... European exporters and weakness in the European equities markets. In his testimony before the European Parliament, ... secondary effects of wage increases, particularly in Germany. He warned of downside risks but said ...
Thursday, 27 March 2008
Durable Goods Orders Fell 1.7% In February
TransGlobe Energy Corporation Announces Filing of 2007 Year-End Disclosure Documents
... production operations in the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Republic of Yemen and in Alberta, ... TransGlobes common shares trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the symbol TGL and on the ...
Egypts Helwan Cement 2007 net rises 23 percent
... news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Reuters ...
Wednesday, 26 March 2008
Iraq forces and militants clash in oil city
... news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Reuters ...
Iraq, Five Years In
... the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, and some sort of assessment seems almost ... Their banks are doing brisk business, their stock market is active and investment in business is ...
Too much for two pillars to bear
... just one big commercial bank - The Australian National Commonwealth Bank of the West Pacific. ... was wildly exaggerated at the time, NABs forex mini-disaster is the answer. Its just too ...
Depa to list on Dubai International Financial Exchange and London Stock Exchange
... in Qatar, the Four Seasons Hotel in Egypt, the Four Seasons Hotel in Mumbai, India ... global depositary receipts (GDRs) on the London Stock Exchange plc (the Prospectus). Copies of the Prospectus ...
Clinical contract news in brief
... and it also snapped up D-Target, a Swiss CRO that specialises in clinical research and ... chairman Peter Fellner. "However the recent difficult stock market conditions and the reduced availability of debt ...
Its a long road to recovery: experts
... may be in another lost decade. The stock market is trading right where it was nine ... or stocks in Brazil, Russia, India and China. Baby boomers concerned about retirement income could ... slump after bubbles in its housing and stock markets. For one thing, although inflation has been ...
Hoarding by banks stokes fears on credit crisis
... stoking fears that the recent respite in equity markets may not signal the end of the ... cent to close at 1,266. In Asia, Japans Nikkei 225 closed up 2.1 per cent ...
Emerging Markets Report: Pakistans political stability critical for the local market
... YORK (MarketWatch) -- The swearing in of Pakistans new prime minister Tuesday is a step ... 31%. The market capitalization of the Karachi Stock Exchange is about $75 billion, while Pakistans GDP ... indicates the enormous potential of the local stock market, Dzierwa said. Local retail investors dominate Pakistans ...
Iraq, Five Years In
... Their banks are doing brisk business, their stock market is active and investment in business is ... of functional in the same way that Pakistan and Nigeria and other violent but viable ...
Tuesday, 25 March 2008
Finance: a profile of young star Nikhil Kaushik
... 28, works for BTS Investment Advisors, a Swiss private equity firm. Unlike small shareholders, these ... that is not traded on a public stock exchange. Conversely, many companies and individual entrepreneurs in ...
Roller Drive provides energy efficient conveying.
... Established in 1959 and listed on the Swiss Stock Exchange SWX, the Interroll Group currently employs 1100 ... a strategic holding company located in SantAntonino, Switzerland, the Group operates with three global business ...
The Isms That Bedevil Bush
... is to remain always a child." With Iraq entering its sixth year, the dollar sinking ... a Nobel Prize for proving, when the stock market bubble, caused by the Feds easy money ...
Conspiracy behind BP raids?
... offices of British oil giant BP in Moscow on Wednesday were conducted by secret service ... a looming "redistribution" of oil assets in Russia, newspapers said on Thursday. "Market sources do ... fell nearly 10 percent on the Russian stock exchange after news of the raids on Wednesday. ...
Shatt al-Arab water surplus in return for writing off the debt
... week with the inauguration of a new stock exchange system in Baghdad. 24 March 2008 (Iraq ... Cairo International Industrial Exhibition, organized by the Egyptian Ministry of Trade and Industry from (18 ...
Capital Markets Up-Date
... Proposed Changes To The ASX Listing Rules The Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) has been reviewing its Listing Rules (LR) and has released three consultation papers ...
Super financial regulator should be a top priority
... year for one regulator to replace the Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority and Australian Securities and ... of interest. The recent troubles in the equities market, coupled with rumour-mongering and short-selling by hedge ...
Monday, 24 March 2008
Company Upgrade: Introduces NACEL Energy to our Small Cap Radar
... world renowned independent research firm, based in Johannesburg, South Africa. Along with walking investors through ... of 1933 and Sections 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and are subject to ...
Company Upgrade: Introduces Victory Energy to our Small Cap Portfolio
... world renowned independent research firm, based in Johannesburg, South Africa. Along with walking investors through ... of 1933 and Sections 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and are subject to ...
Govt committed to develop nuke energy: PM
Commodity Online NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday said his government is committed to develop nuclear energy as a clean source of electricity.
Stocks Gain As JPMorgan Ups Bear Bid
Wall Street extended its big advance Monday as investors grew upbeat over a revised agreement that will give Bear Stearns Cos. shareholders five times the payout than was outlined in a deal a week ago. Investors were also pleased by a stronger-than-expected housing report.
Stocks Cap Volatile Week With Big Gains
Wall Street capped a volatile week with a big advance Thursday, rebounding from a steep sell-off as investors sought bargains and cheered a milder-than-expected drop in a regional manufacturing report.
PM to lay foundation stone for 1500 MW project
Commodity Online NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will lay the foundation stone for the 1500 mw Pragati Phase III gas based power plant ,to come up at an estimated cost of Rs 4,500 crore in West Delhi.
16 funds that star in bear markets
These stock funds weathered the 2000-02 downturn, and their resilience is shining through again. A screen helped find winning funds with bear-tested managers.
Saturday, 22 March 2008
US Treasury says Feds Bear actions help all investors
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserves actions to lend billions of dollars to prop up and sell off ailing brokerage Bear Stearns will help all Americans by stabilizing capital markets, a senior U.S. Treasury official said.
An elite investment that cuts taxes
Exchange-traded notes look like mutual funds and ETFs, but theyre a form of the derivatives that big-money investors use for things like sheltering income. That advantage makes them worth a look.
Catering to the bailout nation
Heres where building bubbles on top of bubbles has brought us. Instead of letting the market work and creative destruction run its course, too many people want a handout.
Wednesday, 12 March 2008
Drake Management May Shut Down Largest Hedge Fund After Losses
Winding down the $3 billion Global Opportunities Fund is one option being considered by Drake ``in an attempt to maintain and maximize value for investors during this period of severe market downturn and contraction of liquidity,'' the letter said.
Drake, which had blocked most redemptions from the fund in December, is reviewing other options, including allowing investors to get their money back over the next 18 months or to move their assets to a new fund. Drake, which managed $13 billion as recently as the end of the year, is considering similar steps for its two other hedge funds.
Monday, 10 March 2008
Blackstone says tough conditions hit results
Under a measure known as economic net income (ENI), Blackstone earned a fourth-quarter profit of $128.2 million, or 8 cents a share, compared with a pro forma adjusted figure of $894.9 million, or 72 cents, a year ago.
Analysts polled by Reuters had expected it to report 16 cents a share.
"Lack of available financing in the U.S. and Europe for large leveraged transactions limited our transaction fees," Blackstone's Chairman and Chief Executive Stephen Schwarzman said in a statement. "Difficult market conditions in the U.S. and Europe continue in 2008 and there is little visibility on when these conditions might improve."
The company cited decreases in the value of Blackstone's portfolio investment in Financial Guaranty Insurance Company, which was hit by turmoil in the credit markets, and lower net appreciation of portfolio investments in other sectors as compared with the prior year.
ENI is net income excluding income taxes, noncash charges related to vesting of equity-based compensation and amortization of intangible assets. Blackstone prefers to focus on ENI because of the huge payouts associated with its more than $4 billion initial public offering in June.
Carlyle Capital Says Lenders May Force Further Sales
The fund has asked lenders to refrain from further sales after they liquidated collateral securing $5 billion of debt, Carlyle Capital Corp. said in a statement today. It is meeting lenders to discuss more than $400 million of margin calls and is ``evaluating all options,'' the Guernsey, Channel Islands-based fund said.
Carlyle Capital used loans to buy about $22 billion of AAA rated mortgage debt issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which the firm says have an ``implied guarantee'' from the U.S. government. Even the safest mortgage bonds have slumped following the collapse of the subprime-mortgage market, leading to the failure of hedge funds led by Peloton Partners LLP.
``This particular Carlyle entity wasn't prepared,'' said Philip Keevil, a senior partner in London at Compass Advisers LLP and former head of European mergers at Salomon Smith Barney Inc. ``They hadn't started selling ahead of time and now they're having trouble liquidating their positions.''
Started by David Rubenstein 21 years ago, Carlyle expanded its mortgage investments last year, selling $300 million of shares in Carlyle Capital.
Hedge Funds Reel From Margin Calls Even on Treasuries
Since Feb. 15, at least six hedge funds, totaling more than $5.4 billion, have been forced to liquidate or sell holdings because their lenders -- staggered by almost $190 billion of asset writedowns and credit losses caused by the collapse of the subprime-mortgage market -- raised borrowing rates by as much as 10-fold with new claims for extra collateral.
While lenders are most unsettled by credit consisting of real estate and consumer debt, bankers are now attempting to raise the rates they charge on Treasuries, considered the world's safest securities, because of the price fluctuations in the bond market.
``If you have leverage, you're stuffed,'' said Alex Allen, chief investment officer of London-based Eddington Capital Management Ltd., which has $195 million invested in hedge funds for clients. He likens the crisis to a bank panic turned upside down with bankers, not depositors, concerned they won't get their money back.
The lending crackdown is the worst to hit the $1.9 trillion hedge-fund industry since Russia's debt default in 1998 roiled global credit markets and required the U.S. Federal Reserve to pressure the securities industry to arrange a $3.6 billion bailout of Greenwich, Connecticut-based Long-Term Capital Management LP. Today, hedge funds are being forced to sell assets to meet banks' margin calls, resulting in the dissolution of the funds.
``There has to be more in the next weeks,'' Allen said. ``There are people who have been hanging on by their fingernails who can't hold on much, much longer.''
`Mercy of Counterparties'
Ivan Ross, founder of Westport, Connecticut-based hedge fund Tequesta Capital Advisors, received a call from his bankers on Feb. 22 demanding he put up more money or risk losing his loans. Ross was unable to meet the margin call as the market for mortgage- backed debt seized up, preventing him from selling securities to raise the cash. Four days later, lenders liquidated his $150 million fund.
``Because it's impossible in this environment to move among dealers, you're at the mercy of counterparties,'' said the 45-year- old Ross, who has managed hedge funds for 13 years, including a stint handling mortgage-backed debt for billionaire George Soros. ``To the extent they want to shut you down, they can.''
The demise of Tequesta revealed the deathtrap for hedge funds caught in the credit maelstrom of banks selling mortgage-backed bonds as fast as they can while demanding more collateral from clients who use the securities to back loans.
Carlyle Fund
On Feb. 24, London-based Peloton Partners LLP gave up a ``night and day'' effort to stave off demands from banks, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and UBS AG, for as much as 25 percent collateral for securities that once required 10 percent, according to investors in the fund. Peloton, run by former Goldman partners Ron Beller and Geoff Grant, liquidated the $1.8 billion ABS Fund, its largest.
The same day, about 5,000 miles (7,770 kilometers) away in Santa Fe, New Mexico, JPMorgan Chase & Co. told Thornburg Mortgage Inc. that it had defaulted on a $320 million loan because it couldn't meet a $28 million margin call, according to U.S. regulatory filings.
Thornburg, the home lender that lost 93 percent of its market value in the past year, was near collapse March 7 after it failed to meet $610 million of margin calls. Chief Executive Officer Larry Goldstone said in a statement the company fell victim to a ``panic that has gripped the mortgage financing industry.''
Repo Agreements
Carlyle Capital Corp., the debt-investment fund started by private-equity firm Carlyle Group of Washington, was suspended from trading in Amsterdam on March 7 after it couldn't meet margin calls, and its banks seized and sold assets.
``Banks are reducing exposure anywhere they can and the shortest way to do that is to cut leverage,'' said John Godden, chief executive officer of London-based hedge-fund consultant IGS AIS LLP.
Hedge funds are mostly private pools of capital whose managers participate substantially in the profits from their speculation on whether the price of assets will rise or fall.
Thursday, 06 March 2008
ECB holds rates, seen forecasting lower growth
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet is due to comment on the competing threats of high euro zone inflation and slower growth at 1330 GMT when he holds his monthly news conference and delivers a quarterly update to the bank's economic projections.
All 72 economists polled by Reuters last week expected the ECB to keep rates on hold this month for a ninth month in a row <ECB/INT>, and the euro was little moved versus the dollar <EUR=>, despite hitting a record high of $1.5349 earlier in the day.
Economists expect ECB staff to forecast lower growth but higher inflation for this year and possibly for 2009, highlighting the Governing Council's dilemma as food and energy prices climb. It is not helped by the strong euro, which holds back inflation but also hampers growth.
Annual inflation in the 15-nation region hit a record high of 3.2 percent in January and February, dampening expectations that the ECB would soon follow other major central banks and loosen monetary policy.
Many economists believe the inflation projections will be revised up. BNP Paribas economist Ken Wattret said he expected the 2009 forecast to be raised to 1.9 or 2.0 percent from the current midpoint forecast of 1.8 percent.
Wal-Mart's February Sales Rise; Gap, AnnTaylor Fall
Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, said today in a statement that sales at stores open at least a year rose 2.6 percent last month, beating its estimate for a gain of 2 percent or less.
Shoppers headed to discounters and warehouse clubs to stock up on food and necessities, shunning lightweight jackets and sweaters at department stores and mall-based retailers. A decline in jobs, gasoline costing more than $3 a gallon and the continued erosion of the housing market have caused consumers to limit spending.
``We are seeing the consumer trading down,'' Fred Crawford, managing director at AlixPartners LLP, a Southfield, Michigan-based consulting firm, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview. ``You've got a large swing set in Middle America. In good times, they buy up into department store categories, and in tougher times, they buy down into mass categories.''
U.S. retailers' same-store sales may have risen 0.5 percent to 1 percent last month, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers. The New York-based trade organization reports monthly results later today.
Companies in the U.S. unexpectedly lost 23,000 jobs in February, the first decline in almost five years, according to a private report based on payroll data from ADP Employer Services released yesterday. The University of Michigan/Reuters index of consumer confidence fell last month to its lowest level since 1992.
Retail Shares
Wal-Mart climbed 55 cents, or 1.1 percent, to $50.10 at 8:19 a.m. in trading before the New York Stock Exchange opened. Gap fell 4.7 percent.
The 31-member Standard & Poor's 500 Retailing Index has dropped 5.2 percent this year before today, compared with a 9.2 percent decline for the S&P 500 Index.
Limited Brands, the owner of the Victoria's Secret lingerie chain, said February same-store sales dropped 9 percent, better than analyst estimates for a 10.9 percent drop.
Staples Inc., the world's largest office-supplies retailer, reduced its full-year profit and sales forecast March 4 as customers at its North American retail stores reduced purchases of copiers and desks.
``The core economy, the part that's really relevant to Staples and Staples' customers, is declining,'' Staples Chief Financial Officer John Mahoney said in a telephone interview. ``From the perspective of our customers and our business, this is a recession now.''
February Sales
February tends to be the least important sales month in the first quarter for many retailers, comprising about 30 percent of discounters' quarterly revenue, according to Christine Augustine, a retail analyst at Bear Stearns Cos.
With ``sluggish'' traffic, most retailers may be ``playing defense'' by managing inventory and cutting costs, she wrote in a Feb. 29 research note.
``Aside from Valentine's Day and President's Day, and the demand for consumables and other necessities, we think consumers had few reasons to shop in February, particularly given the tough economic backdrop,'' Augustine wrote.
Ambac to Sell Half the Company, Bet May Not Pay Off
Ambac said yesterday it plans to issue $1 billion of common stock, more than doubling the number of shares outstanding. The New York-based company will also offer $500 million of units that convert to shares in 2011.
Investors had anticipated Ambac would be bailed out by banks, which would backstop a capital raising of as much as $3 billion, enough to overcome record losses on subprime-mortgage debt. Instead, the company announced it would raise half that amount in a transaction that would dilute existing shareholders, sending Ambac down 19 percent in New York Stock Exchange trading.
``The new offering is highly diluting to existing shareholders,'' Jim Ryan, an insurance analyst at Morningstar Inc. said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. ``The market was looking for a backstop, to say the least.''
The sale of common stock, managed by Credit Suisse Group, Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and UBS AG, is scheduled for tonight, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Ambac fell 26 cents to $8.44 in early New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have tumbled 90 percent in the past year, reducing the company's market value to $884 million.
Abandoned Plan
By proposing a sale of common shares, Ambac is reverting to a plan it abandoned in mid-January. The company announced a $1 billion sale Jan. 16, sparking a 70 percent plunge in its stock, and canceled the offering Jan. 18.
Ambac cut its dividend to 1 cent from 21 cents a share and said it will suspend writing guarantees on debt, including mortgage-backed bonds. The combined plans will probably bolster capital enough for an AAA rating, Moody's and S&P said yesterday.
Stock investors were ``expecting something different in terms of some type of a more orchestrated event that looked less like a conventional offering of common stock and more like a carefully crafted infusion from business partners,'' said Colin Glinsman, who oversees about $25 billion as chief investment officer at Oppenheimer Capital in New York.
Credit-default swaps tied to Ambac's AAA rated insurance unit rose 38 basis points to 513 basis points from 475 basis points before the announcement, according to CMA Datavision in London. 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.
CDO Losses
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.
Ambac, its larger competitor MBIA Inc., and the rest of the industry stumbled after expanding beyond municipal insurance to guarantees on collateralized debt obligations that have since tumbled in value. Bond insurers with AAA ratings have guaranteed $2.4 trillion of debt.
The loss of Ambac's top rating would cast doubt on $556 billion of municipal and asset-backed securities insured by the company, forcing some investors to sell the debt and others to reduce their holdings.
Carlyle Fund Gets Default Notice After Margin Calls
Carlyle Capital Corp. missed four of seven margin calls yesterday totaling more than $37 million, the Guernsey, U.K.- based fund said today in a statement. The fund expects to get at least one more notice of default related to the margin calls.
The collapse of the subprime mortgage market has prompted investors to flee all but the safest forms of debt, leading to the failure of hedge funds including Peloton Partners LLP. The Carlyle fund raised $300 million in July and used loans to buy about $22 billion of AAA rated so-called agency mortgage securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
``The credit crisis is spilling over to the next asset class, agency bonds,'' said Philip Gisdakis, senior credit strategist at UniCredit SpA in Munich. ``There's never just one cockroach. If you see one highly leveraged hedge fund going bust, then there's another on the way.''
Peloton, the London-based hedge-fund firm run by former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. partners, announced plans last week to liquidate its ABS Fund after ``severe'' losses on mortgage-backed debt and demands from banks to repay loans. Thornburg Mortgage Inc. in Santa Fe, New Mexico, plummeted 62 percent in New York trading this week after the home lender received a default notice on a $320 million loan.
Widening Spreads
Carlyle Capital, run by John Stomber, fell 1.7 percent in Amsterdam trading today to $11.80. The fund originally sold shares at $19 each. Emma Thorpe, a London-based spokeswoman for U.S. private-equity firm Carlyle Group, declined to comment.
The agency mortgage-bond market has about $4.5 trillion of securities, according to estimates from UniCredit. The spread between 30-year agency mortgage bonds and 10-year U.S. Treasuries widened to more than 200 basis points yesterday, the highest since 1986, according to Bloomberg data cited by UniCredit today.
At the same time, money-market rates for euros and pounds climbed to the highest since mid-January, signaling the global squeeze on short-term bank lending may be returning. The three- month London interbank offered rate, or Libor, for euros advanced 1 basis point to 4.4 percent yesterday, the highest since Jan. 18, according to the British Bankers' Association.
Tuesday, 04 March 2008
Copper May Rise on Dollar Slide; Lead Gains to Four-Month High
The U.S. currency reversed gains and fell against the euro and declined for a sixth day against the yen. Copper has climbed 29 percent this year as an index of the dollar against six currencies including the euro and the pound has dropped 4.1 percent.
``The dollar is helping to support commodity prices,'' said Leon Westgate, a metals analyst at Standard Bank Ltd. in London. ``The main driver is money flow.''
Copper for delivery in three months gained $10 to $8,585 a metric ton as of 12:48 p.m. on the London Metal Exchange. Prices yesterday rose to $8,661, the highest since May 2006 when copper gained to a record $8,880 a ton.
The higher prices have curbed demand in China, the world's biggest user, said Eric Yan, head of China trade at Triland Metals Ltd. in London.
``If copper goes up to $10,000, Chinese demand will be dramatically reduced,'' he said. ``Chinese demand is quite weak and I don't think it will recover very soon.''
Nickel rose $400 to $33,600 a ton. Prices have climbed 15 percent since a strike began Feb. 28 at a Colombian mine owned by BHP Billiton Ltd. The workers are still on strike, Illtud Harri, a spokesman for BHP in London, said in an e-mail today.
MGIC Plans Stock Sale to Bolster Mortgage Insurance
Part of the money raised will be used to boost sales, the Milwaukee-based company said late yesterday in a statement. MGIC plans to decide on the size of the stock offering by ``mid to late March,'' and the company may consider other ways of raising capital, it said.
MGIC needs to raise capital to avoid a downgrade of its claims-paying ability after a record fourth-quarter loss of $1.47 billion, Fitch Ratings said Feb. 25. The insurer said Feb. 13 it hired an adviser to help raise money.