November 2009

Soros backs Goalie fund

November 28, 2009

$10bn currency bet famously broke the Bank of England in 1992, has invested $5m in Manocap, an African private equity firm co-founded by Kerryman Niall O’Cathasaigh, a former Goal executive. The Manocap Soros Fund will focus on farming and related

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Hotel owners, like home owners, behind on payments (AP via Yahoo! Finance)

November 28, 2009

Like many home owners, hotels are starting to drown in debt. They have been enticing travelers all year with sweet deals: credits for in-house spas and restaurants, up to 50 percent off five-star rooms, even free nights.

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Banks reel from real estate deals in Myrtle Beach area (The Myrtle Beach Sun News)

November 28, 2009

Newly released statistics give a clearer picture of the magnitude of Horry County’s real estate meltdown, with year-over-year sales plunging by more than 80 percent in some census tracts – and the fallout from declining home values is forcing one local bank to quickly raise cash or consider a merger to comply with orders from federal regulators.

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Bomb Responsible for Russian Train Derailment Killing 26, Prosecutors Say

November 28, 2009

By Anastasia Ustinova Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Terrorism probably caused the deadly derailment of the Moscow to St. Petersburg express train late yesterday, killing at least 26 people and injuring dozens, Russian officials said. “Our main lead is an explosion of an unknown device, in other words terrorism,” Vladimir Yakunin , the head of OAO Russian Railways, the country’s railroad monopoly, told the government’s Vesti television station. The Prosecutor General’s Office opened a probe focusing on terrorism and illegal possession of an explosive device and arms, Vesti reported, citing spokeswoman Marina Gridneva. The Nevsky express, carrying 682 passengers and 29 railway personnel, was derailed at 9:30 p.m. Moscow time about 350 kilometers (220 miles) north of Moscow, killing at least 26 people and injuring 96, the emergency ministry said on its Web site . At least 18 passengers are still missing and many more may be dead, the ministry said. Rescue workers are using cranes to cut through the wreckage looking for trapped bodies, Russia’s emergency situations Minister Sergei Shoigu said during a televised video conference with President Dmitry Medvedev . ‘Crater’ Passengers reported hearing an explosion before the derailment, the station said. Investigators said they discovered a small “shell crater” at the scene. The incident is “very similar” to a 2007 blast, when an explosive device planted under the railroad track caused the train traveling from Moscow to St. Petersburg to derail, Yakunin said. Sixty passengers were hurt and 25 hospitalized in the explosion, which the government treated as an act of terrorism. Terrorism in Russia has been focused in the North Caucasus region, where violence has escalated with almost daily attacks on government officials and police this year. Federal forces fought two wars against Chechen separatists after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. From January until mid-September, 424 people were killed in attacks in Chechnya, Ingushetia and Dagestan, almost three times the number of violent deaths in the same period last year, according to state-run news agency RIA Novosti. Those killings include an August suicide truck bombing at an Ingush police station that killed 25 and the July murder of Chechen human rights activist Natalya Estemirova. On Aug. 19, Medvedev called for terrorists to be eliminated “without emotion or hesitation.” The president called for a crackdown on “terrorist scum” in June. To contact the reporter on this story: Anastasia Ustinova in St. Petersburg at austinova@bloomberg.net .

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Dubai worries not to impact India: Sharma

November 28, 2009

a brave face stating financial concerns in Dubai would not impact the Indian economy and the country’s real estate sector. ‘I don’t think,’ said Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma when asked whether the confidence erosion in Dubai would have

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Buzzintown Eyes Profit Zone In Two Quarters

November 28, 2009

owners and production houses. In a quick chat with VCCircle, Amitabh Saran, co-founder and MD, Buzzintown, said, the fund would help the company to think of plan A and plan C apart from its core business. Why is it necessary to have Plan A … 7

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Cox & Kings price IPO at Rs 330 per share

November 28, 2009

Kings (India) Limited has fixed Rs 330 per share for its Initial Public Offer of 18.49 million equity shares of Rs ten each, to be decided on a 100 per cent book building basis. The issue consists of a fresh stake of 15.45 million, besides an offer

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TPG tax fight worries investors

November 28, 2009

Australian authorities have slapped U.S. private equity firm TPG with a bill for 678 million Australian dollars ($629 million) in taxes and penalties, a move that is sending chills down the spines of foreign investors. The

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Bomb Responsible for Russian Train Derailment Killing 26 …

November 28, 2009

Here is an interesting post from ourceexcerpt% Read the original here here: What is pricing structure for commercial real estate brokers … Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers. … “ Distressed Debt” via Industry-News.org in Google Reader : companies in industries such as steel, coal, telecommunications, foreign investment and textiles. He specializes in leveraged buyouts and distressed businesses. …

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White House Plans To Step Up Pressure On Lenders To Help Homeowners

November 28, 2009

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration, battling a foreclosure crisis that shows no signs of relenting, will step up pressure on mortgage companies to do more to help people remain in their homes, officials said Saturday. The administration will announce its expanded program on Monday, Treasury spokeswoman Meg Reilly said. “We are taking additional steps to enhance servicer transparency and accountability,” Reilly said. She said the goal was to increase the rate that troubled home loans were converted into new loans with lower monthly payments. Industry officials said the new effort would include increased pressure on mortgage companies to accelerate loan modifications by highlighting firms that are lagging in that area. The Treasury is also expected to announce that it will wait until the loan modifications are permanent before paying cash incentives to mortgage companies that lower loan payments. Under the $75 billion Treasury program, companies that agree to lower payments for troubled borrowers collect $1,000 initially from the government for each loan, followed by $1,000 annually for up to three years. The government support, which is provided from the $700 billion financial bailout program, is aimed at providing cash incentives for mortgage providers to accept smaller mortgage payments rather than foreclosing on homes. The program has come under heavy criticism for failing to do enough to attack a tidal wave of foreclosures. Analysts said the foreclosure crisis is likely to persist well into next year as high unemployment pushes more people out of their homes. Rising foreclosures depress home prices and threaten the sustainability of the fledgling economic recovery. A report last week from the Mortgage Bankers Association found that 14 percent of homeowners with mortgages were either behind on payments or in foreclosure at the end of September, a record level for the ninth straight quarter. The Congressional Oversight Panel, a committee that monitors spending under Treasury’s bailout program, concluded in a report last month that foreclosures are now threatening families who took out conventional, fixed-rate mortgages and put down payments of 10 to 20 percent on homes that would have been within their means in a normal market. Treasury’s program, known as the Home Affordable Modification Program, “is targeted at the housing crisis as it existed six months ago, rather than as it exists right now,” the report said. Scott Talbott, senior vice president of government affairs for the Financial Services Roundtable, said the industry supported many of the changes Treasury was proposing. But he said the foreclosure problem, which began with heavy defaults on subprime mortgages, was expanding to more traditional types of mortgages because of unemployment which has now hit a 26-year high of 10.2 percent. “The subprime problem has regrettably morphed into an unemployment problem,” Talbott said. He said there was no government program to help the unemployed who are in danger of losing their homes but “many private lenders are modifying loans for the unemployed on their own.” Treasury’s Reilly said the expanded program would, among other steps, make more aid available to struggling borrowers and expand the number of organizations providing help. ___ Associated Press writer Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

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Vatika mulls to raise around Rs 1.25 bn from Brahma Cap

November 28, 2009

is in discussions with real estate investment firm Brahma Capital to get fresh funds, reports Economic Times. The fund has up to date managed to raise which raised Rs 10 billion from a group of international financial institutions such as Goldman Sachs,

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DSP Merrill Lynch Equity Fund sells 0.93% stake in Aban Offshore

November 28, 2009

sold 0.93% stake in India’s reputed offshore drilling contractor in the private sector, Aban Offshore, for Rs 321.31 million. It sold 260,000 shares on the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The shares were sold at a price of Rs 1,235

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Indian stocks tumbles due to Dubai debt problems

November 28, 2009

stocks tumbles due to Dubai debt problems Make Your Page Sunday, November 29, 2009 Updated on Sunday, November 29, 2009 5:35:05 AM n stocks tumbles due to Dubai debt problemsMumbai November 27, 2009 9

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Economist Predicts Just 2% Growth In 2010

November 28, 2009

A Robust economic recovery in 2010 is certainly on most investors’ wish lists as this year draws to a close. A return to prosperity would not only mean an end to our long financial nightmare, but it would also buttress a rebounding stock market, one of 2009′s few bright spots. S The news out of Dubai late last week, however — that its investment company is struggling to meet repayments on some of its $59 billion in debt — reminds us that we are far from finished with a ferocious deleveraging process…

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Difficulty of private equity exits risks Asia’s reputation

November 28, 2009

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Cox and Kings fixes IPO price at Rs 330/share

November 28, 2009

crore. The company has fixed the issue price at Rs 330 a share for offering 1.8 crier equity shares to public, Cox and Kings said in a statement. The offer consists of a fresh issue of 1.5 crore shares of the company. Besides 30.46 lakh equity

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Search ends with 100,000 top prize

November 28, 2009

a new platform with investors.’ Seedcorn, the largest business competition on the island with a 360,000 prize fund, aims to stimulate new start-up activity, accelerate commercial development and create more opportunities for private equity investment. A

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Johann Hari: Dubai Has Always Been Bankrupt — Morally and Environmentally

November 28, 2009

Dubai is finally financially bankrupt – but it has been morally bankrupt all along. The idea that Dubai is an oasis of freedom on the Arabian peninsular is one of the great lies of our time. Yes, it has Starbucks and Dunkin’ Donuts and the Gucci styles, but beneath these accouterments, there is a dictatorship built by slaves. If you go there with your eyes open – as I did earlier this year – the truth is hidden in plain view. The tour books and the bragging Emiratis will tell you the city was built by Sheikh Mohammed, the country’s hereditary ruler. It is untrue. The people who really built the city can be seen in long chain-gangs by the side of the road, or toiling all day at the top of the tallest buildings in the world, in heat that Westerners are told not to stay in for more than 10 minutes. They were conned into coming, and trapped into staying. In their home country – Bangladesh or the Philippines or India – these workers are told they can earn a fortune in Dubai if they pay a large upfront fee. When they arrive, their passports are taken from them, and they are told their wages are a tenth of the rate they were promised. They end up working in extremely dangerous conditions for years, just to pay back their initial debt. They are ringed-off in filthy tent-cities outside Dubai, where they sleep in weeping heat, next to open sewage. They have no way to go home. And if they try to strike for better conditions, they are beaten by the police. I met so many men in this position I stopped counting, just as the embassies were told to stop counting how many workers die in these conditions every year after they figured it topped more than 1,000 among the Indians alone. Human Rights Watch calls this system “slavery.” Yet the Westerners who have flocked to Dubai brag that they “love” the city, because they don’t have to pay any taxes, and they have domestic slaves to do all the hard work. They train themselves not to see the pain. But Dubai’s bankruptcy does not end there: it is ecologically bust. This is a city built in the burning desert, where everything shrivels up and blows away if it is not kept artificially cold all the time. That’s why it has the highest per capita carbon emissions on earth – some 250 percent higher even than America’s. The city has to ship in desalinated water – which is more costly than oil. When it runs out of cash, it will run out of water. Today Dubai will be bailed out by the United Arab Emirates, the oil-rich country of which it is only one state. But the oil will not last forever. More importantly, there is no Bank of Morality that could provide a bailout for this sinister mirage in the desert.

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Wilbur Ross Top Holdings: Assured Guaranty Ltd., Montpelier Re Holdings Ltd., International Coal Group, MetroPCS Communications, Satyam Computer…

November 28, 2009

companies in industries such as steel, coal, telecommunications, foreign investment and textiles. He specializes in leveraged buyouts and distressed businesses. In 2009, Forbes magazine listed Ross as the #196 richest American, with an estimated net

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Sunday November 29 2009 (The Malaysian Insider)

November 28, 2009

NEW YORK, Nov 28 — Dubai’s debt woes could further unhinge an already fragile US commercial real estate, as it illustrates the importance of that tiny country to global investors in an increasingly interconnected world.

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Pirrie brothers return to power

November 28, 2009

2006 have made a foray back into power generation with the acquisition of an Airdrie-based company through their private equity vehicle. Nevis Capital, a Glasgow private equity company launched by John and James Pirrie after the sale of LCH Generators,

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GoldenNetworking.com to Host Distressed Investing Leaders Forum 2010 at Kirkland & Ellis' New York H

November 28, 2009

GoldenNetworking.com will host on February 26th, 2010, Distressed Investing Leaders Forum 2010 (http://www. DistressedInvestingLeadersForum.com) at Kirkland & Ellis' New York City headquarters. This extraordinary gathering of minds will congregate the

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A value buy

November 28, 2009

Srividhya Sivakumar DSP BlackRock World Mining Fund (DSPBR WMF), an open-ended fund of funds equity scheme, is the latest thematic fund offering from this asset management company. Seeking to predominantly invest in BlackRock Global Funds (BGF) ?

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‘Secondary Deals’ To Gain Momentum In PE Industry?

November 28, 2009

In a deal which underlines our view that private equity will reinvent itself in 2010, the acquisition of Birds Eye Food by Pinnacle Foods, for US$1.3bn, is an example of a ‘secondary deal’ between two private equity fund-owned

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GoldenNetworking.com to Host Distressed Investing Leaders Forum …

November 28, 2009

NEW YORK, Nov 28 — Dubai’s debt woes could further unhinge an already fragile US commercial real estate , as it illustrates the importance of that tiny country to global investors in an increasingly interconnected world. …

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Ben Bernanke: No One Can Regulate Wall Street Better Than The Fed

November 28, 2009

For many Americans, the financial crisis, and the recession it spawned, have been devastating — jobs, homes, savings lost. Understandably, many people are calling for change. Yet change needs to be about creating a system that works better, not just differently. As a nation, our challenge is to design a system of financial oversight that will embody the lessons of the past two years and provide a robust framework for preventing future crises and the economic damage they cause.

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Spread your ELSS investment

November 28, 2009

I want to make a lump sum investment of around Rs 30,000 in an ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) fund. Please help me choose a good one

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Tandem Expansion

November 28, 2009

Denver-Boulder Edmonton Kitchener-Waterloo Montréal Ottawa Portland Seattle South-Florida Toronto Vancouver Victoria Home»Directory»Global» Tandem Expansion Tandem Expansion is a private growth capital fund seeking to invest in small and mid-sized

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Increase in the Number of Problem Banks to be Discussed at Private Equity Leaders Forum 2009

November 28, 2009

that run the biggest risk of collapse, increased to 552 in the third quarter, the FDIC reported. The fund had a negative balance of $8.2 billion at the end of the third quarter, first time into the red since the fallout from the savings-and-loan crisis

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Federer’s Bid for Fifth Tour Title Ends With Semifinals Loss to Davydenko

November 28, 2009

By Danielle Rossingh Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Roger Federer’s bid for a fifth ATP World Tour Finals title was ended by Nikolay Davydenko in the semifinals. The Russian beat the top-ranked Swiss 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 at the end-of-season tournament at London’s O2 arena . Before today’s match, the seventh-ranked Davydenko hadn’t won a set from Federer since the 2006 Australian Open. His first loss to Davydenko in 13 meetings marks the end of a season during which Federer won his first French Open and became the first man to win 15 Grand Slam singles titles when he beat Andy Roddick at Wimbledon. It was Federer’s seventh semifinal at the Tour finals in eight appearances. The 28-year-old right-hander secured the year-end No. 1 ranking by beating Britain’s Andy Murray in a group match earlier this week. That puts him alongside Pete Sampras and Jimmy Connors as the only players to end the year as No. 1 five or more times since the rankings were introduced in 1973. U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina faces Sweden’s Robin Soderling in the other semifinal later today. To contact the reporter responsible for this story: Danielle Rossingh at the O2 arena through the London sports desk at drossingh@bloomberg.net

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London Conference to Set Plan for Security Handover to Afghan Government

November 28, 2009

By Theophilos Argitis Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown said an international conference will be held in London next year to set out a timetable for the handover of security to Afghanistan’s government. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Afghan President Hamid Karzai will be among those attending the meeting on Jan. 28, Brown told a televised press conference at the Commonwealth summit in Trinidad and Tobago today. The London meeting will concentrate on political strategy in Afghanistan as the U.S. and U.K. prepare to ramp up their presence there to thwart a Taliban insurgency. Brown said he won’t set a timetable for “troop numbers” in the country. “The purpose is to move forward our campaign in Afghanistan to match the increase in military forces with an increased political momentum to focus the international community on a clear set of priorities across the 43-nation coalition and marshal the international effort to help the Afghan government,” Brown said. “I believe we will be able to set a clear timetable for 2010 and beyond.” President Barack Obama will announce his Afghan strategy on Dec. 1, with talks focused on adding 30,000 to 35,000 American soldiers, according to a U.S. official. The U.S. now contributes about 70,000 of the 110,000 international troops waging the Afghan war. Additional Troops Brown said he will announce Britain’s new military commitments for Afghanistan next week. He said allies excluding the U.K. and the U.S. also need to send an additional 5,000 troops to Afghanistan. The conference would aim to set benchmarks to measure improvements in Afghanistan’s military and government, including the ability to deliver services to the civilian population, build the military and police forces and hand over “district- by-district” security, Brown said. The plan will be to increase the Afghan forces by 50,000 over the next year, he said. “I want the conference to consider the process for district-by-district handover,” Brown said. “I believe this can begin in 2010 in a number of districts, including one or two in Helmand itself. We need to transfer at least five Afghan provinces to lead Afghan control by the end of 2010.” Asked whether handing over security to Afghanistan’s government implied a withdrawal of troops, Brown said: “If the Afghanistan people were able to be responsible for their own security, but not until then.” To contact the reporters on this story: Theophilos Argitis in Trinidad at targitis@bloomberg.net ;

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Velasco Says Chile’s Copper Savings Protect Its Economy From Dubai Fallout

November 28, 2009

By Sebastian Boyd and James Attwood Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Chile’s economy will be shielded from any fallout over Dubai default concerns because the South American country has cut its foreign borrowing requirements and built a rainy day fund, Finance Minister Andres Velasco said. Emerging-market stocks around the world have slumped for two days on concern a debt restructuring by Dubai World, with $59 billion of liabilities, will add to the $1.72 trillion of losses and writedowns from the global credit freeze. “We are looking at the situation with some degree of serenity,” Velasco said today in an interview. “These are issues for countries where financing, particularly financing of the public sector, is a big issue. For Chile it’s not.” Chile used a three-year copper boom to cut borrowing to the point where it’s a net creditor for the first time since independence from Spain 200 years ago. By the end of 2008, Chile stashed away $20 billion in its stabilization fund, allowing it to draw $8 billion this year to plug a budget gap. Chile’s main stock index, the Ipsa , rose 1.2 percent today, the biggest gain in more than three weeks, after sliding 2.2 percent yesterday. The Chilean peso rose 0.3 percent against the U.S. dollar, recovering most of yesterday’s decline. The peso has rallied 7.7 percent in the past month, the best performer among all currencies tracked by Bloomberg. In March, as the credit crunch hit and Moody’s Investors Service prepared to lower its Aaa rating on General Electric Co. for the first time in 40 years, Moody’s raised its rating on Chile’s debt, the first such increase of the year. The cost of insuring Chilean government bonds against default using credit- default swaps is comparable to Austria, Japan or Greece and cheaper than Spain. Bachelet’s Government Since President Michelle Bachelet’s government took office in March 2006, the country’s main stock index has gained 63 percent in U.S. dollar terms, beating the MSCI Emerging Markets Index’s 23 percent rise and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s 15 percent slide. Chilean sovereign bonds in dollars returned 34 percent in that time, compared with 21 percent for the region as a whole, according to indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch & Co. Velasco said it’s too early to say what effect the Dubai situation will have on emerging markets. “But one strength that is evident in the case of Chile is that precisely because of the kinds of monetary and financial and fiscal policies we have followed over the last few years, we are not necessarily beholden to whatever happened in emerging markets last night,” Velasco said. To contact the reporter on this story: Sebastian Boyd in Santiago at sboyd9@bloomberg.net ; James Attwood in Santiago at Jattwood3@bloomberg.net

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Most U.S. Stocks Drop on Concern Dubai May Default; Goldman, Alcoa Retreat

November 28, 2009

By Rita Nazareth Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Most U.S. stocks fell this week as speculation Dubai will default on its debt spurred concern that the recovery in the global financial system will stall, overshadowing fewer American jobless claims and more home sales. Morgan Stanley , Bank of America Corp. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. lost more than 3.4 percent. They helped send financial institutions to the biggest drop among 10 industries in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index after Dubai World, the state- controlled company with $59 billion of liabilities, said it’s seeking to delay debt payments. Alcoa Inc. slumped 3.6 percent as the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of commodities fell for the fourth time in five weeks. Among S&P 500 companies, 273 declined and 224 rose this week. The S&P 500 added less than 0.1 percent to 1,091.49 after climbing to a 13-month high on Nov. 25. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 8.24 points, or 0.1 percent, to 10,309.92. “Investors are selling into a vacuum,” said Jeffrey Saut , chief investment strategist at Raymond James & Associates in St. Petersburg, Florida, which manages $214 billion. “The collateral damage that will take place from the Dubai fallout is unknown. You’re not going to know until the pros get back next week.” The 0.01 percent gain in the S&P 500 was the smallest weekly move since August 1992, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. U.S. stock exchanges were shut Nov. 26 for Thanksgiving and closed three hours early the next day, when the fewest shares changed hands since Dec. 26. $90 Billion The S&P 500 fell 1.7 percent yesterday after Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index plunged the most since April while U.S. markets were closed for Thanksgiving. Dubai may owe more than the $80 billion to $90 billion in liabilities assumed by investors, UBS AG analysts said. The emirate, which borrowed $80 billion in a four-year construction boom to transform its economy into a regional tourism and financial hub, suffered the world’s steepest property slump in the worst global recession since World War II. An index of financial stocks in the S&P 500 lost 2.3 percent for the biggest weekly decline among 10 industries. Morgan Stanley dropped 5 percent to $30.51, while Bank of America retreated 3.9 percent to $15.47. Goldman Sachs lost 3.4 percent to $164.16. Metal producers fell as commodities slumped. The CRB index retreated 0.5 percent. Crude oil fell 0.9 percent to $76.05 a barrel in New York, while copper lost 0.3 percent to $3.1255 a pound. Alcoa , the largest U.S. aluminum producer, fell 3.6 percent to $12.66. Dow Chemical Co. , the nation’s biggest chemical maker, declined 1.3 percent to $27.56. Halliburton Co. , the world’s second-largest oilfield-services provider, lost 2.6 percent to $29.09. Fewer Jobless Claims The S&P 500 added 1.8 percent in the first three days of the week following better-than-estimated economic reports. The Labor Department said on Nov. 25 that 466,000 Americans filed for unemployment benefits in the week ended Nov. 21, the fewest since September 2008 and less than the 500,000 median forecast of economists. New-home sales increased to an annual pace of 430,000 in October, the Commerce Department reported the same day. The median estimate was 404,000, Bloomberg data show. Dubai’s attempt to reschedule its debt prompted investors to buy assets deemed safe and sell riskier ones. Treasury two- year notes rose, driving their yields down to 0.68 percent, the lowest level in 11 months. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, or VIX, which tends to rise when investors are less willing to take risks, surged 11 percent to 24.74. ‘Risk Aversion’ Telephone companies, health-care providers and utilities posted the biggest gains among 10 industries in the S&P 500. All three groups are considered defensive assets by some investors. “Risk aversion is warranted because of an environment where Dubai is surprising market participants,” said Jack Ablin , Chicago-based chief investment officer of Harris Private Bank, which oversees about $50 billion. “But the economic backdrop is very positive.” AT&T Inc. , the biggest U.S. phone company, rose 3.7 percent to $26.99, while drugmaker Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. added 3.8 percent to $25.38. Duke Energy Corp., the supplier of electricity in states including North Carolina, South Carolina and Ohio, advanced 2.9 percent to $16.69. To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in Sao Paulo at rnazareth@bloomberg.net .

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Black Friday Crowds Snap Up Discounted TVs, Laptops at Walmart, Best Buy

November 28, 2009

By Cotten Timberlake and Chris Burritt Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Retailers reported “strong” shopper traffic on Black Friday as discounts on televisions, toys and computers drew budget-conscious crowds across the U.S., the National Retail Federation said. High-definition TVs, laptops, Zhu Zhu Pets robotic hamsters and winter coats were among the most popular items, according to the federation, a Washington-based trade group. Sales probably met or exceeded retailers’ projections, David Schick , a Baltimore-based analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co., wrote in a note to investors after store visits and conversations with employees. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , the world’s largest retailer, drew crowds with $298 Hewlett-Packard laptop computers and other specials that went on sale at 5 a.m. Best Buy Inc. , the biggest electronics chain, used $547.99 42-inch Samsung flat-panel TVs to lure shoppers grappling with the highest unemployment in 26 years. The retailer had bigger early-morning crowds than last year, Chief Executive Officer Brian Dunn said. “The surprise news is that they are actually buying for themselves as well, due to pent-up demand and frugal fatigue,” Marshal Cohen , chief industry analyst with NPD Group Inc. said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday. “They are saying ‘Let’s loosen up the purse strings a little bit,’ but it is still cautious spending.” NPD, based in Port Washington, New York, is a market research firm. The day after U.S. Thanksgiving is known as Black Friday, the traditional beginning of holiday buying. Explanations of the phrase’s origins differ, one holding that it’s the weekend when retailers go to being in the black, profitable for the year. Stores open early on Black Friday and offer early-bird discounts to attract business. Black Friday Prediction Retailers’ chief marketing officers predicted Black Friday sales would climb an average 1.8 percent from a year ago at their own stores, according to a survey conducted by BDO Seidman LLP in October. Ninety-six of 100 executives said they would increase promotions this year, offering the biggest discounts on consumer electronics. “Retailers in all sectors have reported strong crowds,” according to an NRF statement yesterday. Walmart fell 33 cents to $54.63 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . Richfield, Minnesota-based Best Buy lost 43 cents to $42.83. Snapping Up TVs There seemed to be more discounts on TVs this year, and shoppers were snapping them up, said Charles O’Shea , a New York- based retail analyst with Moody’s Investors Service. In the four hours he spent checking retailers in northern New Jersey, he saw several shoppers standing at bus stops holding flat-panel sets. “It looks like everybody has caught the promotional bug,” O’Shea said in a telephone interview yesterday. The lines in front of Best Buy stores were longer and the company’s Web site attracted more visitors than in 2008, Best Buy’s Dunn said. “Those are both directionally important indicators for us,” he said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Samir Patel arrived at noon on Thanksgiving Day with his brother and cousin to claim the No. 1 spot in line at Best Buy in Jersey City, New Jersey. The 26-year-old, who has been unemployed since he graduated with a master’s degree in May, was waiting to buy a Sony Vaio laptop for $399.99 when the store opened at 5:30 a.m. the next day. ‘Best Deal’ “It’s the best deal for a laptop this year,” he said. “There’s a minimum of 10 in the store.” Holiday sales make up a third or more of retailers’ annual profit. The International Council of Shopping Centers, a trade group, predicted sales at stores open at least a year will advance 1 percent in November and December after a year-earlier 5.8 percent decline, the worst in 40 years. “There’s a little more traffic than last year across the board, maybe 10 percent,” Bill Taubman , chief operating officer of Taubman Centers Inc., a U.S. real estate investment trust with 24 malls, said in a telephone interview yesterday. Walmart, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, kept stores open all night so shoppers could grab items when they went on sale at 5 a.m. The world’s largest retailer cut some toy prices to $5. Toys “R” Us, based in Wayne, New Jersey, had an average of 1,000 people outside its stores before they opened at midnight, five hours earlier than last year, said Chairman and CEO Jerry Storch . The chains sold a “significant number” of Apple Inc. iPods and tens of thousands of Zhu Zhu Pets robot hamsters, he said. For the Kids “The last thing parents will cut back on is toys for their kids,” Storch said in a telephone interview yesterday. At the Macy’s Inc. store in New York’s Herald Square, shopper traffic appeared greater than a year ago, and continued to flow in after the initial rush, Macy’s Chairman and CEO Terry Lundgren said. Housewares and jewelry were selling “briskly,” he said. “Last year we were just getting rid of the inventory we bought six months before,” Lundgren said. “This year we’ve had a year to think through what is the sales trend.” Macy’s, based in Cincinnati, dropped 59 cents to $16.97 yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange. Promotions are shaping up to be less haphazard than last year when conditions were “downright dysfunctional” after the financial crisis forced retailers to clear out goods, Richard Hastings , a Charlotte, North Carolina-based consumer strategist for Global Hunter Securities LLC, said yesterday in an e-mail. After this weekend, sales may slip into a lull until mid- December when retailers push out more discounts, Hastings said. “The season has a long way to go,” Hastings said. To contact the reporters on this story: Cotten Timberlake in Washington at ctimberlake@bloomberg.net Chris Burritt in Greensboro, North Carolina, at 1348 or cburritt@bloomberg.net ;

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Velasco Says Chile's Copper Savings Protect Its Economy From Dubai …

November 28, 2009

NEW YORK, Nov 28 — Dubai’s debt woes could further unhinge an already fragile US commercial real estate , as it illustrates the importance of that tiny country to global investors in an increasingly interconnected world. See the original post: Sunday …. “ Distressed Debt” via Industry-News.org in Google Reader : companies in industries such as steel, coal, telecommunications, foreign investment and textiles. He specializes in leveraged buyouts and distressed businesses. …

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Most U.S. Stocks Drop on Concern Dubai May Default; Goldman, Alcoa …

November 28, 2009

Here is an interesting post from ourceexcerpt% Read the original here here: What is pricing structure for commercial real estate brokers … Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers. … We ‘re working with one local investor group that has amassed a large sum of money for short-term real estate investment. The investor group uses its cash to buy distressed properties, which are then rehabbed and sold for a profit. …

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Most U.S. Stocks Drop on Concern Dubai May Default; Goldman, Alcoa …

November 28, 2009

Here is an interesting post from ourceexcerpt% Read the original here here: What is pricing structure for commercial real estate brokers … Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers. … We ‘ re working with one local investor group that has amassed a large sum of money for short-term real estate investment. The investor group uses its cash to buy distressed properties, which are then rehabbed and sold for a profit.

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Return to lender: U.S. hotel owners going delinquent on debt …

November 28, 2009

Most of the distressed debt is on new or newly renovated high-end resorts built from 2005 to 2007 on dreams of corporate meetings and cocktail hours. Luxury projects approved before the recession are still opening this year and in 2010 …

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Wilbur Ross Top Holdings: AGO, MRH, ICO, PCS, SAY

November 28, 2009

companies in industries such as steel, coal, telecommunications, foreign investment and textiles. He specializes in leveraged buyouts and distressed businesses. In 2009, Forbes magazine listed Ross as the #196 richest American, with an estimated net

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Business forum: Colleges must steer clear of the mess

November 28, 2009

Lawrence Bacow, recommended higher education institutions reduce their exposure to risky alternative investments, such as hedge funds and private equity. From 2002 to 2007, the share of dollars in hedge assets coughed up by institutional investors –

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Commercial Real Estate, Stocks, REITs Falling Off Cliff

November 28, 2009

Commercial Real Estate , Stocks, REITs Falling Off CliffAll of the major national commercial real estate firms now have about 8 agents where they once had 30 or so agents per office. And, they will not co-broke with smaller commercial …

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Abu Dhabi Won’t Bail Out Dubai

November 28, 2009

ABU DHABI (Reuters) – Abu Dhabi, wealthy capital of the United Arab Emirates, will “pick and choose” how to assist debt-laden neighbor Dubai, a senior official said on Saturday, after fears of a Dubai default sent global markets reeling.

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Return to lender: U.S. hotel owners going delinquent on debt …

November 28, 2009

Here is a new post from %sourceexcerpt% Continue here: Return to lender: US hotel owners going delinquent on debt … Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers.

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Hotel owners, like home owners, behind on payments

November 28, 2009

MIAMILike many home owners, hotels are starting to drown in debt. They have been enticing travelers all year with sweet deals: credits for in-house spas and restaurants, up to 50 percent off five-star rooms, even free nights. But all that discounting

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Hotel owners, like home owners, behind on payments (Washington Post)

November 28, 2009

MIAMI — Like many home owners, hotels are starting to drown in debt.

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Tax Break For Financiers Hard To Kill

November 28, 2009

not ready for termination, a committee member said. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Mass., said the tax break for hedge fund managers and venture capitalists that permits much of their profits to be taxed at 15 percent, rather than the standard 35 percent rate, was

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After Black Friday Sales: U.S. Retailers Report Strong Crowds

November 28, 2009

The nation’s shoppers took advantage of deals on toys and TVs with some renewed vigor in stores and online on Black Friday after a year of concentrating their spending on basic necessities. Though the first numbers won’t be available until Saturday, early reports indicated bigger crowds than last year, with people buying more and even throwing in some items for themselves. It was an encouraging sign for retailers, which have suffered through a year of sales declines, and perhaps also for the broader economy, which could use a kickstart from consumer spending. In Chicago, Dan Montgomery and his wife carted bulging Macy’s bags, proclaiming the department stores had “killer deals.” Their favorite buy? A set of two skillets for $19.99, marked down from $100. Still, mall operators said more shoppers were sticking to making purchases in cash and debit cards instead of credit. “I like cash because when you’re out of cash, you’re out of cash. And you don’t have the hangover in January,” Montgomery said. Worries about jobs clearly were on shoppers’ minds. Most people buying for themselves were picking up practical things that were deeply discounted such as pillows, pajamas and coffee makers, according to stores and analysts. “With the layoff there have been a few cutbacks, but with the great sales they’re offering this year, I think it’s, overall, going to be a great Christmas for my two granddaughters,” said Ernest Bell of Marietta, Ga., who was laid off in April from his job as an information technology support representative and was at the local Walmart on Friday. The nation’s retailers ushered in the traditional start of the holiday shopping season with expanded hours and deep discounts in hopes of getting people to spend. Online, Walmart.com, Amazon.com and other online retailers also grabbed for a piece of the action, pushing deals on Thursday and even earlier in the week. Several large retailers, including Walmart and many Old Navy locations, even opened on Thanksgiving. Those stores now have to figure out how to keep people coming back through Dec. 25. Though there were isolated reports of squabbles, the pre-dawn crowds were generally calm. Stores took extra precautions to control the throngs after a Walmart worker on Long Island was trampled to death last year on Black Friday. Analysts monitoring the malls said shoppers were less frenetic, having researched deals before going shopping. Extended hours also gave shoppers more time to grab deals both online and in stores than a year ago. Most Walmart stores were open on Thanksgiving to prevent the mad dash of shoppers for its Friday 5 a.m. specials. ShopLocal, a subsidiary of publisher Gannett Co., on Friday said traffic was up 27 percent at top retailers’ online sites featuring their Black Friday ads. Stores were encouraged that shoppers appeared to be a little freer with their spending. Best Buy, Sears Holdings Corp. and Mall of America, as well as mall operators Taubman Centers and Simon Property Group, offered signs people were buying more than last year. An average of about 1,000 people were in line for midnight openings at Toys R Us stores, CEO Gerald Storch said. After setting aside 100 Zhu Zhu Pets hamsters for each location, Toys R Us came back with several shipments of the hot toy for several of its stores Friday. Even luxury stores, which generally aren’t the big attractions for Black Friday, had brisk traffic, according to analysts. More than 5,000 people were at Macy’s Herald Square store in New York early Friday, slightly more than last year, Macy’s CEO Terry J. Lundgren said. Among the most popular items were Tommy Hilfiger $99 bomber jackets, marked down from $450. Dondrae May, a manager at a Best Buy in Framingham, Mass., said shoppers started lining up at 4 p.m. Thursday – 13 hours before opening. He said shoppers were filling their baskets with more items than a year ago, when they were shellshocked after the financial meltdown. The biggest draws were laptops, TVs and GPS systems, he said. The chain had sold out of all of its early morning specials within two hours of the 5 a.m. opening, spokesman Scott Morris said. While Black Friday is not a bellwether for the season, analysts are studying Friday’s receipts to better understand the mindset of shoppers like Laura Frankito, a nurse who found herself at Kohl’s outside Cleveland buying a Snuggie blanket-robe for her aunt and Tony Hawk T-shirts for her nephew. She’s only giving money to her two children, and she pointed out her newfound practicality by saying she wouldn’t get a $12.99 canine version of the Snuggie for her sister’s dog. “There would have been a year when I would have gotten that,” she said. ___ Associated Press Writer Lisa Cornwell in Cincinnati, AP Writer Kate Brumback in Atlanta and AP Retail Writers Betsy Vereckey and Mae Anderson in New York City, Ashley Heher in Chicago, Emily Fredrix in Cleveland, and Vinnee Tong in San Francisco contributed to this report. (This version CORRECTS to “Simon Property Group” instead of “Simon Properties.”)

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A less leveraged diversified portfolio is need of the hour

November 28, 2009

carefully than was done in boom time, said Stephen Mitchell, Chief Investment Strategist, Emea for JP Morgan’s Private Bank. Private investors tend to put too much emphasis on their home markets when investing; a broader more globally diversified

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Recession Sends Older Americans To Food Pantries

November 28, 2009

ALBANY, N.Y. — Older Americans who were raised on stories of the Great Depression and acquired lifelong habits of thrift now find themselves crowding soup kitchens and food pantries in greater numbers for the first time after seeing retirement funds, second jobs and nest eggs wiped out by recession. “What we see in line is lots of gray hair, lots of walkers,” said Marti Forman, CEO of The Cooperative Feeding Program in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The help is crucial for many fixed-income seniors, who can’t always keep up with rising food prices. “It’s a lifeline. It just means that you can function,” said Ronald Shewchuk of Ithaca, N.Y. “Otherwise we would have to sell our house. I don’t know what we would do. Go to an old age home.” The number of seniors living alone who seek help from food pantries in the U.S. increased 81 percent to 408,000 in 2008, compared to 225,000 in 2006, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Overall, 4.7 million households used American food pantries in 2008, compared to about 3.7 million in 2006. “Seniors thought they were OK, but they’re not OK,” said Virginia Skinner, director of Development at The Association of Arizona Food Banks in Phoenix, citing the downturn in the area’s housing market. Catholic Charities USA, which has 170 agencies across the country helping the needy, issued a 2009 third-quarter report that found a 54 percent increase in requests for food and services from seniors nationwide compared to the same period last year. Despite the increased need, it can be difficult for some older people to come forward and seek help. “They’re of a generation that feels they took care of themselves, and now in these desperate straits they don’t want to acknowledge it,” said Catholic Charities spokesman Roger Conner. “With seniors and retirees – people that were planning for that period of their life – they are often very proud and very private, and they want no one to know of the difficulties they might be experiencing.” Shewchuk, a 72-year-old retired technician, said he’s been struggling to pay his bills and keep up with rising food costs. He said he and his wife Helen, 75, never needed charity before and used to volunteer at their local soup kitchen. This year, they started using it five days a week and getting assistance from food banks and the state. They have no children. “We just have Social Security and a small pension, and we just can’t make it with the mortgage payments and the gas and electric and so forth,” Shewchuk said. “It’s just draining our resources.” At St. Mary’s Food Bank in Phoenix, 64-year-old Sherry Whittemore was collecting her monthly box of canned juice, pasta, beans and vegetables. She began coming to the food bank in January after losing her customer relations job at a Fry’s Electronics store. “I thought I would be able to get a job soon, but that’s just unrealistic,” Whittemore said. Even with a temporary job helping people with vocational training and unemployment payments, she has had to tap into about $14,000 in savings. Hubert Scheid, 76, drives a Lexus and owns a two-bedroom condo in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., but says he has depleted his savings and works part time as a security guard to pay for rent, food and medication. Even then, it’s still not enough. But he makes too much money to qualify for most assistance. For the Thanksgiving holidays, he expected to get a food box and turkey from The Pantry of Broward. “I owned a Porsche. I had all the trimmings, the way you want to live when you’re young and successful,” Scheid said. “I went from rags to riches and from riches back to rags. You can’t get help because you have it too good, but you don’t have it good enough.” Older people also have the added disappointment of no cost-of-living increase in Social Security checks this year. “Seniors were hit with the decline in the stock market,” said Mark Dunlea, executive director of the Hunger Action Network of New York State. “It’s unsettling when you lose a lot of your investment.” The New York City Coalition Against Hunger released a report on the city’s soup kitchens and food pantries that found that 68 percent of responding agencies were seeing an increase in senior citizens. Hunger Solutions Minnesota said this month that food-shelf visits from older people increased 26 percent in the first half of this year, compared to the same period in 2008. Anthony Butler, executive director of St. John’s Bread and Life, a Brooklyn food pantry and soup kitchen, said some of the newest needy were volunteers, comfortable in their retirement. Now they’re clients. “People thought they would get by. They were surprised they would have to use a place like ours,” he said. “We get a lot of that.” In Phoenix, Whittemore started volunteering at St. Mary’s as a way to give back for the food she was receiving and also because she thought her situation would be short-term. Though people are respectful, she can’t help feeling self-conscious. “I’d like to be on that end,” Whittemore said, pointing to a group of volunteers handing out Thanksgiving turkeys, “instead of this end.” ___ Associated Press Writers Terry Tang in Phoenix and Kelli Kennedy in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., contributed to this report.

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Tiger Woods in Good Condition After Car Crash Near Home; Wife Aids Rescue

November 28, 2009

By Michael Buteau and Aaron Kuriloff Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Tiger Woods is in good condition after a car crash in front of his Florida home that left the world’s No. 1-ranked golfer with cuts on his face. Woods, 33, was hospitalized after the crash yesterday, according to a news release from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles. The crash is under investigation, the Highway Safety agency said. Alcohol was not a factor. Woods’s wife, Elin, used a golf club to smash the back window of the vehicle and helped get her husband out, according to an Associated Press report quoting Windermere, Florida, Police Chief Daniel Saylor. “He was in and out of consciousness when my guys got there,” Saylor told AP. Glenn Greenspan , the golfer’s spokesman, said in an e-mail that the crash was a “minor accident.” Woods’s Web site posted a joint statement with Health Central Hospital in Ocoee, Florida, that said he was in “good” condition. Woods struck a fire hydrant while pulling out of his driveway at about 2:25 a.m. local time and drove into a neighbor’s tree, according to the Highway Safety release. The air bags in his 2009 Cadillac sport-utility vehicle didn’t deploy, the Associated Press reported. Woods’s playing status is unknown. He is scheduled to play in the Chevron World Challenge in Thousand Oaks, California, next week. Woods is host of the tournament, which is not part of the U.S. PGA Tour’s regular season and attracts most of golf’s top players. He last played two weeks ago, winning the Australian Masters in his first appearance in that country since 1998. No Majors This season, Woods won six times in 17 events after undergoing reconstructive surgery on his left knee following his 2008 U.S. Open victory. He also had three runner-up finishes among his 14 top-10s in a year, in which he failed to win one of golf’s four major titles for the first time in five years. Woods led the U.S. Tour with $10.5 million in earnings, and ended the season by capturing the yearlong FedEx Cup title for the second time. The championship also included a $10 million bonus. With that bonus, Woods became the first athlete to surpass the $1 billion mark in career earnings, Forbes magazine reported in October, citing its own calculations of Woods’s golf and endorsement earnings. In this year’s majors, Woods tied for sixth at the Masters Tournament and U.S. Open. He then missed the cut for weekend play at the British Open, only his second missed cut at a major in his professional career. His best chance to add to his list of 14 major titles came at the PGA Championship in August. While Woods led the field after 54 holes at Minnesota’s Hazeltine National Golf Club, he wasn’t able to fend off Y.E. Yang and lost for the first time as a pro when holding the lead going into the final round. Woods lives in the Windermere community in Orange County, Florida, with his wife and two children. He is building a new home on Florida’s Jupiter Island. To contact the reporters on this story: Michael Buteau in Atlanta at mbuteau@bloomberg.net ; Aaron Kuriloff in New York at akuriloff@bloomberg.net .

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