, at a capital cost of A$66m or R401m.


"Construction work on infrastructure at the Honeymoon site will be carried out according to our schedule of commencing production later this year," the company was quoted as saying by the Australian Associated Press (AAP).


The mine, which was rubber-stamped by the Uranium One board in August 2006, is expected to produce up to 400 tonnes of uranium oxide annually and generate about A$40m or R243m a year in exports.


Australia's fourth uranium mine will have a life of up to seven years. With nearly 40% of the world's uranium, Australia has the potential to make a major contribution to security in global energy supplies.


"Our industry remains optimistic that, over time, it will be able to expand operations to help meet the world's clean energy needs and, at the same time, help offset the cost of structural adjustment that may accompany Australia's own efforts to deal with its greenhouse emissions," Australian Uranium Association executive director Michael Angwin told AAP.


The Australian government's approval of the Honeymoon uranium mine comes after last year's decision by Australia's new federal government to ban the construction of nuclear power reactors, but allow additional exports of uranium to other countries.


Uranium One originally expected to start off production at Honeymoon in the first quarter of 2008, but in August said this would be delayed to the second quarter after a decision to modify the technology used in the treatment plant.
 

China, U.S. Make Plans for North Korea Collapse, Reports Say

(Bloomberg) -- China and the U.S.-South Korean alliance have begun planning for military intervention in case the Kim Jong Il regime in North Korea collapses, according to two newly published studies -- one of which foresees a race to occupy and control the impoverished communist country.

``If the international community did not react in a timely manner as internal order in North Korea deteriorated rapidly, China would seek to take the initiative in restoring stability,'' says a Jan. 3 report by Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies and the U.S. Institute of Peace.

The report says its unnamed Chinese sources see North Korea as stable for the moment, ``but they worry that the potential for instability may grow.''

Meanwhile, U.S. and South Korean military planners were scheduled to complete by the end of 2007 a contingency plan for controlling the spread of weapons of mass destruction and dealing with refugees fleeing North Korea in the event of a collapse, according to an article in the January/February issue of the U.S. Army journal Military Review.

To beat China to the punch, joint planners should go farther and prepare for a South Korean occupation of the North, argues the author, Army Capt. Jonathan Stafford.

``A failure to prepare for this monumental task risks losing the Korean dream of reunification to Chinese hegemony,'' he writes. ``If South Korea cannot occupy the DPRK immediately and effectively, China will.''

DPRK stands for Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's official name.

Multilateral Approach

The authors of the CSIS-USIP report said Chinese specialists in North Korean affairs they interviewed hoped for a multilateral approach to North Korea rather than a contest for hegemony.

``In the event of instability in North Korea, China's priority will be to prevent refugees from flooding across the border,'' says the report, entitled ``Keeping an Eye on an Unruly Neighbor.'' If Chinese troops need to go into North Korea, ``China's strong preference is to receive formal authorization and coordinate closely with the United Nations,'' it says.

China's People's Liberation Army has contingency plans for at least three possible missions in the country, the report says. One is humanitarian: refugee assistance, or helping with the aftermath of a natural disaster. The second is policing the country to maintain order. The third is to secure North Korea's nuclear weapons and fissile material, or clean up nuclear contamination in the event of a strike -- the report does not specify by whom -- on North Korean nuclear facilities near the border.

China's Reaction

A Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman on Jan. 8 denied knowledge of the plan, according to Agence France Press. ``I have never heard of nor seen the so-called plan mentioned in the report,'' AFP cited the spokeswoman saying.

Regarding nuclear-related contingencies, ``some Chinese experts say explicitly that they favor holding a discussion on stability in North Korea in official channels with the United States,'' the report says.

China is the organizer and host of ongoing talks with the U.S., North and South Korea, Japan and Russia on denuclearizing the North.

Stafford in his article argues that ``the Chinese have been busy laying the political, diplomatic and historical foundations for an occupation and perhaps even an annexation of North Korea.''
 

Gold Futures Rise to Record $900.10 on Interest-Rate Outlook

(Bloomberg) -- Gold futures rose to a record $900.10 an ounce on speculation the Federal Reserve will further cut U.S. interest rates, weakening the dollar and boosting the investment appeal of the precious metal. Silver also climbed.

Interest-rate futures show a 68 percent chance the Fed will lower borrowing costs 0.5 percentage point to 3.75 percent by Jan. 30 after Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke suggested cuts may be necessary to guard against an economic slowdown. Gold rose 31 percent last year when the Fed slashed rates 1 percentage point, sending the dollar 9.5 percent lower against the euro.

``If the Fed drops rates, a lower dollar will propel gold higher,'' said Leonard Kaplan, president of Prospector Asset Management in Chicago. ``Everything we buy is going to be more expensive. Any raw material will go through the roof. The smart people see inflation.''

Gold futures for February delivery rose $4.70, or 0.5 percent, to $898.30 an ounce at 11:55 a.m. on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price reached the record at 10:40 a.m. The record level was confirmed by Nymex.

Silver futures for March delivery rose 2 cents, or 0.1 percent, to $16.295 an ounce. The price earlier reached $16.415, the highest since January 1981. The metal gained 15 percent last year.

HSBC Securities USA Inc. and Morgan Stanley predicted the Fed will reduce its benchmark rate by half a percentage point this month after Bernanke's comments, up from their previous forecast of a quarter point.
 

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Freddie Mac's Strength Rating May Be Cut by Moody's

(Bloomberg) -- Freddie Mac, the U.S. mortgage company that reported its biggest loss last quarter, may be downgraded by Moody's Investors Service because the damage from loan defaults could be worse than the ratings company expected.

Moody's said it may lower Freddie Mac's financial strength rating from A-, the second-highest grade. The McLean, Virginia- based company's top Aaa senior long-term debt rating and the Prime-1 rating for its commercial paper or short-term IOUs won't be cut, Moody's said.

Chief Executive Officer Richard Syron has attempted to shore up Freddie Mac's finances by selling $6 billion of preferred stock, slicing its dividend in half and reducing its mortgage assets by $30.9 billion to $701.4 billion in the three months to Nov. 30. The government-chartered company may need to take similar steps again, Moody's said.

Freddie Mac ``may experience higher credit losses than Moody's previous expectations,'' Moody's analysts led by Brian L. Harris in New York said in the report late yesterday. ``In its review, Moody's will focus on Freddie Mac's asset quality and the potential that the company may experience an elevated level of credit charges over the near to medium term.''

Freddie Mac, which owns or guarantees one in five U.S. home loans, and larger competitor Fannie Mae are suffering as the worst U.S. housing slump in 27 years increases defaults. More than 100 mortgage lenders were shut, scaled back or sold last year as U.S. home foreclosures rose to the highest on record.

`Credit Stress'

``People may regard the financial strength rating as a signal as to whether the agency is becoming more or less positive on a particular institution, and that may feed through to the debt rating,'' said Simon Adamson, a financial services analyst at CreditSights Inc. in London.

Any downgrade to Freddie Mac's financial strength rating is unlikely to be severe enough to result in a cut to its senior debt ranking, Moody's said.

U.S. home prices may fall 12 percent from their peak through 2010 in ``the toughest housing correction in our lifetimes,'' Fannie Mae Chief Executive Officer Daniel Mudd said this week.

``Credit stress is most likely to occur in the company's guarantee portfolio,'' Moody's said.

The New York-based rating company's financial strength rating measures the likelihood a company will need financial assistance from a third party, such as the government or its shareholders.
 

U.S. Stock-Index Futures Drop; Capital One, Citigroup Decline

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stock-index futures fell after Capital One Financial Corp. said profit last year missed its projection because of bad loans and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts reduced their share-price estimates for the country's biggest banks and brokerages.

Capital One, the largest independent U.S. credit-card issuer, dropped after saying 2007 profit missed its October projection by about 20 percent. Citigroup Inc., Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch & Co. slipped after Goldman predicted a U.S. recession this year will hurt earnings at financial companies. Exxon Mobil Corp., the nation's largest energy company, declined as oil retreated for the fifth time in six days.

Standard and Poor's 500 Index futures expiring in March lost 5.8 to 1,405.8 as of 9:06 a.m. in New York. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures decreased 40 to 12,705. Nasdaq-100 Index futures fell 13 to 1,954.5.

``The worry is that current earnings estimates are far too optimistic and need to be cut aggressively,'' said Chirin Gill, who helps manage the equivalent of $3 billion at Daiwa SB Investments in London.

Fourth-quarter profit at S&P 500 companies probably fell 8.1 percent from a year ago, the biggest drop since 2001, according to analysts' estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Earnings at financial companies probably declined 63 percent, the only drop among 10 industries.

U.S. stocks gained the most in two weeks yesterday after Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. said it may invest in municipal bond insurers and Hewlett-Packard Co. predicted earnings will withstand an economic slowdown.
 

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Gold powers to record near $900 as funds active

(Reuters) - Gold surged to a record high just under $900 an ounce on Wednesday, powered by heavy buying by investment funds and helped by rising oil prices and a strong debut for Shanghai gold futures.

Platinum also set a lifetime high on positive fundamentals and tracking gold's rally. Silver touched two-month highs and was not far from its highest level in 27 years.

Spot gold jumped to $891.40 an ounce, surpassing the previous record of $881.10 reached on Tuesday. It was quoted at $883.60/884.40 at 1241 GMT, compared with $878.10/878.90 in New York late on Tuesday.

"This is an extension of the ongoing rally with very strong underlying interest in buying gold across geographic locations," said David Holmes, director of precious metals sales at Dresdner Kleinwort Investment bank.
 

King Likely to Win New Term Leading Bank of England

(Bloomberg) -- Prime Minister Gordon Brown was speechless when asked yesterday whether he would reappoint Mervyn King as governor of the Bank of England, silently nodding toward Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling to repeat the promise of a decision in ``the next few weeks.''

When the time does come, Brown will probably say yes.

Brown has little choice but to overlook King's delay in acting on the financial crisis at Northern Rock Plc last year, say former colleagues, economists and lawmakers from the three main parties. They say the political costs of pushing King aside would outweigh any benefit.
 

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Eskom may quit South Dunes

(Fin24) - Another large tranche of export entitlement through the Richards Bay Coal Terminal (RBCT) will soon become available for black empowered coal companies if Eskom Enterprises pulls out of the South Dunes Coal Terminal (SDCT).


Eskom Enterprises is a 50% shareholder in the SDCT which has a six million tonnes (Mt) entitlement to export through the RBCT in terms of its R1.2bn phase five expansion.


It is understood that Eskom is reviewing its participation in the SDCT and is likely to decide to opt out meaning its 3Mt entitlement will be up for grabs.


There should be no shortage of bidders for that entitlement. When the RBCT last year offered 9Mt/year of "subscription quota" coal in terms of the phase five expansion it received 26 applications for a total of 26.85Mt/year.


Of those, 18 applications totalling 19Mt met all the pre-qualification criteria but only eight companies were successful.
 

Gold Climbs to Record on Higher Oil Prices, Weakening Dollar

(Bloomberg) -- Gold rose to a record as higher crude oil and a weaker dollar spurred demand for the metal as a hedge against inflation.

Gold is off to its best start to the year since 1980. Oil rose to a record $100 last week, U.S. warships were confronted by Iranian boats over the weekend, and the dollar today fell against 15 of 16 major currencies.

``The U.S. dollar is weakening and oil has picked back up,'' said David Thurtell, a metals analyst at BNP Paribas SA in London. ``There are a lot of supportive reasons to buy and not many reasons to sell.''

Gold for immediate delivery rose as much as $17.84, or 2.1 percent, to $876 an ounce in London, exceeding the previous record of $868.89 set Jan. 3. The metal traded at $874.90 as of 12 p.m. in London. Gold for February delivery rose as much as $16.80, or 2 percent, to $878.80 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The metal last reached an all-time high in New York in 1980, when the dollar was weakening, oil prices were rising and the U.S. and Iran were at loggerheads. U.S. Navy warships were approached by Iranian ``fast boats'' in the Straits of Hormuz on Jan. 6, the U.S. Defense Department said yesterday. The straits are the sea route for about a quarter of the world's oil.
 

Blu-ray scores victory

(Fin24) - The International Consumer Electronics Show is turning out to be a celebration party for Blu-ray, the high-definition format that Sony Corp backed, and a wake for a rival movie disc technology pushed by Toshiba Corp.


Just two months ago, Sony CEO Howard Stringer said the fight between Blu-ray and Toshiba's HD-DVD was at a "stalemate", and expressed a wish to travel back in time to avert it.


The impasse was broken on Friday by Warner Bros Entertainment, the last major studio to put out movies in both formats. It announced it was ditching HD-DVD, and from May on, would only publish on Blu-ray and traditional DVD.


The decision puts a strong majority of the major studios, five versus two, in the Blu-ray camp.


Asked on Monday at the show if the Warner announcement decides the format war, Stringer said: "I never put up banners that say 'Mission Accomplished."' But his cheerful delivery belied his words.


By contrast, the main media event scheduled for the show by the North American HD-DVD Promotional Group, which includes Intel and Microsoft, was cancelled because of Warner's defection.
 

Economic worries mar tech show's glitz

(Reuters) - The world's major technology companies are trying to convince consumers they need an expensive, digitally connected home with the latest high-tech gadgets.

But there's a problem: an increasing number of consumers are having trouble just paying for the roof over the heads, much less a 150-inch television.

Few company executives at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week can avoid questions about the state of the economy, and the combination of a surge in the U.S. jobless rate, oil around $100 and a worsening credit and housing crisis has many on edge.

"The fourth quarter is full of strange, unanswerable situations related to unemployment, related to GDP, related to everything else," Sony Corp (6758.T: Quote, Profile, Research) Chief Executive Howard Stringer said on Monday after a briefing at the show. "So it's too soon for us to be pessimistic, but I read the papers."
 

Monday, January 7, 2008

Yahoo CEO stakes out mobile phone market strategy

(Reuters) - Yahoo Inc's Jerry Yang will seek on Monday to demonstrate in his first major speech since taking over as chief executive in June the inroads the company is making putting Web services on mobile phones.

In a speech at the Consumer Electronics Show, an industry agenda-setting conference taking place in Las Vegas this week, the Yahoo co-founder will highlight a series of enhancements the company is making to its Internet services to optimize them to run on hundreds of millions of existing mobile phones.

Marco Boerries, the executive in charge of Yahoo's division supplying Web services for phones, TVs and other devices beyond PCs, told Reuters in an interview ahead of Yang's speech that Yahoo wants to play a big role in these new markets while staying true to its roots as an Internet services pioneer.

Sallie Mae Names Terracciano Chairman; Lord Still CEO

(Bloomberg) -- SLM Corp., the biggest U.S. educational lender, named Anthony P. Terracciano chairman, succeeding Albert L. Lord.

Lord will be vice chairman of the board and remains chief executive officer, Reston, Virginia-based SLM, known as Sallie Mae, said today in a Business Wire statement. John F. Remondi was named vice chairman and chief financial officer.

Lord, 62, served as Sallie Mae's CEO from 1997 to 2005 and resumed the post on Dec. 14, after the collapse of a proposed $25.3 billion takeover by investors including J.C. Flowers & Co.

Sallie Mae has slumped 40 percent in New York Stock Exchange trading since Dec. 13, as Lord has completed a sale of $2.9 billion in shares to pay for stock buybacks and to help improve the company's credit rating.
 

U.S. Stocks Rise for First Time in 2008; JPMorgan, Celgene Gain

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks advanced for the first time this year on speculation the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates to prevent the world's largest economy from sinking into recession.

Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co., the biggest U.S. banks, climbed. Celgene Corp., a maker of cancer treatments, rose after saying profit will jump 45 percent in 2008. Microsoft Corp. gained after Chairman Bill Gates said the world's biggest software maker shipped 100 million copies of its Windows Vista operating system.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index advanced 5.35, or 0.4 percent, to 1,416.98 as of 9:36 a.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 45.11, or 0.4 percent, to 12,845.29. The Nasdaq Composite Index rose 5.01, or 0.2 percent, to 2,509.66.
 

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Ford Plans to Introduce More Fuel-Efficient Engine in 2009

(Bloomberg) -- Ford Motor Co., the second-largest U.S.-based automaker, plans to introduce a new, more fuel- efficient engine as the company tries to halt a sales slide in its home market.

Ford says the EcoBoost engine can improve mileage by as much as 20 percent. The new engine uses turbocharging, which forces air through it. The company says the EcoBoost engine can be smaller and lighter without sacrificing power.

``Customers do want better fuel economy,'' Derrick Kuzak, Ford's product-development chief, told reporters during a Dec. 11 briefing at a company facility in Dearborn, Michigan. ``We need to do it to gain share and volume.''

Ford, which is also based in Dearborn, was passed by Toyota Motor Corp. in 2007 for the No. 2 spot in U.S. sales. Ford had held the position since 1931 and hasn't been third or smaller in U.S. sales since 1905. The company has had 12 consecutive years of declining U.S. market share.
 

US STOCKS-Market sinks as jobs data stirs recession fears

(Reuters) - U.S. stocks tumbled on Friday, dragging the Dow to its worst three-day start to a year since the Great Depression, as a sharp rise in the unemployment rate heightened fears the economy is heading into a recession.

Technology shares were the worst performer in a broad-based decline after chip maker Intel Corp skidded 8.1 percent on concerns that businesses are unlikely to upgrade computer equipment in the face of a slowdown.

The Nasdaq fell 3.77 percent, bringing the index to its worst three-day kick-off to a new year since it was created in 1971.

The U.S. Labor Department reported job creation nearly ground to a halt in December and unemployment rose to a two-year high of 5 percent.

"The payroll numbers are showing that we don't have the jobs, and if you don't have job income you don't have consumers doing any spending," said Gary Shilling, president of A. Gary Shilling & Co. of Springfield, New Jersey. "I don't think there's much question we're in a recession now."
 

Friday, January 4, 2008

U.S. Stocks Fall After Job Growth Misses Forecast; Apple Drops

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. stock market got off to its worst start since 2000 after government reports on jobs and manufacturing added to concern the economy will sink into recession.
Apple Inc., maker of the iPod music player, fell the most since April 2005 and was the biggest drag on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index. Apple declined after Intel Corp., the largest chipmaker, was downgraded by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Alcoa Inc., Home Depot Inc. and Hewlett-Packard Co. led the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its third retreat in four days.