October 2009

Video: Bennenbroek Says Dollar Weakness Related to Liquidity: Video

October 29, 2009

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Nick Bennenbroek, head of currency strategy at Wells Fargo & Co., talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about the value of the U.S. dollar. Bennenbroek also discusses the outlook for the U.S. economy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bennenbroek Says Dollar Weakness Related to Liquidity: Video

October 29, 2009

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Nick Bennenbroek, head of currency strategy at Wells Fargo & Co., talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about the value of the U.S. dollar. Bennenbroek also discusses the outlook for the U.S. economy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Investors Wild For Brazil (PHOTOS)

October 29, 2009

Latin America’s leading country escaped the financial crisis relatively unscathed and is reporting economic figures America can only dream of.

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Rick Smith: On Bread Molds and Breakthroughs

October 29, 2009

Among bread molds, Neurospora is a virtual citadel. Neurospora crassa is a species of bread mold that is so averse to variation that whenever a large segment of DNA gets duplicated-a critical step in genetic evolution-it bombards the copy with what are known as “point mutations” that effectively turn the genetic code into nonsense. To be sure, the process works. Neurospora has relentlessly protected itself from variation. But hundreds of millions of years have gone by, and Neurospora is still, after all, only a bread mold. As biologist Olivia Judson delicately puts it, “Its use of mutations to defend its genome from variation may have inadvertently blocked off some evolutionary paths.” At first glance, we humans would seem to be the opposite of this variation averse type – the ones built for innovation and entrepreneurship in our lives. But there’s an older, survival-driven part of the brain that fights like hell to defend the status quo. We court alternative paths in our imagination, but like the Neurospora , we run from them in our daily lives. Those of us who successfully shield ourselves from the twists and turns of life, from the “roads not taken,” ultimately face the greater risk of bunking up with the Neurospora – inhabiting the same kind of eternal biological status quo. If you are a frequent reader of my blog, odds are strong that’s not what you want for your work or your life. Variation in life direction is not an obstacle to steadfastly avoid – it is a key to unlocking your breakthrough future . Winning requires embracing the alternatives that life randomly presents to us in order to find your own unique place from which to view the world, your own definition of success, your own rules of happiness. Mediocrity thrives on the status-quo. Winning requires variance. Are you open to new life directions, or do you resist them? Other Popular Posts: – Take Your Career From Good to Great – How to Start a Business with No Money – Stripped! How Paris Hilton Caused the Great Recession Order your copy of the Wall Street Journal and Amazon national bestseller The Leap: How 3 Simple Changes can Propel Your Career from Good to Great , today!

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Jenny Darroch: Eighty Years After Black Tuesday

October 29, 2009

And so it’s been 80 years since Black Tuesday — the day on which stocks plunged by 12% (having fallen by 13% the day before) triggering the Great Depression. If we were celebrating a marriage, we would be giving diamonds and pearls after 80 years. Hardly appropriate today when consumers are shunning luxury goods and instead preferring to consume small luxuries such as Sprinkles cup cakes, candy and soda. It’s a shame we aren’t talking about the 42-year anniversary because the appropriate anniversary gift then is improved real estate, or the 43rd year anniversary where the gift is travel or the 44th year anniversary where the gift is groceries (not all that romantic I know). But giving any of these gifts would certainly have the added benefit of lifting the economy out of recession. We all know that consumers are spending less during this recession. Even if consumers can afford to maintain their lifestyle we see evidence of changes to spending: stealth wealth has returned where people who can still afford to consume luxury goods are having to hide the fact; or affluent deprivation where consumers feel poorer and so cut back on expenditure out of concern for their future and the impact that rising health care costs, rising energy costs, depleted retirement accounts and likely increases in taxes to allow the government to repay the deficit will have on their lifestyle. We wait with bated breath to see what the next 12 months will bring. Jenny Darroch is on the faculty at the Drucker School of Management. She is an expert on marketing strategies that generate growth. See www.MarketingThroughTurbulentTimes.com

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AXT, Inc. Announces Executive Promotions

October 29, 2009

FREMONT, CA–(Marketwire – October 29, 2009) – AXT, Inc. ( NASDAQ : AXTI ), a leading manufacturer of compound semiconductor substrates, today announced three executive promotions. Raymond A. Low, formerly AXT’s vice president, corporate controller and acting chief financial officer, has been appointed vice president and chief financial officer. Davis Zhang, formerly AXT’s president of joint venture operations, has been appointed president of AXT China Operations, with responsibility for managing and developing AXT’s joint venture operations, as well as assisting chief executive officer, Dr. Morris Young, with the management of AXT’s manufacturing facilities in China.

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Andrea Chalupa: The New Recruits: Can Capitalism Save the World?

October 29, 2009

What do you get if the 1960s and a banker on Wall Street had a baby? Social entrepreneurism. Though it has a long history, it’s been a buzzword since Muhammad Yunnus and his Grameen Bank won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize for lifting people out of poverty through microloans. Social entrepreneurism isn’t charity; it’s business as usual, tailored to those in high-need, and the subject of an upcoming documentary, The New Recruits: Can Capitalism Save the World? “There’s been this thing called charity, that as long as I can remember was the approach to helping those in need,” says Jeremy Newberger, one of the film’s directors and producers. Charity, says Newberger, has shown us it can’t be the only solution. “There’s still poor people, there’s still suffering.” Newberger and his partners in Ironbound Films , Seth Kramer and Daniel A. Miller, wanted to understand this growing phenomenon of a market driven Peace Corp, so to speak. So with their video cameras, they shadowed three out of the nine 2009 fellows of the Acumen Fund , a non-profit global venture fund, as they tried to build businesses in some of the world’s most volatile regions. “You’re experiencing offices in the developing world,” says Newberger, who calls the film ” Apprentice meets Slum Dog Millionaire .” Playing on this theme, The Office’s Rainn Wilson is the narrator, which infuses the film with his dry humor. For eight days, they captured the frustration and near-death adventures of Heidi Krauel, as she built strategic partnerships in rural India for D.light, a company selling solar power LED lights as a green alternative to kerosene lamps. “There are about 500 million people living in India who do not have access to good electricity,” says Seth Kramer, one of the producers/directors of The New Recruits . It’s common for kerosene lamps to tip over, causing tragic fires. “To solve the problem, a company called D.light emerged…The company was definitely in start-up mode.” Nothing spells Bourne Identity franchise like trying to develop a start-up in India. In one attempt to commute to work, Krauel hired a driver who nearly reversed on a freeway. And then there were the tough customers. “Indian rural villagers, as you’ll see [in the film], are very savvy customers,” says Krauel. Why not just give the product away if they’re impoverished? “That’s what’s so powerful about the idea of social enterprise,” she says. “When you give something away, you’re treating the poor as passive recipients. When you see them as customers, you give them a voice, a voice that informs product design, a voice that informs marketing strategy…That’s a voice that businesses, I don’t think, can afford to ignore any longer.” For more info on social entrepreneurism and adventures of both Acumen fellows and Ironbound filmmakers in The New Recruits , listen to Walletpop’s Big News Podcast . This article originally appeared on Walletpop.com

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Single Father Turned Away From Homeless Shelters

October 29, 2009

As part of its Bearing Witness 2.0 project, the Huffington Post is rounding up a few of the best local stories of the day. Attila Streyar and his toddler daughter Layla are homeless reports Barbara Grijalva of Tucson’s KOLD News , and because he is a single father, Streyar had been turned away from several shelters. “I’m a single dad and I have this baby and we’ve fallen upon hard times,” he said through tears. “I needed some help, just to get shelter. There was no place in this town that I could find that takes care of men with children by themselves.” Streyar found some assistance at the Primavera Foundation , which offers temporary housing, food and relief to struggling families. It operates the only local shelters that will accept single fathers, workers told KOLD. Primavera placed Streyar and his daughter in a motel it uses for temporary family housing. ********* Police officers in Kingston, N.Y., are going door to door on their time off to fight impending layoffs, reports Adam Bosch of the Times Herald-Record . The city administration is looking to cut jobs because of budget deficit. Residents have been eager to sign petitions; already over 1,600 have pledged their support, and the police expect to get 2,500 total signatures by the Nov. 5 budget hearing. “The idea of cutting police here is asinine,” said Corteckia Lightfoot, whose 16-year-old son was shot and killed in 2007. “You’ve got our backs; we’ve got your backs,” she told the cops. ********* The state legislature in South Carolina acted Wednesday to send millions of dollars in benefits to the unemployed, reports Yvonne Wenger of the Post and Courier . The state legislature acted to correct an “oversight” that prevented the use of stimulus funds, Wenger reports, extending benefits for five months. About 113,000 residents have exhausted their benefits so far this year. ********* Twelve thousand new workers at the CityCenter mega-complex in Las Vegas are in high spirits now that they have new jobs, reports Amanda Finnegan of the Las Vegas Sun . “This is like early Christmas. This is like the best gift I could unwrap for myself,” said one man who’d been laid off in February. Nearly 160,000 people applied for the jobs. HuffPost readers: Seen a good local story? Know of a neighbor going to bizarre lengths to get through the recession? Tell us about it! Email jmhattem@gmail.com .

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Video: Market Close 10.29

October 29, 2009

S&P Rises 2.2%, Dow Rises 2%, Nasdaq Rises 1.8%; S&P Financials Index Rises 4.3%; Cyclicals Rally on 3Q GDP Growth (Bloomberg News)

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Video: Market Close 10.29

October 29, 2009

S&P Rises 2.2%, Dow Rises 2%, Nasdaq Rises 1.8%; S&P Financials Index Rises 4.3%; Cyclicals Rally on 3Q GDP Growth (Bloomberg News)

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Pro-Coal Lobby Boss Claims Never To Have Opposed Climate Change Bill (VIDEO)

October 29, 2009

Steve Miller, president and CEO of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, told a House panel on Thursday that his organization never opposed climate change legislation passed by the House over the summer. “Our organization has never opposed the Waxman-Markey bill,” he said. But a June 26 ACCCE press release clearly states that the “ACCCE cannot support this bill, as it is written, because the legislation still does not adequately protect consumers and the domestic economy or ensure that the American people can continue to enjoy the benefits of affordable, reliable electricity, which has been so important to our nation.” And some are asking : Did this fella just lie to Congress? The ACCCE did not immediately return a call from LobbyBlog. Miller was testifying at a House Energy Independence and Global Warming Committee hearing on forged letters opposing the legislation sent to members of Congress by an ACCCE subcontractor. Committee chairman Ed Markey announced at the top of the hearing that the committee’s investigation had found that even though the forgeries were uncovered days before the vote, the ACCCE did nothing to own up to them. “The Coal Coalition was willing to pay millions to peddle a point of view, but they were unwilling to spend a few cents to call the U.S. Capitol and clear the air,” Markey said. “This point of view was based on scare tactics and misleading figures and had zero to do with educating the public on key issues.” Media Matters pulled the video:

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Video: Levchin Says Slide Will Be Profitable `Pretty Soon’: Video

October 29, 2009

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Max Levchin, co-founder of PayPal and currently chief executive officer of Slide Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about the creation and sale of “virtual” goods and the outlook for Slide’s profitability. Slide sells services on Facebook Inc. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Levchin Says Slide Will Be Profitable `Pretty Soon’: Video

October 29, 2009

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Max Levchin, co-founder of PayPal and currently chief executive officer of Slide Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about the creation and sale of “virtual” goods and the outlook for Slide’s profitability. Slide sells services on Facebook Inc. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Google Moves To Hire DC Lobbyists

October 29, 2009

After opening its doors last year , Google’s Washington DC office is beefing up its policy issues staff , reports The Hill . As net neutrality, online privacy and consumer issues gain the attention of Washington lawmakers, Google is looking to add an academic relations manager to work as a liaison to universities as well as a new privacy policy counsel to advocate Google’s position to members of Congress and agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission. In the meantime, it’s brought in a slew of new Washington insiders including a former senior Republican aide to the House Financial Services Committee, the former senior staffer to Sen. Byron Dorgan and former vice president of communications for the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. The tech giant, which is also represented by the Podesta Group, has spent $2.9 million lobbying Congress so far this year, according to lobbying disclosure reports. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this year that Google has focused its lobbying efforts on somewhat-predictable issues such as online advertising, expanded Internet access and cloud-computing technologies. The company has also become a strong proponent of green and renewable energy policies and updates to the electric grid. “There is a growing number of issues being debated in Washington affecting the Internet and our users and we feel it is important to be involved in those debates,” said Adam Kovacevich, a Google spokesman.

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Do Banks Need to Fail for the Commercial Real Estate Industry to …

October 29, 2009

There has been a great deal of discussion lately about commercial real estate distressed assets on the verge of swamping a barely recovering market, and whether or not some banks are too big to fail for the economy to survive.

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World Series Game One Ratings on Fox Climb 29% From Year-Earlier Contest

October 29, 2009
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Galleons Rajaratnam Asks Cut in Bail to $25 Million

October 29, 2009
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Commodities Replace Stocks as Best Asset in Global Poll: Chart of the Day

October 29, 2009

By Brendan Moynihan Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Commodities have displaced stocks as the investment that will offer the best opportunity for profit during the next year, according to a global poll of Bloomberg terminal users. The CHART OF THE DAY shows Bloomberg users’ estimates of which asset class will offer the highest returns and the lowest, comparing this week’s poll to a previous one in July, when stocks were the top pick. The shift in customers’ investment preferences coincided with a 27 percent gain in the UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index and a 17 percent rise in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index since the July survey. Real estate and bonds also switched positions in the ranking of which asset class would offer the lowest returns. In July, 40 percent said real estate would rate last while 29 percent said bonds. This week’s poll showed 40 percent cited bonds and 24 percent real estate. The poll of investors and analysts on six continents was conducted Oct. 23-27. It was based on interviews with a random sample of 1,452 Bloomberg subscribers, representing decision makers in markets, finance and economics. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points. To contact the reporters on this story: Brendan Moynihan in Brentwood, Tennessee, at bmoynihan@bloomberg.net

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Porn-Film Maker Turned Farmer Joins Japanese Movement to End Co-Op’s Grip

October 29, 2009

By Stuart Biggs and Sachiko Sakamaki Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Ganari Takahashi’s first career, making pornographic movies, made him $10 million. He hopes his second, growing fruit and vegetables, will help upend a farming system that costs Japanese taxpayers $45 billion a year. He’s one of an increasing number of Japanese farmers who say they can make a profit by leaving the world’s most heavily subsidized agricultural industry and selling directly to consumers rather than through the national cooperative. “Profitable farming is the same as pornography,” Takahashi, 50, said in an interview near the 3.2 hectares (7.9 acres) of farmland near Tokyo he bought in 2006. “You have to create an image and make it cool.” He sells eggplants and peppers online and at his vegetable-themed restaurants. Farmers like Takahashi are challenging Japan Agricultural Cooperatives Group , the country’s dominant distributor of rice and vegetables, which sets the price of everything from feed to fertilizer for its members. Their initiative may help cut subsidies as Japan’s new government struggles to contain spending, as well as lower prices for consumers and make trade agreements easier, said academic Masayoshi Honma . “This is already happening,” said Honma, a professor of agriculture at the University of Tokyo . “These farmers are smart. They’re looking at the market and making their own decisions.” More than half the members of the JA, as the cooperative is called, expressed dissatisfaction with its distribution channels, an association survey published in May found. No details were given on the number of respondents. Declining Membership In the two years through 2007, farmer members of the JA declined by 100,000 to 4.9 million, the association says. The number of people entering farming rose to 10,400 last year from 8,700 in 2006, Agriculture Ministry statistics show. Many are independent farmers growing vegetables, Honma said. “It’s no surprise these farmers are succeeding with the least help,” Roger Martini, co-author of an Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development report on Japanese agriculture, said at a press conference in Tokyo on Oct. 21. “They’re focused on the consumer and they’ve developed their own supply chains and marketing.” Japanese farmers typically derive 50 percent of their revenue from subsidies, price supports and restrictions on imports, compared with 12 percent for the U.S., the OECD says. “I have no intention of taking subsidies and I don’t want people to think farming is weak,” said farmer Masaaki Saito, 30. “Farmers need to take control from production to packaging to sales.” Very Veggie Saito is a JA member who founded Very Veggie , a group of farmers with their own store to bypass the JA’s channels. A 5-kilogram (11-pound) bag of rice costs about $29 in Japanese supermarkets, against $7 for a 10-pound bag in the U.S., based on the price at Tokyo-based Isetan Co. supermarkets and the online price from Pleasanton, California-based Safeway Inc. Red Fuji apples cost $2 apiece in Japan compared with 90 cents in the U.S., according to the same sources. Japan’s agriculture system was born from food shortages after World War II as the government sought to encourage production. The OECD says Japan’s average farm size is 2.3 acres outside Hokkaido, the sparsely populated northern island, against 1,065 acres in the U.S. The JA negotiates a price with wholesalers, then adds a 2 percent profit margin and charges as much as 30 percent for distribution. As the association expanded into loans and insurance, it gained an interest in maintaining the number of farms and policies that prevent consolidation, said Aurelia George Mulgan, a Japanese politics professor at the University of New South Wales in Canberra, Australia. Blame Game The JA isn’t monolithic, said Shinichiro Kaino, general manager for policy and planning at the group’s Tokyo headquarters. “People often blame JA for preventing large-scale farming,” Kaino said in an interview. “The reality is when Japanese farmers didn’t want to handle the distribution or storage of produce, the JA stepped in and did it for them.” Kaino said while the JA’s share of distribution of farm produce is declining, independent farmers don’t yet have the volume to undermine the co-operative. The group has also set up direct sales channels and Internet shopping . “Japan’s agricultural system made sense in a country recovering from war and during the economic boom,” said Yusuke Miyaji, a pork farmer south of Tokyo. “Since the economy declined, the JA hasn’t secured high prices.” Mail-Order Pork Miyaji, a 31 year-old graduate of Tokyo’s Keio University , returned to his family farm from a job in an information- technology company. He markets hogs with promotional barbeques and sells pork to consumers by mail order. Still a member of the JA, he said income in the two years he’s been handling distribution and marketing has doubled. Ex-porn maker Takahashi said he turned to farming so he wouldn’t have to hide his profession from his children. He’s yet to make a profit as he waits for his white strawberries to catch on, in part because of high startup costs, he said. “Our aim is to make eating vegetables a delicacy,” he said. “You have to provide a sensory experience.” To contact the reporter on this story: Stuart Biggs in Tokyo at sbiggs3@bloomberg.net ; Sachiko Sakamaki in Tokyo at Ssakamaki1@bloomberg.net .

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Chinese Drywall Emits `Elevated’ Level of Sulphuric Gas, U.S. Probe Finds

October 29, 2009

By Mark Drajem Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — U.S. investigators said Chinese drywall emits high levels of sulphuric gas while stopping short of linking the building material to illnesses. “They find chemical elements, but they don’t find enough to be detrimental to people’s health,” Florida Senator Bill Nelson told reporters. To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem in Washington at mdrajem@bloomberg.net

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Barrick, Newmont Mining Profits Beat Estimates on Higher Prices for Gold

October 29, 2009

By Rob Delaney Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Barrick Gold Corp. and Newmont Mining Corp. , the world’s largest gold producers by revenue, reported third-quarter adjusted profits that beat analysts’ estimates because of higher prices and efforts to contain costs. Barrick’s third-quarter profit excluding one-time items was 54 cents a share, the Toronto-based company said today in a statement. That topped the 46-cent average estimate of 23 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Newmont’s per-share profit of 79 cents beat the 55-cent average estimate of 17 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Sales rose 49 percent to $2.05 billion, the Greenwood Village, Colorado-based company said. Barrick is “keeping the cash costs low,” said Barry Schwartz , a portfolio manager with Baskin Financial Services Inc. in Toronto, who helps manage C$315 million ($293 million) and has 130,000 of the company’s shares. “The story of Barrick is a company that has increasing gold production in the next few years and has good control over its cash costs.” Barrick Chief Executive Officer Aaron Regent is eliminating bets against gold’s value and increasing reserves to benefit from gold prices that surged to a record $1,072 an ounce in New York this month. Newmont is increasing output mainly from its Boddington mine, an Australian project the company bought from partner AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. for $1.09 billion this year. “Newmont had a very good track record through last year and so far this year in maintaining their cost guidance,” David Haughton , an analyst at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, said in an Oct. 26 telephone interview. Shares Rise Barrick climbed C$2.21, or 6 percent, to C$39.25 at 11:21 a.m. in Toronto Stock Exchange trading. The shares declined 17 percent this year before today. Newmont rose $1.54, or 3.7 percent, to $43.04 in New York. The rise of the gold price helped the companies’ revenue increase more than the volume of metal sold. Barrick’s sales rose 12 percent to $2.1 billion even as its ounces sold fell by about 50,000 ounces. Newmont’s sales surged 49 percent while it sold 4.4 percent more ounces of gold. “Every portfolio should contain some gold or gold equities, and our valuation metrics point to Barrick, Goldcorp and Newmont as the most undervalued stocks,” John Bridges , a JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst in New York, said in an Oct. 26 note to clients. Barrick’s third-quarter sales rose 12 percent to $2.1 billion, in line with the average estimate in the Bloomberg survey. The average price of gold sales rose 11 percent from a year earlier to $971 an ounce, the company said. Production Costs Barrick’s production costs were $456 an ounce, which the company said was on plan. Those costs compare with $452 in the prior period and $466 a year earlier. Barrick reported a net loss of $5.35 billion, or $6.07 a share, which compares with net income of $254 million, or 29 cents, a year earlier. The loss resulted from a $5.7 billion charge to eliminate fixed-price contracts and an expense taken because the company decided not to exercise its right to increase its stake in the Sedibelo platinum project in South Africa. Newmont net income climbed to $388 million, or 79 cents a share, from $191 million, or 42 cents, a year earlier. Newmont’s average gold-production cost fell 13 percent from a year earlier to $404 an ounce, the company said today. “Our continued focus on cost containment resulted in a 13 percent improvement in gold cost of sales per ounce,” Newmont Chief Executive Officer Richard O’Brien said today in a statement. Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd. , the Canadian gold producer that’s quadrupling output, fell in Toronto a day after reporting a third-quarter loss of $17 million on a currency translation charge and a slower-than-expected production ramp-up. Agnico plunged C$4.25, or 6.4 percent, to C$62.35, in Toronto trading. The shares rose 6.1 percent this year through yesterday. To contact the reporter on this story: Rob Delaney in Toronto at robdelaney@bloomberg.net .

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Homebuyer Tax Credit Would Expand to Existing Owners Under Senate Proposal

October 29, 2009

By Brian Faler and Dawn Kopecki Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — The Obama administration endorsed plans to extend an $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers, saying it is helping stabilize the nation’s housing market. The tax break, enacted earlier this year as part of an economic stimulus package, has “brought new families into the housing market and contributed to three consecutive months of rising home prices,” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said today in a statement . The tax break will expire Nov. 30 unless Congress intervenes. Senate Democrats have announced plans to extend the credit until April 30 while expanding it to include higher-income Americans and some who already own homes. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus said today the new plan would offer a $6,500 credit for homebuyers who have lived in their prior residence for at least five years. Couples earning up to $225,000 and individuals up to $125,000 would qualify for the break, Baucus said. That’s up from the current $75,000 limit for individuals and $150,000 for couples. “The success of the American economy is closely tied to the success of the housing market – by helping to stabilize the housing market, the homebuyer tax credit has helped to shore up the economy as it begins to recover,” said Baucus. “This would enable an even greater number of potential homebuyers to take the credit.” Millions of renters earn more than $75,000, he said. Democrats have been pushing to include the provisions in an unemployment benefits bill, which has been held up by a disagreement with Republicans over other proposed amendments. Worst Price Drop Lawmakers said they want to prevent home sales from slipping as the economy struggles to recover from the worst drop in home prices since the Great Depression. More than 1.2 million borrowers have claimed $8.5 billion of the $13.6 billion set aside for the homebuyer tax credits this year, according to the Treasury Department. The Democrats’ proposal would extend the credit to home purchases under contract by April 30 so long as they close the sale within 60 days. Those buying homes worth more than $800,000 wouldn’t be eligible for the credit, said Baucus. “We need to target the credit toward those potential home buyers who need it most, and not those home buyers who would have bought the new home without the new credit,” said Baucus. House Plan Any legislation would have to be reconciled with a House unemployment measure approved last month that omits the homebuyer tax provisions and extends jobless benefits only in states with the highest unemployment rates. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi , a California Democrat, is waiting to see the final Senate agreement before deciding whether to support it, said spokesman Nadeam Elshami . While the tax credit speeds demand for homes from next year to this year, it won’t necessarily increase overall sales, said Scott Buchta , head of investment strategy at Guggenheim Securities LLC in Chicago. “They do need to expand the credit to get more people involved, but at the end of the day you are paying people tax dollars to do what they probably would have done anyway,” Buchta said. “If it is passed, home sales of lower-priced homes should continue to hold their ground. However, if it is not passed we will probably see home sales slow down as we wait for natural demand to build up again.” Significant Support Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , a Nevada Democrat, said yesterday that there is significant support among both parties for the homebuyers’ tax credit. He said the other amendments sought by Republicans are unrelated to the unemployment bill and are designed to embarrass his colleagues. Republicans want to vote on amendments on immigration and to bar funding for the community activist group Acorn . Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell , a Kentucky Republican, agreed that most lawmakers support the unemployment and homebuyer measures. “We’re not that far away from an agreement,” he said yesterday. The $2.4 billion unemployment measure would extend jobless benefits by 14 weeks in all states and provide an additional six weeks of benefits in states with the highest unemployment rates. About 1.9 million Americans will exhaust their unemployment benefits by the end of this year unless Congress acts, the Labor Department said. To contact the reporters on this story: Dawn Kopecki in Washington at dkopecki@bloomberg.com ; Brian Faler in Washington at bfaler@bloomberg.net

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Financial Overhaul to Curb Systemic Risk Met With Congressional Opposition

October 29, 2009

By Alison Vekshin Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama’s proposal to police companies for systemic risk and shift the cost for failure to the financial industry faced opposition as lawmakers said the plan would keep the burden on taxpayers in a crisis. “The bill we’re considering today will simply institutionalize too-big-to-fail” and lead to “perpetual taxpayer bailouts,” Representative Jeb Hensarling , a Texas Republican, said at a House Financial Services Committee hearing on a draft bill negotiated with the Treasury Department. Representative Barney Frank , the committee’s chairman, this week unveiled legislation to create a council including the Federal Reserve to monitor firms for risks to the economy. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. would get power to take apart systemically risky firms rather than let them fail in bankruptcy. A similar Senate bill hasn’t been proposed. Frank’s legislation is aimed at preventing companies from becoming so large that government must block a failure that could shake markets. Lawmakers have said a lack of a mechanism for shutting large firms in an orderly way led to ad hoc programs, such as the $700 billion taxpayer bailout used by lenders including Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. Lawmakers today took issue with key provisions, including a plan to have U.S. financial companies with more than $10 billion in assets repay costs to unwind a firm after it fails. They also opposed having regulators maintain a confidential list of systemically risky institutions. ‘Ugly Head’ “Most of us don’t die and then buy a life insurance policy,” said Representative Luis Gutierrez , an Illinois Democrat. “The fund should be set up just in case their reckless behavior, their risky behavior, raises its ugly head again.” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner , in testimony, said establishing a fund before a firm collapses “would create expectations that the government would step in to protect shareholders and creditors from losses.” Frank’s legislation gives the resolution authority to the FDIC, expanding the agency’s existing power to disassemble commercial banks and thrifts. FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair , breaking with the Obama administration, said firms should be required to prepay into a fund that Congress sets up to cover the costs of future failures, rather than be assessed after a collapse. “All large firms, not just the survivors, would pay risk- based assessments into the fund,” Bair testified. “This approach would also avoid assessing firms in a crisis.” Representative Randy Neugebauer , a Texas Republican, and other party members said the resolution authority isn’t necessary and he supported liquidating companies in bankruptcy. Bankruptcy Role “In all but the rarest cases, bankruptcy will remain the dominant tool for handling financial failure,” Geithner said, citing the demise of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008. “As the collapse of Lehman Brothers demonstrates, the bankruptcy code is not an effective tool for resolving the failure of complicated global financial institutions in times of severe stress.” Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Tarullo , Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan and Office of Thrift Supervision Acting Director John Bowman generally supported the compromise measure. The legislation is part of the Obama administration’s plan to overhaul U.S. rules governing Wall Street to prevent a repeat of last year’s financial market collapse, leading to more than $1 trillion in U.S. bailout programs. To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Vekshin in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net .

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Citadel’s Securities Head D’Souza to Quit a Year After Joining Hedge Fund

October 29, 2009

By Saijel Kishan, Katherine Burton and Bradley Keoun Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Rohit D’Souza, a former Merrill Lynch & Co. executive hired a year ago by Citadel Investment Group LLC to build an investment bank and brokerage, is leaving the hedge-fund firm. D’Souza’s departure date has not been set, spokeswoman Katie Spring said in a telephone interview today. Patrik Edsparr will take over the securities unit, Spring said. D’Souza has hired 70 bankers, sales representatives and traders to create a securities firm as Citadel aims to fill a void left by last year’s collapse of Bear Stearns Cos. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Citadel is the first hedge-fund company to expand into advisory and brokerage services to institutional investors, vying to take market share from firms such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley. “It raises the question of stability of the business and increases their difficulty to attract highly talented professions,” said Robert Olman, president of Alpha Search Advisory Partners, a recruitment firm based in Roslyn, New York. At least six senior executives have left Citadel since the beginning of 2008, including Mikhail Malyshev , the firm’s former global head of high-frequency trading who helped make $1 billion last year when Citadel’s biggest funds lost 55 percent. Joe Russell , head of U.S. fundamental credit, Matt Andresen , who was co-head of Citadel’s derivatives group, and Jason Lehman , who was ran Citadel’s global options business, all left in the past year. Losing Executives Citadel plans to start trading bank loans and high-yield bonds and hired loan trader Mike Weir from Morgan Stanley, according to a person familiar with the matter. Citadel sought unsuccessfully to hire four members of Barclays Capital’s loan sales and trading team for the effort in August. Griffin, 41, approached D’Souza in May 2008, a month after he quit Merrill. The Mumbai native had spent four years at what was once the world’s largest brokerage, where he ran its global equity-trading business. There he oversaw the modernization of the firm’s automated-trading systems and added a propriety trading desk. In 2007, his division made the most revenue, a record $8.29 billion, within Merrill’s investment bank. D’Souza left the firm in April 2008 after a rift with then Chief Executive Officer John Thain who had planned to install another senior trading executive over him. Before Merrill, D’Souza was at Morgan Stanley for eight years, where he ran its North American equity trading business. He previously worked for Investment Technology Group, a brokerage and financial technology firm in New York. To contact the reporters on this story: Saijel Kishan in New York at skishan@bloomberg.net ; or Katherine Burton in New York at kburton@bloomberg.net ; or Bradley Keoun in New York at bkeoun@bloomberg.net

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Stocks in U.S., Commodities Advance as Dollar, Bonds Drop on Growth in GDP

October 29, 2009

By Rita Nazareth Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks rallied, snapping a four-day losing streak for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index , after the economy returned to growth following the worst contraction in seven decades. Treasuries dropped and the dollar and yen weakened, while commodities rose. Caterpillar Inc. , Alcoa Inc. and American Express Co. jumped at least 4.1 percent after the Commerce Department said gross domestic product grew at a 3.5 percent pace from July through September after shrinking for four straight quarters. Motorola Inc. , Procter & Gamble Co. , Newmont Mining Corp. and Kellogg Co. climbed on better-than-estimated earnings . “The stock rally is not over yet,” said Jeffrey Kleintop , who helps oversee about $247 billion as chief market strategist at LPL Financial in Boston. “The stock market can celebrate. This news is an important confidence boost, in particular to individual investors.” The S&P 500 increased 1.9 percent to 1,062.89 at 1:41 p.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 166.56 points, or 1.7 percent, to 9,929.25. The MSCI AC World Index , a measure of developed and emerging markets, rose 1.5 percent after seven straight losses. The VIX , the benchmark for U.S. stock options that is known as Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” tumbled 10 percent to 25.08 in its steepest slide since July amid reduced demand for protection against declines in equities. ‘Waterloo of the Bears’ The growth in GDP topped the median estimate of 3.2 percent in a Bloomberg survey of economists and eased concern that an almost eight-month rally in equities outpaced the prospects for recovery. U.S. stocks extended a global slump yesterday as an unexpected decline in new-home sales exacerbated those concerns. The S&P 500 has surged 56 percent from a 12-year low on March 9, yet slipped 3.7 percent from this year’s high on Oct. 19. “The fourth quarter will be the Waterloo of the bears,” said E. William Stone , who oversees $102 billion as chief investment strategist at PNC Wealth Management in Philadelphia. “We are in economic recovery both in the U.S. and globally, so you will eventually see revenue growth because you are seeing the recovery hold.” The return to growth also fueled speculation that the Federal Reserve will begin to discuss lifting its benchmark interest rate from a record low range near 0 percent and further unwind other programs meant to stimulate the economy. European Central Bank council member Axel Weber signaled the bank may start to withdraw its emergency stimulus measures next year. The Fed has already announced a phase-out of some of its programs and will complete its $300 billion Treasury purchase program today. Norway and Australia have started to raise interest rates. ‘Tug-of-War’ Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told a congressional committee today that the recession remains “alive and acute” for struggling homeowners and the unemployed. “It’s a tug-of-war,” said Michael Binger , a Minneapolis- based fund manager at Thrivent Asset Management, which oversees about $60 billion. “We’ve had a stronger-than-expected GDP number and corporations are running more efficiently. But I don’t see the government reversing the stimulus measures or the Fed changing language or indicating higher interest rates any time soon. The unemployment rate is still very high.” Motorola gained 11 percent to $8.83. The biggest U.S. mobile-phone maker reported third-quarter profit excluding some costs of 2 cents, exceeding the average estimate for a breakeven quarter in a Bloomberg survey. Motorola cut jobs and production costs to offset slumping handset sales. Earnings Surprises Procter & Gamble added 4.2 percent to $59.61. The world’s largest consumer-products company reported first-quarter profit that topped the average analyst projection after price increases helped offset volume declines. Procter & Gamble also raised its full-year forecast for organic sales growth. Kellogg rose 1.8 percent to $50.89. The largest U.S. maker of breakfast cereal said it had third-quarter profit of 94 cents a share. The company was forecast by analysts to earn 85 cents, based on the average estimate from a Bloomberg survey. Symantec Corp. jumped 11 percent to $17.40. The biggest maker of security software reported second-quarter profit that topped analysts’ estimates after winning back customers from competitors and adding new business users. Genworth Financial Inc. jumped 15 percent and led insurance companies 4 percent higher, the biggest gain among 24 S&P 500 industries. The life insurer and mortgage guarantor was raised to “buy” from “neutral” by Bank of America Corp. MetLife Inc. , the biggest U.S. life insurer, gained 5.7 percent to $36.10 ahead of its earnings report . Lincoln National Corp. , the bailed-out insurer, climbed 15 percent to $25.58 after its first profit in a year topped estimates. Profit Analysis Earnings-per-share have exceeded the average analyst estimates at 81 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 that posted third-quarter results so far, which would be a record proportion for a full quarter, according to Bloomberg data going back to 1993. Still, profits have decreased 23 percent on average for the 295 companies that reported since Oct. 7. U.S. stocks also gained after the number of Americans collecting unemployment insurance fell more than forecast to the lowest level in seven months. The number of people receiving jobless benefits declined by 148,000 to 5.8 million in the week ended Oct. 17, the lowest since March 21 and biggest weekly drop since July, Labor Department figures showed. Indexes of raw-material producers and energy companies rose at least 2 percent as oil, gold and industrial metals gained after the GDP data. Commodities Gain Crude for December delivery gained as much as 3.9 percent to $80.24 a barrel. Gold rebounded from a three-week low, while copper climbed for the first time this week. Commodities prices also rose as the dollar declined 0.7 percent against an index of six major currencies, increasing demand for an alternative investment and inflation hedge. Treasuries extended losses after the U.S. sold a record $31 billion in seven-year notes, sending the 10-year yield up eight basis points to 3.497 percent. Newmont Mining added 4.2 percent to $43.23. The largest U.S. gold producer reported third-quarter profit of 79 cents a share on higher bullion prices and lower production costs. The results topped the 55-cent per-share average estimate of 17 analysts. Exxon Mobil Corp. had the second-biggest of only three declines in the Dow average, falling 0.6 percent to $73.42. The largest U.S. company reported third-quarter net income of 98 cents a share, 4 cents lower than the average of 15 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Demand slumped for fuels to run cars, trucks, factories and airplanes. First Solar Inc. tumbled 17 percent to $126.35. The world’s largest maker of thin-film solar power modules reported sales of $480.9 million in the third quarter, trailing the average analyst estimate by 9.3 percent, according to Bloomberg data. Bullishness Subsides The rally in global stocks has failed to convince investors and analysts that it’s time to take on more risk or dispel their concerns about U.S. economic policies and its banking system. Only 31 percent of respondents to a poll of investors and analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers in the U.S., Europe and Asia see investment opportunities, down from 35 percent in the previous survey in July. Almost 40 percent in the latest quarterly survey, the Bloomberg Global Poll, say they are still hunkering down. U.S. investors are even more cautious, with more than 50 percent saying they are in a defensive crouch. ‘Serious Bumps’ The U.S. economy faces “serious bumps” ahead that are likely to slow the pace of growth, Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said. The economy won’t be expanding quickly enough to reduce unemployment, Stiglitz told a press conference in Beijing today. The economy will enter “a very gloomy period” of high unemployment, economist David Malpass , president of Encima Global in New York, told Bloomberg Radio. The U.S. unemployment rate reached a 26-year high of 9.8 percent in September. “GDP numbers were good and will stimulate more investor interest in stocks,” said Randy Bateman , who oversees $13 billion as chief investment officer at Huntington Asset Advisors in Columbus, Ohio. “We can’t declare victory yet. Maybe it was more pronounced because of the success of cash-for-clunkers program. I believe we are not going to double dip, but maybe we’ll see a lesser number in the fourth quarter.” To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in New York at rnazareth@bloomberg.net .

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Too Big To Fail, Too Small To Survive: Small Bank Failures Mount, While Big Banks’ Profits Soar

October 29, 2009

On Wall Street, they may be popping the champagne bottles over big bank profits this past quarter. But times are tough for small to mid-size banks around the country as failures mount higher and higher. The top 10 bailed-out banks — Citigroup, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, PNC Financial, U.S. Bancorp, SunTrust and Capital One – have reported combined profits this year of $13.5 billion in the first quarter, $16.8 billion in the second quarter and $11 billion in the third quarter after a massive $18 billion loss in the fourth quarter of 2008. Meanwhile, the number of failed banks has quintupled, from 10 in the third quarter of 2008 to 50 in the third quarter of 2009. So far this year, 106 banks with assets totaling $106 billion have failed, almost half of which have been concentrated in three states (California, Georgia and Illinois). That has put a major dent in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s fund that insures deposits which recently fell into the red. While several giant banks such as Washington Mutual and IndyMac failed last year, this year the list has been dominated by small and mid-size banks such as Brickwell Community Bank in Woodbury, Minn., which had just a single branch and $72.6 million in assets. And it promises to keep getting worse for such banks. As the New York Times recently reported: Burdened by worsening commercial real estate loans, many small banks’ troubles are just beginning. Many analysts say that the now-toxic loans could sink hundreds of small lenders over the next few years and place a significant drag on the economy. Below, we’ve charted the rise in profits for the top 10 recipients of bailout funds versus the rate of failure for U.S. banks: Some economists have questioned what seems to be a two-tier system. “There is no good case for making the smaller, competitive, community-oriented institutions take the brunt of the down-sizing, as opposed to the bloated, ungovernable, and predatory institutions that were at the center of the crisis,” Nobel-Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz told a Senate committee back in April. Last month, economists Dean Baker and Travic McArthur described how government policy may end up increasing the disparity between “too big to fail” banks that have received billions in bailout dollars and smaller banks that were allowed to fail: “A predicted result of a formal TBTF policy is that the gap between the interest rate that smaller banks must pay to obtain deposits and otherwise borrow funds and the interest rate paid by the TBTF banks would increase, since the TBTF banks are now effectively able to borrow all their funds (not just smaller deposits) with the backing of the federal government.” And banking officials in states hit by bank failures have also been outspoken in their criticism of the administration’s policy. “Federal policy has not treated the rest of the industry with the same expediency, creativity or fundamental fairness,” Joseph A. Smith Jr., the North Carolina commissioner of banks, testified in Congress earlier this month. “This has been a lost opportunity for the federal government to support community and regional banks and provide economic stimulus.” The message seems to be sinking in with the Obama administration, which is set to revise its policy on such banking behemoths this week. “‘Too big to fail’ has become worse,” FDIC chair Sheila Bair told USA TODAY last week. “It’s become explicit when it was implicit before. It creates competitive disparities between large and small institutions, because everybody knows small institutions can fail. So it’s more expensive for them to raise capital and secure funding.” President Obama himself acknowledged the perception of such a disparity in a July speech though he defended the administration’s approach during the financial crisis: “I know that many community bankers consider it unfair that small banks–which did not cause the financial mess–are allowed to fail, while larger banks that took the biggest risks are rescued. That’s an understandable reaction. But we can’t escape the reality that certain institutions, by virtue of their size or their linkages to key markets, pose unique risks to the system and can bring others down with them.” Yet the White House seems to be watering down any drastic reform of its policy, with reports that the Treasury Department “have decided against making financial firms pay upfront the costs of dismantling them if regulators decide they have grown “too big to fail,” according to a House aide familiar with the plan,” notes the Associated Press : Instead, those companies would be allowed to borrow money from the government. The government would then recoup the costs by either seizing the firm’s profits or seeking restitution from the entire industry, the aide said. Get HuffPost Business On Facebook and Twitter !

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Global PR Agency LEWIS Appoints Virgin Atlantic’s Paul Charles as Chief Operating Officer

October 29, 2009

LONDON–(Marketwire – October 29, 2009) – Leading global PR agency, LEWIS , has appointed Paul Charles, former PR Professional of The Year , and currently Director of Communications for Virgin Atlantic , in the new role of Chief Operating Officer. Paul takes up his post in January and will report to CEO Chris Lewis.

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Area Offices Under Gun for $2B Debt

October 29, 2009

Search for Dallas Commercial Real Estate Thursday, October 29, 2009 – The Dallas Morning News reports that Morgan Stanley, which paid $6.5 billion to buy Crescent Real Estate Equities two years ago, has $2

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Certain Software Appoints Olivier Delerm as Chief Marketing Officer

October 29, 2009

Experienced Software Industry Marketer to Drive Growth for Global Events and Meetings Solution Provider

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Video: Goolsbee Says Too Soon to Consider Exit From Stimulus: Video

October 29, 2009

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Austan Goolsbee, a senior White House economic adviser, talks with Bloomberg’s Lori Rothman about the impact of the Obama administration’s stimulus package on the economy. The U.S. economy grew in the third quarter for the first time in more than a year, propelled by stimulus-driven gains in consumer spending and home building. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Goolsbee Says Too Soon to Consider Exit From Stimulus: Video

October 29, 2009

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Austan Goolsbee, a senior White House economic adviser, talks with Bloomberg’s Lori Rothman about the impact of the Obama administration’s stimulus package on the economy. The U.S. economy grew in the third quarter for the first time in more than a year, propelled by stimulus-driven gains in consumer spending and home building. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Resource America: $110M in real estate deals since ’07

October 29, 2009

Resource America Inc.’s unit that specializes in real estate has invested $110 million for institutional and other clients in distressed real estate deals since late 2007, when it began looking for new deals. Resource Real Estate Inc. managed

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American River Bankshares Announces Kevin B. Bender Named Chief Operating Officer

October 29, 2009

SACRAMENTO, CA–(Marketwire – October 29, 2009) – American River Bankshares ( NASDAQ : AMRB ), the parent company of American River Bank, a community business bank serving the Greater Sacramento Area, today announced that Kevin B. Bender has been promoted to Chief Operating Officer. Mr. Bender, who previously served as Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer, will lead American River Bankshares’ Central Support Services, Regulatory Compliance, Electronic Banking, Information Technology and Loan Operations Departments. He will continue to serve on the Company’s Executive Management Team, Leadership Council, Compliance Committee, Risk Management Committee and Technology Committee.

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Corporate Office Properties Trust gets Canton Crossing for $95M

October 29, 2009

CEO Randall M. Griffin acknowledged Thursday the toll the rough real estate market is taking on his company, but theres also an upside to those economic challenges: COPT is budgeting about $170 million to acquire distressed properties as land owners

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Corporate Office Properties Trust gets Canton Crossing for $95M

October 29, 2009

CEO Randall M. Griffin acknowledged Thursday the toll the rough real estate market is taking on his company, but theres also an upside to those economic challenges: COPT is budgeting about $170 million to acquire distressed properties as land owners

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Corporate Office Properties Trust gets Canton Crossing for $95M

October 29, 2009

CEO Randall M. Griffin acknowledged Thursday the toll the rough real estate market is taking on his company, but theres also an upside to those economic challenges: COPT is budgeting about $170 million to acquire distressed properties as land owners

Read the full article →

Corporate Office Properties Trust gets Canton Crossing for $95M

October 29, 2009

CEO Randall M. Griffin acknowledged Thursday the toll the rough real estate market is taking on his company, but theres also an upside to those economic challenges: COPT is budgeting about $170 million to acquire distressed properties as land owners

Read the full article →

Corporate Office Properties Trust gets Canton Crossing for $95M

October 29, 2009

CEO Randall M. Griffin acknowledged Thursday the toll the rough real estate market is taking on his company, but theres also an upside to those economic challenges: COPT is budgeting about $170 million to acquire distressed properties as land owners

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I-many Further Expands Executive Team With New VP of Global Channel Business

October 29, 2009

Brian Sterrett Appointed VP of Global Channels and Partners to Expand Partner Ecosystem in Support of Company Growth

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Overseas Buyers Poised To Ignite UK Commercial Property Market

October 29, 2009

LONDON -(Dow Jones)- The U.K.’s commercial real estate sector could be gearing up for fierce competition from buyers as funds, expecting more distressed property to come to market in the next two years, plan to snap up

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James Brakke Joins Debt Resolve Board of Directors

October 29, 2009

Company Restructuring Continues at Board Level

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James Brakke Joins Debt Resolve Board of Directors

October 29, 2009

Company Restructuring Continues at Board Level

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James Brakke Joins Debt Resolve Board of Directors

October 29, 2009

Company Restructuring Continues at Board Level

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AtNetPlus, Inc. Hires Additional Technical and Marketing Staff

October 29, 2009

IT Specialist Jason Skala and Marketing Assistant Julie Siller Join the AtNetPlus Team

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