December 2009

Federal Reserve Board proposes amendments to Regulation D that would enable the establishment of a term deposit facility

December 28, 2009

Federal Reserve Board proposes amendments to Regulation D that would enable the establishment of a term deposit facility

Read the full article →

Richard Alvarez Joins Health Contact Partners as Vice President, Business Development and Sales

December 28, 2009

LAKE FOREST, IL–(Marketwire – December 28, 2009) – Richard Alvarez, 40, of Itasca, Ill., has joined Health Contact Partners health call center as Vice President of Business Development and Sales. He reports to Nancy Eckrich, Senior Vice President of Health Contact Partners’ Lake Forest, Ill.-based parent company, Trustmark. Alvarez will be responsible for developing a strategic plan to identify new channel partners and broaden relationships with existing partners. He will identify potential sales markets and align resources to execute the sales strategy. His office is located at Health Contact Partners’ headquarters in Wheeling, Ill.

Read the full article →

Video: Nobu Owner Nieporent Says Vegas Dining `Oversaturated’: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Drew Nieporent, president of Myriad Restaurant Group and a co-owner of Nobu, talks with Bloomberg’s Scarlet Fu about the outlook for fine dining in New York, Las Vegas and London. Nieporent says Las Vegas dining is “oversaturated” and that the CityCenter complex will do well “because it’s new.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Lebas Says U.S. Rates, Treasury Yields to `Creep Higher’: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Guy Lebas, chief fixed-income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Lori Rothman about the outlook for U.S. Treasury yields. Lebas also discusses today’s Treasury auction and Federal Reserve monetary policy. Bloomberg’s Brian Luke also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Dean Baker: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Just a Four-Letter Word?

December 28, 2009

That word would be “TARP” of course. The night before Christmas, the Treasury announced that these two bankrupt mortgage giants would get an unlimited draw on the taxpayers’ dollars. This looks a lot like TARP. Just to remind everyone, the original TARP program was about buying up bad assets from banks. It had the appearance of the mother of all bailouts, as it seemed likely that the government would overpay for these assets, handing public money to bankrupt banks. The TARP changed course, with the government providing hundreds of billions of dollars of loan money to banks at a time when the private sector had no confidence in the banking system. The TARP, along with the much larger lending programs from the Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC, succeeded in preventing the financial system from collapsing. The banks are now back on their feet, with near record profits and near record bonuses for the executives who are so skilled in getting public money. The largest banks have now repaid their TARP money, with many smaller banks anxious to follow suit in order to avoid troubling questions about how they have used their taxpayer dollars. The major exception to the happy picture in the financial sector is the plight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Officially, the Treasury reports that together the two companies have drawn just over $100 billion on their $400 billion line of credit from the government. But this story is very hard to reconcile with the decision to enlarge this line of credit without limit. The Treasury claims this was done to assure the financial markets that the government would stand behind the debt of the two mortgage giants. Since Fannie and Freddie went into conservatorship in September of 2008, it has been explicit policy that the government would back up their debt. Originally, $200 billion was committed for this purpose. That amount was subsequently doubled to $400 billion (almost half of the ten-year cost of the health care bill). If the bad debts to date have only forced Fannie and Freddie to draw just $100 billion, isn’t a commitment equal to four times prior losses sufficient to maintain the confidence of financial markets? The arithmetic on this is very hard to understand. While Fannie and Freddie did get into subprime near the peak of the bubble in 2005, the vast majority of their assets were still tied to prime mortgages. These are mortgages in which people had to put 20 percent down or buy mortgage insurance. The combined portfolios and guarantees of the two companies were $5.5 trillion at the time of their takeover. Suppose that 10 percent of their mortgages went bad (an extremely high rate for prime mortgages). This would put $550 billion at risk. If the loss rate on these mortgages was 25 percent (a very high loss rate for prime mortgages), then Fannie’s and Freddie’s combined losses would be just $163 billion, not even half of the line of credit. Furthermore, Fannie and Freddie had combined reserves of more than $50 billion going into this disaster, and make money on ongoing operations. On the face of it, it is very difficult to see how Fannie and Freddie could go more than $400 billion in the hole, based on their September 2008 assets. In fact, this possibility seems so far out, it is hard to imagine that the financial markets need any further evidence of the government’s commitment to these mortgage giants. This raises the possibility that Fannie and Freddie are incurring losses on assets purchased after September of 2008. This would mean that they were paying too much for mortgages and mortgage-backed securities bought from banks after the financial meltdown was already in full swing. This was the original purpose of the TARP program. Of course, TARP came with at least some restrictions and disclosure requirements. If Fannie and Freddie are overpaying for mortgages, then there are no conditions whatsoever put on the banks that get the money. It is possible that there is some other more innocent explanation for the sudden need to raise Fannie’s and Freddie’s credit limits. If so, then the Obama administration should make its case to the public and explain how losses could conceivably run above $400 billion (credit markets don’t need reassurance against inconceivable events). While they are it, the Obama administration might also want to explain why the CEOs of these bankrupt companies now stand to pocket $6 million a year, a fact released in another Christmas Eve announcement. Surely, there are people who can run bankrupt companies at a much lower pay rate. This looks like yet another case where Santa is being very generous to the financial industry boys, while leaving the rest of us with a lump of coal. Christmas Eve announcements were a favorite trick of the Bush administration. It is disappointing to see this practice continue under President Obama.

Read the full article →

Video: Henry Says Retailers With Internet Sales `Going to Win’: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Sarah Henry, a retail analyst at MFC Global Investment Management LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Matt Miller about U.S. holiday sales. Retail sales rose an estimated 3.6 percent this holiday season as online gift-buying, last-minute spending and an extra shopping day spurred a recovery from last year, the worst in four decades. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Duvall Investment Group Chosen to Provide Association Management to Boxwood (dBusinessNews.com)

December 28, 2009

Duvall, Inc. ( www.duvallonline.com ) has been engaged by Boxwood Condominiums Owners Association (COA) as its association management firm. Duvall will provide the 24-condo community with COA management services ranging from janitorial and maintenance services to construction and remodeling.

Read the full article →

Alcott’s Potboilers Featured Drug Addicts, Cross-Dressers: Dave Shiflett

December 28, 2009

Review by Dave Shiflett Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Louisa May Alcott did a lot more than write “Little Women.” She was an abolitionist and a crusader for women’s rights. She wrote pulp fiction under a pseudonym. She chopped firewood. You’ll learn all about this fascinating woman in “Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind ‘Little Women,’” an engrossing docudrama airing tonight on PBS at 9 p.m. New York time. If you thought that Alcott was nothing but a prudish writer of family novels and children’s stories, think again. Starring Elizabeth Marvel as Alcott and Jane Alexander as her first biographer, Ednah Dow Cheney, the program reveals the many sides of the author of “Little Women,” an 1868 novel based on her childhood in Concord, Massachusetts. Alcott is portrayed as a wry, attractive free-thinker who was ahead of her time. Marvel often addresses the camera directly, delivering memorable lines from Alcott’s writings along with lively accounts of her conversations. For non-Alcott scholars, one of the surprising revelations is her authorship of crime fiction under the pen name A.M. Barnard. Those books featured drug addicts, cross-dressers and killers, a far cry from the stories for young readers that made her famous. Fruitlands Commune Alcott was no desperate housewife. She never married and made no apologies for her independence. “I’d rather be a free spinster and paddle my own canoe,” she quips in the movie, though she does mention a short-term relationship with a younger Polish lad. “We had a fine time for a fortnight,” Alcott observes, without providing salacious details. More interesting, to me at least, is her relationship with her father, Amos Bronson Alcott, a transcendentalist pal of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau . He is portrayed as a man with massive sideburns and a propensity for melancholy who let the women in his life do most of the heavy lifting. After a harrowing stint at the utopian Fruitlands community in northern Massachusetts, Louisa May’s family moved dozens of times, including a stay in one of Boston’s worst slums. ‘Moral Pap’ Dad could talk up a storm but he put few beans in the pot for his wife and four daughters. Louisa May toiled as a seamstress, laundress, teacher and wood-splitter. She never forgot those hard times, even after becoming wealthy from the publication of “Little Women” and its sequels, “Good Wives” and “Little Men.” “Though an Alcott I can support myself,” she says in a bit of understatement. She was brutally honest about her reasons for writing her best-known books. “I don’t enjoy writing moral pap for the young,” she notes, but “do it because it pays well.” The film, directed by Nancy Porter and written by Harriet Reisen, also explores Alcott’s dedication to progressive causes. “I was an abolitionist at the age of three,” she says. During the Civil War she worked at a Union hospital in Washington, where she contracted typhoid fever. She was treated with a compound called calomel, which contains mercury. Alcott thought the treatment caused chronic health problems, though the movie speculates that she may have also suffered from bipolar disorder and lupus. Like many writers, Alcott was prone to self-medication, which in her case included opium and hashish. She died on March 6, 1888, outliving her father by two days. This docudrama, part of PBS’s “American Masters” series, should spur fresh interest in Alcott, whose artistic and personal dexterity deserve wider appreciation. “Little Women” may never seem so prim again. ( Dave Shiflett is a critic for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer of this story: Dave Shiflett at dshifl@aol.com .

Read the full article →

Ski Champion Lindsey Vonn Escapes Serious Injury in World Cup Slalom Crash

December 28, 2009

By Alex Duff Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Defending World Cup ski champion Lindsey Vonn of the U.S. escaped serious injury today when she crashed in a giant-slalom race. Vonn, 25, may resume competition as early as tomorrow after hurting her left arm, the U.S. Ski Team said on its Web site . It cited medical director Richard Quincy and said Vonn didn’t sustain any fractures. Vonn is scheduled to compete at the Winter Olympics, which open Feb. 12 in Vancouver. Vonn lost balance when her skies clipped a gate in Lienz, Austria, and was taken to a local hospital for tests, the team said. She had received first aid on the slope before managing to ski down on her own. In March, she became the first American woman to win the overall World Cup ski title two years in a row. She leads this season’s standings. Germany’s Kathrin Hoelzl won today’s event. To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Duff in Madrid at aduff4@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

U.S. Dollar Takes Temperature of Troubled World: Paul Kennedy

December 28, 2009

Commentary by Paul Kennedy Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — How is one to explain the wild gyrations in the international exchange value of the U.S. dollar in recent times over the past year or so? During one month it is falling fast, in another it is rising just as fast. Since early December, it has risen about 5 percent against the yen — not a weak currency these days — and almost as much against the euro. Some older-fashioned bankers must be yearning for the days of fixed exchange-rates, for a time when a national currency was attached to the steady price of gold. Alas, no more. So it is not just the U.S. dollar and other currencies, but also the spot prices of oil, gold and other commodities that fluctuate wildly in the world markets. In sum, we live in a world of fiscal trading doubt. As a comfort, financial columnists will patiently explain why these reversals in currency values occur. Among the reasons: U.S. bond yields are ticking up; some economic indicators point to a resumption of growth; the U.S. balance of payments is forecast to shrink; Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is talking up the dollar. One could toss in various other market forces, like the surge in sales of dollar-denominated junk bonds. So it is all markets, markets, markets. Sell the dollar short on Monday, buy it back on Tuesday. No wonder the big banks want to reward their smartest, fastest traders with epic bonuses. What goes up, must come down, until it goes up again. Even the mighty American currency is no exception here. Reasons for Unease Still, there are two other aspects to this tale of the dollar’s fate that grip me and make me uneasy in spite of the dollar’s recent gains. The first is the conviction among scholars much more learned in global financial matters than myself, that the dollar is inexorably headed to a reduction in its share of foreign- currency deposits held by national treasuries, because the latter will continually adjust to the shifts in the world’s productive balances, and thus to a currency’s relative purchasing value. This argument is most elegantly expressed in a recent article by the Italian economist, Antonio Mosconi called “The World Supremacy of the Dollar at the Rendering (1917- 1980).” But Mosconi’s sentiment exists in many other places. My own tack here on the dollar’s rises and falls isn’t a strictly economic one, but the view of someone professionally trained in the study of history and strategy. It is scarcely surprising to learn that, when crises and wars erupted, bankers and traders seek to put their money in the safest place possible, either a neutral country, such as Switzerland, or a country that seemed more likely to win than to lose (18th- and 19th-century Britain). Finding Refuge Again, if you lived in a country whose governmental policies were economically foolish, and whose national currency suffered as a result, you were only being prudent in locating some of your capital assets in a sounder place: how many of today’s worried Venezuelan or Argentine elites hold bank accounts in the U.S., Switzerland, the U.K. or the Cayman Islands? To a large degree, this benefits the host economy and keeps its currency strong. Occasionally, the national currency becomes so strong that its government imposes negative interest-rates, to stop the inflow of capital and its possible inflationary consequences. Still, it is a sign of confidence, a sort of market speculators’ Good Housekeeping Mark of Approval. Water flows ever downhill; smart money flows to where it can prosper and be secure. The history of currency movements thus becomes a not- much-understood history of relative national strengths as well as a history of international crises. World War I To give just one example: In the stormy years of repeated international crises before 1914, British Treasury officials feared that an outbreak of all-out war in Europe would cause foreign governments and private investors to drain gold from London, then the world’s only free market for gold. In fact, as soon as the July 1914 Balkan crisis seemed destined to lead to a Great-Power shootout, foreigners began to pour their gold and other assets into the pound sterling. All of this, of course, had an ironic double impact. As seen solely from the perspective of the currency markets, this was a massive vote of confidence in the British financial system. As seen from the perspective of the Foreign Office, though, this really was a bad omen; it meant that the international order, which the No. 1 power of the time had a massive interest in keeping stable, was tending toward chaos. Bad News Abroad In short, when a reserve currency strengthens sharply, even in the face of economic fundamentals such as large trade deficits, there is usually, perhaps always, bad news from abroad. This leads me to a rather gloomy conclusion, which I trust will not be proven correct, but which I think all sensible readers would like to ponder. If the above analysis is correct, then the U.S. has found itself in this first decade of an undoubtedly troubled 21st- century in a most peculiar condition as regards its twin roles, as the currency and banker of last resort, and as the key stabilizer of world security and international affairs. If global politics are relatively calm, the dollar will probably continue its gentle longer-term decline, fluctuating only in accordance with traders’ economic decisions. But if global politics are bad — war in the Middle East, the collapse of Pakistan, a shootout in the Taiwan Straits or on the Korean Peninsula, heightened Russian-Ukrainian tensions — then there will be a predictable flight to safety. It would be an exaggeration to claim that a strengthening U.S. dollar must always mean a worsening world situation. But a pattern of “stronger dollar, troubled planet” does seem to have established itself. So, given the choice, what would the Obama administration prefer: a rising national currency, with mayhem abroad or the prevalence of peace, with longer-term currency erosion? It’s worth a thought, even during our holiday celebrations. ( Paul Kennedy is a professor of history at Yale University. The opinions expressed are his own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: Paul Kennedy at paul.kennedy@yale.edu

Read the full article →

My Casualty List Shows Stocks Ready to Rebound: John Dorfman

December 28, 2009

Commentary by John Dorfman Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) – From 1999 through early 2007, I compiled a quarterly Casualty List of banged-up stocks that I believed had good rebound potential. I’m resurrecting this idea. Here is the Fourth Quarter 2009 Casualty List, focusing on stocks that are down 15 percent or more for the quarter as of Dec. 24, and that I think are likely to recover smartly in 2010. In the leadoff spot is Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. of Pasadena, California. Joseph Jacobs , a engineer from Brooklyn, New York, founded the company in 1947. It has grown to a corporation with more than 160 offices in 20 countries, and with revenue of more than $11 billion in a year, according to the company’s Web site. A series of acquisitions fueled the growth at Jacobs. Often, acquisitive companies borrow heavily to finance their conquests. Not so with Jacobs. It carries debt equal to less than 1 percent of stockholders’ equity. Jacobs doesn’t have a nice, smooth earnings growth curve. Earnings bounce up and down from year to year. But I hope that the adoration of smoothness went out with Bernie Madoff . In any case, Jacobs has turned a profit every year going back at least to 1987, which is as far as the Bloomberg database carries me. Jacobs shares fell as much as 15 percent in a single day on Nov. 17, when the company forecast that it would earn $2.00 to $2.60 a share in 2010. Analysts had been expecting about $2.80. For the quarter, it is down about 16 percent. Room for Buyers Fidelity Management & Research, the Boston mutual fund giant, was once the largest shareholder , but it has been selling in 2009. I believe that Fidelity has now unloaded the vast majority of its stake, so that the coast is clear for buyers to come in without worrying about being trampled by an oversize seller. I like Jacobs because it has expertise in many aspects of engineering, because it has large customers who can undertake big, complex projects, and because of its sterling balance sheet. Harte-Hanks Inc. , based in San Antonio, has fallen about 20 percent this quarter. It publishes direct-mail marketing publications, notably the Pennysaver and The Flyer in California and in Florida. In its three best years, Harte-Hanks earned $1.26 to $1.39 a share. Analysts are predicting only 82 cents a share in 2010 , but I suspect the company might earn a dollar a share as the economy revives more rapidly than people expect. The stock is trading a little below $11. If I’m right, it is selling for about 11 times 2010 earnings, a pretty multiple. If I’m wrong and the analysts’ consensus is right, it’s at 13 times earnings, still reasonably attractive. Time Horizon While I think Jacobs Engineering is a good three year-to- five year pick, Harte-Hanks is more of a one-year strategy. I think the Internet will continue stealing advertising market share from print products over time. But as a play on a reviving economy, I think Harte-Hanks is timely. If you achieve a gain, I’d sell the stock as soon as the gain qualifies for long-term capital-gains tax treatment. Frontier Oil Corp. , based in Houston, is having a terrible year. Analysts expect that when it closes the books on 2009 it will have earned 26 cents a share, the worst showing since 2003, and a mere shadow of peak earnings, which were $4.62 a share in 2007. That year, Frontier shares hit a high of about $48 a share. Today they languish at less than $12. Oil Prices It seems to me that earnings between $1 and $2 a share would suffice to lift the stock price substantially. I think Frontier will enter that earnings zone in 2011, as oil prices rise. I think oil will rise because of increased demand by reviving economies in the U.S. and Europe. The price might also be pushed higher — though I hope not — by political turmoil in the Middle East, Russia or Nigeria. Frontier’s specialty is refining heavy oil, which is thicker than so-called light, sweet crude. Many refineries are unable to cope with the more gunky grades of oil. At present, demand isn’t especially heavy. When demand intensifies, the ability to refine heavy crude becomes a desirable capability — especially if light, sweet crude is in short supply. I think Frontier’s competitive position is likely to improve in 2010 and 2011, and so is its pricing power. The stock trades for eight times earnings and just over book value (corporate net worth per share). I’ll round out the list with another niche energy stock, Cal Dive International Inc. of Houston. If you need divers to lay pipe or to repair an offshore rig under water, Cal Dive is one of the leading suppliers. Earnings Decline Since it went public in 2006, Cal Dive has struggled. Diluted earnings per share declined in 2007 and 2008, and seem likely to decline again in 2009. The consensus calls for earnings of 94 cents a share this year, down from $1.91 in 2006. Why on earth would I want a stock whose earnings are in their third straight year of decline? I like it because it provides a useful service, and because the stock is just plain cheap, trading at six times earnings and at very close to book value. Disclosure note: I currently have no long or short positions in any of the stocks discussed in this week’s column, personally or for clients. ( John Dorfman , chairman of Thunderstorm Capital in Boston, is a columnist for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: John Dorfman at jdorfman@thunderstormcapital.com .

Read the full article →

Holiday Retail Sales in U.S. Climbed an Estimated 3.6%, SpendingPulse Says

December 28, 2009

By Cotten Timberlake and Linda Sandler Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. retail sales rose an estimated 3.6 percent this holiday season as online gift-buying, last- minute spending and an extra shopping day spurred a recovery from last year, the worst in four decades. A jump in purchases the week before Christmas helped year- over-year electronics sales increase 5.9 percent from Nov. 1 to Dec. 24, MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse said in a statement. Jewelry and luxury sales also gained, the research firm said. The increase may signal that revenue at retailers will beat trade groups’ forecasts for the two-month period ending Jan. 2. Shoppers resumed purchasing this season as consumer confidence rebounded from a record low in February. “We saw a nice little surge toward the end of the season,” with the pace picking up Dec. 22, 23 and 24, said Michael McNamara , a vice president for research and analysis at SpendingPulse, in a Bloomberg Television interview today. “Last year, we were in critical condition, this year, in stable.” Retailers also recorded an extra day of sales because there were 28 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas this year compared with 27 last year. Excluding the extra day would temper the increase “anywhere from 2 percent to 4 percent,” SpendingPulse said. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , the world’s largest retailer, gained 13 cents to $53.73 at 11:46 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Macy’s Inc. , the second-largest U.S. department store company, jumped 42 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $17.99. The 30-member Standard & Poor’s 500 retail index rose 0.5 percent to 419.71. ‘Improving Faster’ “Consumer sentiment for higher-income folks has been improving faster as of late,” David Schick , an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co., said in a telephone interview today. “That is driving some of the better spending coupled with the fact that we are comparing with a dramatic drop-off in the more discretionary categories last year.” The SpendingPulse estimate for Nov. 1 to Dec. 24 excludes automotive and gasoline sales, the Purchase, New York-based researcher said in an e-mail yesterday. SpendingPulse measures retail sales across all payment forms, including cash and checks. The firm didn’t disclose dollar spending totals. Holiday Forecasts SpendingPulse doesn’t forecast holiday sales. The Washington-based National Retail Federation has predicted a 1 percent decline, to $437.6 billion. The International Council of Shopping Centers, another trade group, anticipates a 2 percent increase in sales at stores open at least a year. The NRF’s measure is based on U.S. Commerce Department retail sales data, excluding auto dealers, gas stations and restaurants. The NRF releases holiday results after the Commerce Department announces its December data on Jan. 14. The ICSC will report the retail chains’ latest weekly results tomorrow. Retailers will report December sales — the period ending Jan. 2 — on Jan. 7. Last year holiday sales fell 3.4 percent, according to the NRF. The 2008 season was the worst since New York-based ICSC started recording sales four decades ago. This season, online sales jumped 18 percent from Nov. 27 to Dec. 24, according to SpendingPulse. “People were more comfortable doing last-minute shopping online, especially with the bad weather,” Kamalesh Rao , director of economic research for SpendingPulse, said in a telephone interview yesterday. A snowstorm on the East Coast the weekend before Christmas closed some malls early on Dec. 19 and kept shoppers at home. Jewelry sales rose 5.6 percent for November and December, while luxury retail excluding jewelry gained 0.8 percent, SpendingPulse said. “Holiday 2009 can be described in one word, ‘Adequate,’” Marshal Cohen , the chief retail industry analyst at Port Washington, New York-based NPD Group Inc., said today. To contact the reporters on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net ; Cotten Timberlake in Washington at ctimberlake@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Canplats Gets $265.2 Million Offer From Newmont Venture, Topping Goldcorp

December 28, 2009

By Thomas Black Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Canplats Resources Corp. received a C$276.6 million ($265.2 million) takeover offer from a Newmont Mining Corp. venture, topping Goldcorp Inc. ’s most recent bid. Minera Penmont, which is 44 percent owned by Newmont and the remainder by Mexican miner Fresnillo Plc. , offered C$4.60 a share in cash plus shares of a newly formed exploration company valued at 20 cents a share, Canplats said in a statement. Goldcorp has until Jan. 5 to match the offer, which Canplats’ board determined is “superior,” Canplats said. Canplats owns Mexico’s Camino Rojo project, which has 3.45 million ounces of measured and indicated gold. The Penmont offer is double Vancouver-based Canplats’ 20-day volume-weighted average trading price before the company announced on Nov. 16 that it agreed to sell to Goldcorp, Canplats said in the statement. If Goldcorp doesn’t match the offer, Canplats said it will pay a C$9.3 million breakup fee. Lynette Gould , a Goldcorp spokeswoman, said the company is evaluating all of its options. Canplats last week accepted an offer of about C$254 million from Goldcorp that matched a bid from the Penmont venture. Blaine Monaghan , a Canplats spokesman, declined to comment. Greenwood Village, Colorado-based Newmont fell 25 cents to $47.73 at 12:05 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The Toronto Stock Exchange is closed today. To contact the reporter on this story: Thomas Black in Monterrey at tblack@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Faber Says Dollar May Rise 5-10% Against Euro as Bearish Sentiment Recedes

December 28, 2009

By Deirdre Bolton and Ye Xie Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — The dollar may appreciate 5 to 10 percent against the euro in the “near term,” according to Marc Faber , publisher of the “ Gloom Boom & Doom ” newsletter. U.S. equities and the dollar may keep rallying together, reversing a relationship that existed from March to November, Faber said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “Sentiment on the U.S. dollar was really extremely negative over the last three months,” Hong Kong-based Faber said. “The other currencies are not much better. The dollar will appreciate against the euro by another 5 to 10 percent, and later on we’ll have to see, but that would be a near-term target.” The dollar has gained 4.2 percent to $1.4405 per euro this month, and was poised to end a five-month losing streak, on signs the U.S. economic recovery is gaining momentum. Investors need to be “very careful” holding U.S. Treasuries and cash, and U.S. stocks will rally as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues may have to print more money to help the government finance its debts, said Faber. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index “could go up 200 percent if it prints enough,” Faber said. “The worst investment, in the long run, will be U.S. Treasuries, and cash which has no return at present. This is the one reason that I am moderately positive about equities is that this money goes into leverage plays.” To contact the reporters on this story: Deirdre Bolton in New York at dbolton@bloomberg.net ; Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

OSI, Maker of Airport Scanners, Climbs After Christmas Day Terror Attempt

December 28, 2009

By Angela Greiling Keane Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — OSI Systems Inc ., a maker of scanning equipment for airport-security checkpoints, rose the most in 11 months in Nasdaq trading after U.S. officials said a passenger tried to blow up a plane on a Christmas Day flight. OSI jumped $2.27, or 10 percent, to $24.29 at 11:23 a.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market trading . The shares climbed by as much as 13 percent, the most since Jan. 29. OSI’s Rapiscan unit makes machines that can detect liquids and other potential explosives beneath passengers’ clothing. The U.S. Transportation Security Administration placed an order valued at $25 million for Rapiscan’s imaging equipment, the Hawthorne, California-based company said in October. “We are starting to implement and put them in at TSA’s direction at U.S. airports,” Peter Kant, an executive vice president for Rapiscan, said today in an interview. “We’ve been on the phone a lot with TSA about how to expedite delivery.” The company has delivered about 40 so far to the security agency, he said. U.S. officials charged Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23- year-old Nigerian man, with trying to blow up Northwest Flight 253 as it prepared to land in Detroit on Christmas Day. The flight, carrying 278 passengers, was en route from Amsterdam when Abdulmutallab mixed explosive substances under a blanket on his lap, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a statement. Passengers subdued and restrained him until the plane landed safely. Other companies that make security equipment include L-3 Communications Holdings Inc., which rose $1.56, or 1.8 percent, to $87.19 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Earlier the shares touched $87.25, the highest level since October 2008. To contact the reporter on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Bank of Israel Raises Benchmark Rate for Third Time as Growth Accelerates

December 28, 2009

By Alisa Odenheimer Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — The Bank of Israel raised the benchmark interest rate for a third time since the global economy began to recover as growth accelerated and inflation exceeded the government’s target range. Governor Stanley Fischer increased the lending rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 1.25 percent, the Jerusalem- based central bank said today. Seven of 16 economists surveyed by Bloomberg had predicted the increase, while nine expected no change. “The decision to increase the interest rate for January was taken in light of the inflation environment in Israel which is in the upper part of the price stability range, against the background of growth that is becoming more firmly based,” the bank said in an e-mailed statement. Fischer in August became the first central banker to boost the key rate since the beginning of the global economic recovery and raised it for a second time last month. Inflation accelerated to 3.8 percent in November, its fastest pace in almost a year, breaching the government’s 1 percent to 3 percent target range for the first time in three months. The benchmark Mimshal Shiklit note due February 2017 fell 0.19 shekel to 108.3 at the close in Tel Aviv before the decision. The yield on the 5.5 percent security rose three basis points to 4.87 percent. The shekel strengthened to 3.7825 to the dollar as of 5:50 p.m. local time. The currency was at 3.7857 just before the decision. Economic Expansion Gross domestic product expanded an annualized 2.2 percent in the third quarter, the fastest pace in more than a year. The economy may grow faster than the Bank of Israel’s 2.5 percent forecast next year, Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said Dec. 24. Growth is likely to return to its 2003-2008 level of about 5 percent by the end of next year, he said. The economy returned to growth in the second quarter this year, after contracting in the previous two quarters as the global financial crisis dried up Israel’s main export markets. The Bank of Israel is sending “a message of resolve by raising its rate for January, heading off unnecessary increases later on,” Rafael Gozlan , chief economist at Leader Capital Markets in Tel Aviv, said in an e-mailed report prior to the announcement. The TA-25 stock index has increased almost 75 percent this year, led by Delek Group Ltd., which rose more than six-fold. To contact the reporter on this story: Alisa Odenheimer in Jerusalem at aodenheimer@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

U.S. Holiday Retail-Sales Increase of 3.6% May Top Forecasts on Extra Day

December 28, 2009

By Cotten Timberlake and Linda Sandler Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. retail sales rose an estimated 3.6 percent this holiday season from a year earlier, signaling a higher-than-forecast outcome helped by an extra shopping day. A jump in purchases the week before Christmas helped year- over-year electronics sales increase 6 percent from Nov. 27 to Dec. 24, and 5.9 percent from the period starting Nov. 1, MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse said in a statement yesterday. Jewelry and luxury sales also gained, it said. Christmas fell on a Friday this year, compared with a Thursday last year, giving retailers an additional day of sales. Excluding the extra day would temper the increase “anywhere from 2 percent to 4 percent,” SpendingPulse said. Improving consumer sentiment aided holiday sales of discretionary items, said David Schick , an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Baltimore. “Consumer sentiment for higher-income folks has been improving faster as of late,” Schick said in a telephone interview today. “That is driving some of the better spending coupled with the fact that we are comparing with a dramatic drop-off in the more discretionary categories last year.” The spending estimate for Nov. 1 to Dec. 24 excludes automotive and gasoline sales, the Purchase, New York-based researcher said in an e-mail yesterday. SpendingPulse measures retail sales across all payment forms, including cash and checks. The firm didn’t disclose dollar spending totals. SpendingPulse doesn’t forecast holiday sales. The Washington-based National Retail Federation has predicted a 1 percent decline, to $437.6 billion. The International Council of Shopping Centers anticipates a 2 percent increase in sales at stores open at least a year. The holiday selling period ends Jan. 2, according to the U.S. retail industry calendar. Retailers will report December sales on Jan. 7. Worst in Decades Last year holiday sales fell 3.4 percent, according to the National Retail Federation. The 2008 season was the worst in four decades, the ICSC, a New York-based trade group, said. “This year, we have seen increasing stability in spending, as opposed to the freefall of 2008,” Michael McNamara , vice president, research and analysis for SpendingPulse, said in a statement today. More shopping occurred online, where sales rose 18 percent from Nov. 27 to Dec. 24, according to SpendingPulse. “People were more comfortable doing last-minute shopping online, especially with the bad weather,” Kamalesh Rao , director of economic research for SpendingPulse, said in a telephone interview yesterday. A snowstorm on the east coast the weekend before Christmas closed some malls early on Dec. 19 and kept shoppers at home. Apparel Falls Sales of women’s and specialty apparel fell less than 1 percent from Nov. 1 to Dec. 24 compared with a year earlier. Colder weather may have accounted for a pickup in purchases, Rao said, while men’s clothing and footwear sales increased throughout the season. Jewelry sales rose 5.6 percent for November and December, while luxury retail excluding jewelry gained 0.8 percent, SpendingPulse said. Men’s clothing sales gained 3.9 percent for the season and footwear rose 5 percent. Marshal Cohen , the chief retail industry analyst at Port Washington, New York-based NPD Group Inc., said, “Holiday 2009 can be described in one word, ‘Adequate.’” To contact the reporters on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net ; Cotten Timberlake in Washington at ctimberlake@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Video: Dorfman Discusses Stocks Expected to Rebound in 2010: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — John Dorfman, chairman of Thuderstorm Capital and a columnist for Bloomberg News, talks with Bloomberg’s Matt Miller about some of the stocks expected to rebound in 2010. ¶ Among the companies Dorfman expects to recover next year are Jacobs Engineering Group Inc., Harte-Hanks Inc., Frontier Oil Corp. and Cal Dive International Inc. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Maya Wiley: Feminomics: Race, Gender, and Poverty in Economic Recovery

December 28, 2009

From an economic standpoint, will 2010 be the year of the woman? As part of the Roosevelt Institute’s ongoing ‘Feminomics’ series, running on the New Deal 2.0 blog, I was asked to reflect on women’s changing roles in the economy. Here’s my take on focusing on the needs of women of color as a bellwether for the overall economy. We all need jobs: men and women, people of all races, ages and physical abilities. So it’s welcome news that recent jobs numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that we only lost 11,000 jobs — not the 135,000 we thought we’d lose. And these numbers also tell us that we have a lot more to do to ensure that all who should work can work. To do that, we must make sure that we add the jobs to the economy that we all need. So why talk about women and why talk about women and race? Talking about women and race will help focus us on where our economy is very broken. Men have lost jobs faster than women. Men need jobs. But most job creation has been in male-dominated industries like construction. Women of all races, and black men too, are grossly under-represented in construction jobs. According to 2008 Department of Labor data, women are almost 60 percent of the US labor force — working or looking for work. But women also earn only about 80% of what men earn. And women of color are faring worse than white women. When we at the Center for Social Inclusion crunched the numbers, we found that unemployment has also risen faster for young women of color than for white women in the same age range. Unemployment among young black women has increased by 8.6% to 20.4%. Today, 14.6% of Latina women in that age category are unemployed — an increase of 7.2% since the start of the recession. Age matters, too. Young, white women are doing as poorly as their young male counterparts — unemployment has risen 6.2% to 11%. Another reason to pay attention to women’s needs in this recession? In a word: poverty . The poverty rate for black women is 26.2%, and it’s 25.5% for Latina women — more than 4 times higher than the white male poverty rate. And it is not surprising that children are the collateral damage when we fail address the unemployment and poor pay that is behind these numbers. Even in a recession, it is shocking that 30.6% of Latino children, 33.9% of Black children, 15.8% of white children, and 13.3% of Asian children live in poverty. A democracy needs a democratic economy. That means that we invest our public dollars in our people so that we all can participate in the economy. Our economy is a set of relationships — childcare, health care, transportation, education and networks. Investing in childcare, access to education — particularly higher education — and in critical infrastructure like broadband and public transit that connects excluded communities to job opportunities and job centers, can ensure that our economy and our nation work. The White House is on the right track when it looks to reform health care, invest in infrastructure and fix financial institutions. But neutral decisions will mean that women, particularly women of color, will probably not have the same opportunities. Collecting data by race and gender, understanding where investments are low and unemployment is high, and removing the barriers the excluded face will produce a stronger nation. This post originally appeared on New Deal 2.0 .

Read the full article →

Don McNay: Advice for the Unknown Lottery Winner

December 28, 2009

And as he started to go, She said Billy keep your head low Billy, don’t be hero, come back to me. -Bo Donaldson and The Heywoods. Someone won a $128 Powerball jackpot near my home in Central Kentucky. At the time I am writing this, the winner has not come forward. I’ve done a number of television and radio interviews since the news broke.. I give the same advice that I gave in my book, Son of Son of a Gambler: Winners, Losers and What To Do When You Win the Lottery. After having overcome trillion-to-one odds, the idea of running through the money would seem silly to most winners. However, studies shows that 90% of people blow all their money within five years of winning the jackpot. I have counseled lottery winners. Here are a few tips I have given them: Never let anyone know you won. Every lottery winner who goes public eventually tells stories about people harassing them. Power Ball winner Jack Whittaker said, “There should be a book to tell you how to handle it when people get thrown into the limelight.” You are asking for trouble if you have a news conference and tell the world that you have a bunch of money that you never planned on having. The news conference turns out really well for the lottery officials promoting their product, and it provides a good story for the media. It will not, however, turn out so well for you. Bowling Green, Kentucky attorney Steve Thornton announced that a few years ago that one of his clients had won the Kentucky lottery. Steve set up a corporation and protected the client’s identity. A winner who bought a $162 million ticket in Amelia, Ohio set up a trust through a bank trust department. They also took the payments over 30 years. No one knows who they are or how to contact them. If you win the lottery, find an attorney who can do the same thing for you. Your life will be much happier. If you decide later on that you want to be famous, you will have enough money to fund your own reality show. Take the annual payments, not the lump sum. Never take a lump sum. The annual payments are a better deal. Lottery winners are totally unprepared for sudden wealth. If you take the money as a lump sum, and become overcome by lust, drugs, sex, bad friends, bad family, bad investments or other factors, then the money will be gone, and there will be no way to get it back. If you take annual payments and run through the first check, you have 29 more chances to get it right. It gives you time to organize a plan and take advantage of ways to save taxes and improve return. Spend money on some good advice. There are a ton of tax breaks for the wealthy. When you win the lottery, you need to find people who can get those tax breaks for you. Asking for good advice does not mean calling the bookkeeper for your bowling league. You need someone who has dealt with big money and is not trying to learn while they earn. Big-time advisers don’t advertise in the phone book under “Help for Lottery Winners,” but if you ask some well-respected attorneys, you will eventually get referred to the advisor you need. There are people who are good at helping rich people become richer. Get one of them working for you. Use your money for a purpose. There was a great book written in the 1980′s by Ami Domini called The Challenges of Wealth. It was a groundbreaking study of sudden wealth written during a time when few studies were available on the subject. Her research showed that rich people are happiest when they help a cause that they really believe in. The most joyful people were those who gave money for scholarships, helped their church and formed non-profit groups. You can leave your children enough money to be comfortable without spoiling them. People who leave their families too much money wind up with children like Paris Hilton. If you study history, you will find that most of the people who amassed great fortunes, like Carnegie and Rockefeller, gave substantial amounts of money to charity while they were still alive. Even more gave money to charity upon death. You have an opportunity to take care of family and have plenty left over to make an impact on society. It will make you content and make the world a better place Don McNay, CLU, ChFC, MSFS, CSSC is one of the world’s leading authorities in helping people deal with “Big Money” issues. McNay is an award winning, syndicated financial columnist and Huffington Post Contributor. You can read more about Don at www.donmcnay.com McNay founded McNay Settlement Group, a structured settlement and financial consulting firm, in 1983 and Kentucky Guardianship Administrators LLC in 2000. You can read more about both at www.mcnay.com McNay has Master’s Degrees from Vanderbilt and the American College and is in the Eastern Kentucky University Hall of Distinguished Alumni. McNay has written two books. Most recent is Son of a Son of a Gambler: Winners, Losers and What to Do When You Win The Lottery McNay is a lifetime member of the Million Dollar Round Table and has four professional designations in the financial services field.

Read the full article →

Charles Gasparino: New York Needs Wall Street

December 28, 2009

David Paterson hasn’t fared well over the past two years as governor of New York State: unemployment is high, taxes are out of control and the state’s budget is a mess. As Michael Barone pointed out in a recent column, people continue to flee the state in droves. But I give Paterson an “A” for honesty. He’s possibly the only liberal politician willing to admit publicly that the greed merchants on Wall Street are a necessary evil for big government liberalism to survive. It is, of course, very fashionable to beat up on Wall Street these days, particularly for those on the left. President Obama went on 60 Minutes to call the CEOs of the biggest banks “fat cats,” feasting off of government bailout money as unemployment remains high, before he herded them into a room in the White House (or at least most of them; the flights for the CEOs of Goldman, Morgan Stanley and the chairman of Citigroup, were delayed so they attended via a conference call) and asked that they start extending more loans to small business and not pay themselves too much. But Obama, unlike Paterson, is being disingenuous; aside from a few snotty remarks, the president hasn’t done much to get the banks lending right now. In fact, his policies have fostered an environment that allows Wall Street to make money — bundles of it as demonstrated by Goldman Sachs’ $20 billion bonus pool — at the expense of helping Main Street. Obama has supported Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s near-zero interest rate policy; he’s basically declared every big bank Too Big To Fail, meaning the federal government will save the likes of Goldman Sachs if it should somehow bet wrong in the trading markets, as it did last year. That means the banks can borrow cheaply in the open market, and in a pinch from the Federal Reserve itself, to finance not lending but their trading in bonds. Why would any bank need to take a chance by lending money to a struggling small business when it can take almost no risk and earn countless billions by simply borrowing at next to nothing, buying a bond and pocketing the difference? My guess is that Obama is allowing Wall Street to make such easy money, doing as Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein calls “God’s Work”, because the president knows that there’s a limit to the amount of debt the Chinese will buy to expand all the socialism he’s unleashing on the American people — from stimulus packages that don’t stimulate to health care reforms that make a bad situation even worse. At some point, he will need Wall Street to step in and buy those Treasury bonds the Chinese may soon refuse to buy. In the meantime, small businesses get the shaft so Goldman Sachs can make money to finance big government. The president wont tell you this because he knows that large portions of the electorate don’t agree with Obamanomics (check out his floundering poll numbers) so in order to get his agenda through, he spins a class warfare tale about Main Street versus Wall Street even as he uses Wall Street to advance his big government agenda. Paterson, on the other hand, is fessing up to this unholy alliance. It began a couple weeks ago when he took a not-so-veiled shot at one of his likely challengers, state attorney general Andrew Cuomo, who has continued the office’s Wall Street bashing tradition that began under another AG who became governor, Eliot Spitzer. Cuomo has been investigating Wall Street’s huge bonuses; he once threatened to go public with the names of executives earning huge bonuses at AIG, the large insurer that was bailed out by the government last year, if they didn’t return the money. Cuomo’s Wall Street attacks have earned him huge recognition, and at least according to the polls, a large lead over Paterson in a Democratic primary. Paterson, however, believes the attacks are counter productive; politicians in Iowa don’t go around attacking the agriculture industry, and they don’t attack big oil in Texas. So why are so many NY Pols attacking the investment banks that feed the monster of big government in New York State that they created and sustain? It was, of course, a great question, whether you agree with New York’s big government or not (I don’t). Cuomo, to his credit, has spoken about the need to cut taxes and slash the state’s bureaucracy, though I find it hard to believe he’s about to kill the monster his father helped create (Andrew is, of course, the son of former NYS Gov. Mario Cuomo) Over the weekend I interviewed Paterson on WABC radio (I was filling in for the regular host, Larry Kudlow) and he made the following point: Because of all the class warfare from the likes of Obama and Cuomo, the $20 billion in bonus money that Goldman has amassed will probably be handed out to executives not in cash but mostly in restricted stock (the decision to be announced shortly), which the state can’t get its grubby hands on. For all his negatives so far, Paterson’s logic on this issue appears to be resonating, at least with Cuomo. As the New York Post reported, the AG seems to be backing off his threat to publicly chastise the AIG bonus babies. He knows he will need them if and when he becomes governor.

Read the full article →

Larry Summers: Bailout Only A "Temporary" Measure

December 28, 2009

Mr. Summers: The government’s direct actions to invest money in companies were once-a-generation or once-every-two-generation responses to a once-every-two-generation emergency. They were designed to be, and have proven to be, temporary. There is no aspiration of any kind to change the private-sector basis of our economy.

Read the full article →

Video: Gitesh Pandya Discusses `Avatar’ Box Office Performance: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Gitesh Pandya, editor of Box Office Guru LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Scarlet Fu about the performance of films during the holiday season. Pandya says James Cameron’s “Avatar” will “easily” break the $1 billion dollar mark internationally. (This is an excerpt from the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Cash For Clunkers: Home Edition (Forbes)

December 28, 2009

Will the costly tax credits ever end?

Read the full article →

Commercial Mortgage | Miami Real Estate Properties

December 28, 2009

Proficient commercial mortgage brokers have the skills and track record to assist borrowers and lenders with commercial loan workouts if they have performed numerous successful modifications in a distressed context. Commercial loan brokers can help to resolve complex financial problems with their proven methodology and can help the parties determine the best course of action. Try to find a commercial real estate finance broker with whom no up-front fees are required and …

Read the full article →

After A Decade Of Economic Expansion, China Could Be Poised To Overtake U.S. Economy: Niall Ferguson

December 28, 2009

By the end of the decade the western world could only look admiringly at the speed with which the Chinese government had responded to the breathtaking collapse in exports caused by the US credit crunch, a collapse which might have been expected to devastate Asia. While the developed world teetered on the verge of a second Great Depression, China suffered little more than a minor growth slow-down, thanks to a highly effective government stimulus programme and massive credit expansion.

Read the full article →

Video: McNamara Says Retail `Stability’ May Ripple to Economy: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Michael McNamara, vice president of Mastercard Advisors, talks with Bloomberg’s Scarlet Fu about the outlook for the retail market and the U.S. economy. McNamara also discusses the sales performance of women’s apparel and electronics, and consumer sentiment. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Commercial Real Estate Prices Fall To Lowest Level In 7 Years

December 28, 2009

‘The number one issue facing commercial real estate right now is the value declines that we’ve seen since prices peaked,’ Matthew Anderson, a partner at Foresight Analytics in Oakland, California. Also worrying is that an estimated $1.4 …

Read the full article →

Jim Randel: Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion

December 28, 2009

I’ve just added a new favorite book to my top ten list: Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini, PhD. The premise of this book is that in our increasingly complex and pressured world, we often make decisions by falling back on instinctive patterns. Cialdini has identified six such categories of these bedrocks: 1. Reciprocity – when someone does something for us, we are inclined to want to do something in return. 2. Consistency – we tend to stay within the perimeters of prior decisions or commitments we have made. 3. Social Proof – we are inclined to follow the crowd. 4. Likeability – we make decisions in favor of people we like or feel a bond with. 5. Authority – we bend toward the views and instructions of those who on face value warrant our respect. 6. Scarcity – we want what we can’t have. The fact is that most of the time, we are right to use the above shortcuts in making choices. When you hear tons of people talking about a great movie, it is likely that you too will enjoy the movie. When you feel connected to a person, you are usually safe in following his or her lead. When a person of authority or presumed respect suggests a course of action, it is most often logical to follow that advice. And so on. The problem arises when persuaders and marketers manipulate our instincts to induce decisions that are not necessarily in our best interest. Before I read Cialdini’s book, I would have said that does not happen to me very often. I would have said (pre-book) I am a level-headed person who understands the why of Path A over Path B. After reading the book, I am not so sure. Cialdini’s many examples and studies make a powerful case for paths we all take – simply because we do not have the time, information or energy to assess all factors. I intend to use future e-letters to flesh out some of the points in Cialdini’s book. For now, let me leave you with an excerpt from Cialdini’s concluding chapter: ( F)or the sake of efficiency, we must sometimes retreat from a time-consuming, sophisticated, fully-informed brand of decision making to a more automatic, primitive, single-featured type of responding. … We are likely to use these lone cues when we don’t have the inclination, time, energy, or cognitive resources to undertake a complete analysis of the situation. … All this leads to a jarring insight: With the sophisticated mental apparatus we have used to build world eminence as a species, we have created an environment so complex, fast-paced, and information-laden that we must increasingly deal with it in the fashion of the animals we long ago transcended.

Read the full article →

Risk Of New Government Defaults Worries Investors

December 28, 2009

After two years of worrying about mortgage and corporate risk, attention is now shifting to managing the risk of country defaults and bankruptcies of heavily indebted regional governments and city administrations, say bankers.

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: 2009: The Year Wall Street Bounced Back and Main Street Got Shafted

December 28, 2009

In September 2008, as the worst of the financial crisis engulfed Wall Street, George W. Bush issued a warning: “This sucker could go down.” Around the same time, as Congress hashed out a bailout bill, New Hampshire Sen. Judd Gregg, the leading Republican negotiator of the bill, warned that “if we do not do this, the trauma, the chaos and the disruption to everyday Americans’ lives will be overwhelming, and that’s a price we can’t afford to risk paying.” In less than a year, Wall Street was back. The five largest remaining banks are today larger, their executives and traders richer, their strategies of placing large bets with other people’s money no less bold than before the meltdown. The possibility of new regulations emanating from Congress has barely inhibited the Street’s exuberance. But if Wall Street is back on top, the everyday lives of large numbers of Americans continue to be subject to overwhelming trauma, chaos and disruption. It is commonplace among policymakers to fervently and sincerely believe that Wall Street’s financial health is not only a precondition for a prosperous real economy but that when the former thrives, the latter will necessarily follow. Few fictions of modern economic life are more assiduously defended than the central importance of the Street to the well-being of the rest of us, as has been proved in 2009. Inhabitants of the real economy are dependent on the financial economy to borrow money. But their overwhelming reliance on Wall Street is a relatively recent phenomenon. Back when middle-class Americans earned enough to be able to save more of their incomes, they borrowed from one another, largely through local and regional banks. Small businesses also did. It’s easy to understand economic policymakers being seduced by the great flows of wealth created among Wall Streeters, from whom they invariably seek advice. One of the basic assumptions of capitalism is that anyone paid huge sums of money must be very smart. But if 2009 has proved anything, it’s that the bailout of Wall Street didn’t trickle down to Main Street. Mortgage delinquencies continue to rise. Small businesses can’t get credit. And people everywhere, it seems, are worried about losing their jobs. Wall Street is the only place where money is flowing and pay is escalating. Top executives and traders on the Street will soon be splitting about $25 billion in bonuses (despite Goldman Sachs’ decision, made with an eye toward public relations, to defer bonuses for its 30 top players). The real locus of the problem was never the financial economy to begin with, and the bailout of Wall Street was a sideshow. The real problem was on Main Street, in the real economy. Before the crash, much of America had fallen deeply into unsustainable debt because it had no other way to maintain its standard of living. That’s because for so many years almost all the gains of economic growth had been going to a relatively small number of people at the top. President Obama and his economic team have been telling Americans we’ll have to save more in future years, spend less and borrow less from the rest of the world, especially from China. This is necessary and inevitable, they say, in order to “rebalance” global financial flows. China has saved too much and consumed too little, while we have done the reverse. In truth, most Americans did not spend too much in recent years, relative to the increasing size of the overall American economy. They spent too much only in relation to their declining portion of its gains. Had their portion kept up — had the people at the top of corporate America, Wall Street banks and hedge funds not taken a disproportionate share — most Americans would not have felt the necessity to borrow so much. The year 2009 will be remembered as the year when Main Street got hit hard. Don’t expect 2010 to be much better — that is, if you live in the real economy. The administration is telling Americans that jobs will return next year, and we’ll be in a recovery. I hope they’re right. But I doubt it. Too many Americans have lost their jobs, incomes, homes and savings. That means most of us won’t have the purchasing power to buy nearly all the goods and services the economy is capable of producing. And without enough demand, the economy can’t get out of the doldrums. As long as income and wealth keep concentrating at the top, and the great divide between America’s have-mores and have-lesses continues to widen, the Great Recession won’t end — at least not in the real economy. Cross-posted from Robert Reich’s Blog

Read the full article →

David Adams Named Editor of PODER Enterprise Miami and US Editions

December 28, 2009

MIAMI, FL–(Marketwire – December 28, 2009) – David Adams, an award-winning, veteran reporter covering Latin America, has joined Page One Media, producers of PODER Enterprise magazines, with editions in the U.S. and Latin America. Adams has more than 25 years’ experience in print and online journalism, and served the last 15 years as the Miami-based Latin America correspondent for the St Petersburg Times, Florida’s largest newspaper. He is also a longtime contributor to The Economist magazine.

Read the full article →

Video: Rosner Says `Unlikely’ U.S. to Bring Back Glass-Steagall: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Joshua Rosner, managing director at Graham Fisher & Co., talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu, Jon Erlichman and Adam Johnson about the outlook for a reintroduction of the Glass-Steagall Act, which would separate commercial and investment banks. ¶ Rosner also discusses mark-to-market accounting, bank capital and expectations for the performance of regional banks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Yuan Forwards Fall After Wen Rejects Appreciation Calls: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — China’s yuan forwards declined after Premier Wen Jiabao said the nation will “absolutely not yield” to calls for currency gains, damping speculation appreciation will resume in coming months. Bloomberg’s Sara Eisen reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Jets-Bengals Game Moved to Prime Time Jan. 3 Amid New York’s Playoff Quest

December 28, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — The New York Jets will play the final game of the National Football League’s regular season in prime time as they try to claim a playoff berth for the first time since 2006. The Jan. 3 game between the Jets and Cincinnati Bengals has been moved to 8:30 p.m. New York time and will be televised nationally on General Electric Co.’s NBC network. The matchup was originally scheduled to start at 1 p.m. at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The Jets (8-7) would earn a spot in the NFL’s postseason with a victory over the Bengals, who have already clinched a playoff berth as the American Football Conference North Division champions. Cincinnati has a 10-5 record and is competing with the New England Patriots for the No. 3 playoff seed in the AFC. The Sunday night matchup will be the final game of the NFL’s regular season. New York sent the Indianapolis Colts to their first loss of the season yesterday and is among five teams with 8-7 records competing for the AFC’s final two playoff spots. In another time change, the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles will start at 4:15 p.m. on Jan. 3 instead of 1 p.m. The game, televised by News Corp.’s Fox network, will determine the National Football Conference’s East Division winner. the release. The league’s flexible scheduling creates marquee match-ups for the Sunday night games on NBC during the season’s final seven weeks. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Marc Faber Says Dollar May Rise Another 5%-10% Versus Euro in `Near Term’

December 28, 2009

By Deirdre Bolton and Ye Xie Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — The dollar may appreciate 5 to 10 percent against the euro in the “near term,” according to Marc Faber , publisher of the “ Gloom Boom & Doom ” newsletter. U.S. equities and the dollar may keep rallying together, reversing a relationship that existed from March to November, Faber said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “Sentiment on the U.S. dollar was really extremely negative over the last three months,” Hong Kong-based Faber said. “The other currencies are not much better. The dollar will appreciate against the euro by another 5 to 10 percent, and later on we’ll have to see, but that would be a near-term target.” The dollar has gained 4.2 percent to $1.4405 per euro this month, and was poised to end a five-month losing streak, on signs the U.S. economic recovery is gaining momentum. Investors need to be “very careful” holding U.S. Treasuries and cash, and U.S. stocks will rally as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues may have to print more money to help the government finance its debts, said Faber. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index “could go up 200 percent if it prints enough,” Faber said. “The worst investment, in the long run, will be U.S. Treasuries, and cash which has no return at present. This is the one reason that I am moderately positive about equities is that this money goes into leverage plays.” To contact the reporters on this story: Deirdre Bolton in New York at dbolton@bloomberg.net ; Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Iranian Crackdown Leaves At Least Eight People Dead, State Television Says

December 28, 2009

By Ali Sheikholeslami and Nicholas Johnston Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — The Obama administration “strongly” condemned a crackdown by Iranian security forces on protesters in Tehran that left at least eight people dead. The eight fatalities in yesterday’s protests were reported by the state-run English-language Press TV on its Web site today, citing the Supreme National Security Council. One of the people killed was a 35-year-old nephew of Mir Hossein Mousavi , a former prime minister and the main challenger in the disputed June 12 presidential election, Mousavi’s Kaleme.org Web site said. The New York Times reported at least five more deaths in other cities; Iranian state television said that more than 15 people were killed in Tehran, according to Agence France-Presse. “We strongly condemn the violent and unjust suppression of civilians in Iran seeking to exercise their universal rights,” National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said in a statement issued in Hawaii yesterday. “Governing through fear and violence is never just.” Mousavi, and the other main presidential election challenger, ex-parliament Speaker Mehdi Karrubi , said the June balloting was rigged to ensure a second term for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad . Mousavi’s supporters organized the latest protests to coincide with a religious observance. More than 300 arrests were reported in a police statement carried by the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Ahmadinejad reject the allegations of vote fraud. Uranium Enrichment Iran is also under international pressure to suspend uranium enrichment. Obama has set a Dec. 31 deadline for progress on diplomatic talks on Iran’s nuclear program and has threatened tougher sanctions. Enriched uranium can be used in nuclear weapons, though Iran says its program is intended for peaceful energy generation only. Some 4,000 protesters were arrested following the election and more than 140 of them have been tried on charges of attempting to topple the government. Before yesterday’s violence, Iranian officials said 36 people had been killed in street clashes, while the opposition put the toll at 72. The British Broadcasting Corp.’s Persian television service showed footage obtained from the Internet depicting clashes in Tehran today. The pictures included demonstrators setting fire to a police station in the central Vali-ye-Asr Square and of bleeding protesters being helped by others. Tear Gas, Shots Thousands took to the streets shouting “Death to the dictator,” AP said. Security forces tried to disperse the protesters with tear gas and warning shots, then opened fire, AP said, citing witnesses. Opposition Web site Rahesabz.net reported that clashes occurred in other cities, including Tabriz, Babol, Mashhad and Najafabad. Four people may have been killed in Tabriz, Rahesabz.net said, citing unverified reports. The police statement cited by IRNA said the five victims were “killed suspiciously.” “One has fallen off a bridge, two have been killed by a car and another one has been shot,” Iran’s Deputy Police Chief General Ahmadreza Radan was cited as saying by IRNA. Police officers didn’t fire their guns, according to the statement. — With assistance from Henry Meyer in Dubai. Editors: Mark Rohner , Julian Nundy To contact the reporters on this story: Ali Sheikholeslami in London at alis2@bloomberg.net ; Nicholas Johnston in Honolulu at njohnston3@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Nigerian Forces Clash With Islamic Militants; Four Are Killed, Police Say

December 28, 2009

By Ardo Abdullahi Hazzad and Mike Cohen Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Nigerian armed forces exchanged gunfire with members of a militant Islamic group known as Yan Kala Kato in Bauchi in the north of the country today, resulting in the death of two militants and two soldiers, police said. Four children are also believed to have died after their home was set alight by the militants, said Chief Superintendent Naziru Bello in an interview in the city. The Yan Kala Kato group first surfaced in Nigeria in the early 1980s, when their leader Muhammadu Marwa Maitatsine declared war on all those who did not believe in his fundamentalist teachings. To contact the reporter on this story: Ardo Abdullahi Hazzad in Bauchi via Johannesburg at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net . Mike Cohen in Cape Town at mcohen21@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Russia Warns of Oil Cutoff to EU’s East on Ukraine Dispute, Slovakia Says

December 28, 2009

By Krystof Chamonikolas Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Russia warned it may cut off oil supplies to Slovakia, Hungary and the Czech Republic because of a dispute with Ukraine over transit of the commodity, the Slovak government said. Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko notified the European Union of the possible stoppage, the Slovak government said in a statement today, citing an official letter it received from the European Commission, the EU’s executive body. Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico called an emergency meeting of the country’s Security Council to discuss the warning. He and Economy Minister Lubomir Jahnatek will speak in a press conference later today, the statement said. To contact the reporter on this story: Krystof Chamonikolas in Prague at kchamonikola@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

MGM Mirage Option Traders Bet Casino Operator’s Stock to Double in a Year

December 28, 2009

By Jeff Kearns Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Options traders are doubling down on MGM Mirage , betting a new 67-acre (27 hectares) complex of gaming tables, hotels, condominiums and stores will restore the casino operator’s profits. Investors buying contracts to purchase MGM for twice its current stock price through January 2011 helped drive the number of bullish options on the shares to 1.5 times the level of bearish ones, the highest ratio since June 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Existing January 2011 $20 calls increased 12-fold last week as the shares fell to $9.50. “It’s an aggressive play,” said Frederic Ruffy , the senior options strategist at WhatsTrading.com, the New York- based provider of options-market analysis. “They’re looking for a substantial move higher.” MGM, the Las Vegas Strip’s largest casino owner, is counting on the $8.5 billion CityCenter resort, which opened to the public on Dec. 1, to reduce its $13 billion long-term debt load. MGM shares have dropped 31 percent this year, following an 84 percent drop in 2008 that ended a nine-year rally . The stock has lost 11 percent since Nov. 24, the day before Dubai World, the state-owned company that is MGM’s partner in CityCenter, roiled global markets by seeking to delay payments on its own debt. CityCenter is protected against default by its owners, MGM Chief Executive Officer Jim Murren said in a Nov. 27 interview. More Visitors Travel to Las Vegas will rise 7 percent to at least 38 million visitors in 2010, Murren said Nov. 18. CityCenter’s almost 6,000 rooms may steal guests from Last Vegas-based MGM’s other resorts in the city and hold down room rates at Las Vegas Sands Corp. , Wynn Resorts Ltd. and Harrah’s Entertainment Inc. as well as MGM, analysts say. MGM will trim its annual loss to 52 cents a share in 2010 from 72 cents this year, according to the average estimate of 23 analysts in a Bloomberg survey. While the company earned $1.04 a share in 2008, MGM said in March that it may not stay in compliance with financial covenants under its senior credit facility this year. Trading of bullish MGM options jumped to a seven-week high on Dec. 23. Investors created new contracts , lifting the number of existing calls at the end of last week to 324,566, compared with 211,881 puts giving the right to sell. Open interest for January 2011 $20 calls jumped 12-fold to 21,652 on Dec. 23 for last week’s biggest increase among the company’s options, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and Trade Alert LLC, a New York-based provider of market analytics. Open interest for January 2011 $15 calls jumped more than fivefold the previous day to 23,084 for last week’s second- biggest increase, the data show. “It’s a long shot,” Joshua Belanger , founder of OptionSizzle.com, a Stamford, Connecticut-based provider of options market data. “But given how much these casino names can move, it could really give them some bang for their buck.” To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Kearns in New York at jkearns3@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Delta, American Air Lead U.S. Carriers Lower on Renewed Terrorism Concern

December 28, 2009

By Mary Jane Credeur Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Delta Air Lines Inc. , American Airlines parent AMR Corp. and UAL Corp. fell in New York trading as a terrorism attempt on a Christmas Day flight to Detroit highlighted potential aviation risks. Delta slid 43 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $11.34, while AMR declined 16 cents, or 2 percent, to $7.98 and United Airlines parent UAL decreased 28 cents, or 2 percent, to $12.81 at 9:35 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Delta and AMR are the world’s largest carriers, while UAL is No. 3 in the U.S. Market reaction may be accentuated this week by low trading volume between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays, said Jeff Straebler , an RBS Securities Inc. analyst. The Bloomberg U.S. Airlines Index of 13 carriers traded last week at its highest since January on signs that travel demand is improving. The index fell 1.7 percent at 9:35 a.m. “Investors are going to remember that things like this can happen in the industry,” said Straebler, who is based in Stamford, Connecticut, and doesn’t rate airline shares. U.S. officials on Dec. 26 charged Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian man, with trying to blow up Northwest Flight 253 as it prepared to land in Detroit on Christmas Day. The flight, carrying 278 passengers, was en route from Amsterdam when Abdulmutallab mixed explosive substances under a blanket on his lap, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a statement. Other passengers subdued and restrained him until the plane landed safely. Government Review President Barack Obama has ordered a government review of terrorist detection methods to determine how Abdulmutallab avoided detection after the man’s father told U.S. officials that his son had extremist views. Another Nigerian passenger on a separate Northwest flight yesterday from Amsterdam to Detroit was questioned by U.S. officials after the man spent “an unusually long time in the aircraft lavatory,” the Department of Homeland Security said. The passenger was later found to have a “legitimate illness” and was released. Security reforms are likely to follow the Christmas Day incident, said Michael Derchin , an analyst at FTN Equity Capital Markets Corp. in New York, who recommends buying shares of American and Atlanta-based Delta. New procedures will ease passengers’ minds even if the methods cause inconvenience, while other safety improvements will probably be invisible, he said. The airline index slid 2.1 percent on Dec. 24, 2001, the first trading day after Richard Reid unsuccessfully tried to detonate explosives in his shoe aboard a flight from Paris to Miami by American Airlines. Delta surpassed American as the world’s largest carrier last year when it bought Northwest. ‘Pretty Resilient’ “The shoe-bomber happened and now we have to take our shoes off at the airport,” Derchin said. “This is something that we all live with when we fly.” Business travelers are “pretty resilient about things like this” and won’t be scared off, Derchin said. The botched attack comes as travel is starting to rebound. Traffic, measured in miles flown by paying passengers, fell 1 percent in November for the six biggest U.S. carriers, the best results in 18 months. Delta and Chicago-based UAL rose to their highest in at least 11 months on Dec. 22 after UBS Securities LLC analyst Kevin Crissey said revenue per passenger mile flown may increase in January for the first time in a year. Measured on that basis, revenue may gain 1.5 percent next month and 4.5 percent in February even without further strengthening in demand, Crissey wrote in a Dec. 21 note to clients. He recommends buying shares of Delta, Fort Worth, Texas-based AMR and UAL. New Rules Airlines don’t anticipate the Northwest incident having a negative effect on travel, said David Castelveter , a spokesman for the Air Transport Association in Washington, a trade group for U.S. carriers. “Our hopes are they would recognize that we’re working with the Transportation Security Administration and the Department of Homeland Security to ensure this doesn’t happen again,” Castelveter said. Airline passengers traveling to the U.S. from other countries are being ordered to remain seated for the last hour of flight and won’t be able to retrieve items from their carry- on bags in overhead bins in response to the attempted attack, Air Canada said Dec. 26 in a statement on its Web site. Passengers also won’t be allowed to have anything on their laps in the last hour of international flights, the Montreal- based carrier said. By the time most people return from the Christmas and New Year’s holiday break on Jan. 4, additional airport screenings and rules aboard flights will probably overcome lingering fears of flying, Straebler said. “Not many people are making business-travel arrangements around the holidays, and by the time they are back in the office, tighter screening or procedures should get everybody comfortable again,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Mary Jane Credeur in Atlanta at mcredeur@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

U.S. Holiday Retail-Sales Increase of 3.6% Exceeds Forecasts on Extra Day

December 28, 2009

By Cotten Timberlake and Linda Sandler Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. retail sales rose an estimated 3.6 percent this holiday season from a year earlier, signaling a higher-than-forecast outcome helped by an extra shopping day. A jump in purchases the week before Christmas helped year- over-year electronics sales increase 6 percent from Nov. 27 to Dec. 24, and 5.9 percent from the period starting Nov. 1, MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse said in a statement yesterday. Jewelry and luxury sales also gained, it said. Christmas fell on a Friday this year, compared with a Thursday last year, giving retailers an additional day of sales. Excluding the extra day would temper the increase “anywhere from 2 percent to 4 percent,” SpendingPulse said. Improving consumer sentiment aided holiday sales of discretionary items, said David Schick , an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Baltimore. “Consumer sentiment for higher-income folks has been improving faster as of late,” Schick said in a telephone interview today. “That is driving some of the better spending coupled with the fact that we are comparing with a dramatic drop-off in the more discretionary categories last year.” The spending estimate for Nov. 1 to Dec. 24 excludes automotive and gasoline sales, the Purchase, New York-based researcher said in an e-mail yesterday. SpendingPulse measures retail sales across all payment forms, including cash and checks. The firm didn’t disclose dollar spending totals. SpendingPulse doesn’t forecast holiday sales. The Washington-based National Retail Federation has predicted a 1 percent decline, to $437.6 billion. The International Council of Shopping Centers anticipates a 2 percent increase in sales at stores open at least a year. The holiday selling period ends Jan. 2, according to the U.S. retail industry calendar. Retailers will report December sales on Jan. 7. Worst in Decades Last year holiday sales fell 3.4 percent, according to the National Retail Federation. The 2008 season was the worst in four decades, the ICSC, a New York-based trade group, said. “This year, we have seen increasing stability in spending, as opposed to the freefall of 2008,” Michael McNamara , vice president, research and analysis for SpendingPulse, said in a statement today. More shopping occurred online, where sales rose 18 percent from Nov. 27 to Dec. 24, according to SpendingPulse. “People were more comfortable doing last-minute shopping online, especially with the bad weather,” Kamalesh Rao , director of economic research for SpendingPulse, said in a telephone interview yesterday. A snowstorm on the east coast the weekend before Christmas closed some malls early on Dec. 19 and kept shoppers at home. Apparel Falls Sales of women’s and specialty apparel fell less than 1 percent from Nov. 1 to Dec. 24 compared with a year earlier. Colder weather may have accounted for a pickup in purchases, Rao said, while men’s clothing and footwear sales increased throughout the season. Jewelry sales rose 5.6 percent for November and December, while luxury retail excluding jewelry gained 0.8 percent, SpendingPulse said. Men’s clothing sales gained 3.9 percent for the season and footwear rose 5 percent. Marshal Cohen , the chief retail industry analyst at Port Washington, New York-based NPD Group Inc., said, “Holiday 2009 can be described in one word, ‘Adequate.’” To contact the reporters on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net ; Cotten Timberlake in Washington at ctimberlake@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Stocks Rise on China’s GDP Growth Data; Emerging-Market Currencies Advance

December 28, 2009

By Nicolas Johnson and Matthew Brown Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Stocks advanced around the world, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index higher for a sixth day, after China said its economy grew faster than estimated this year. Emerging-market currencies rose, and Treasuries fell. The S&P 500 added 0.3 percent at 9:36 a.m. in New York, posting the longest winning streak in almost two months. Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index climbed to a 15-month high. The Brazilian real advanced against the 16 most-traded currencies tracked by Bloomberg. Treasuries dropped before this week’s record-tying $118 billion sale of debt. China’s economy, which is leading the world out of the first global recession since World War II, grew faster than previously estimated, the government said. The U.S. will turn in its best performance since 2004 next year as spending picks up and companies increase investment, said Dean Maki , the most- accurate forecaster in a Bloomberg News survey. “The global economy is just about bottoming out,” said Masaru Hamasaki , chief strategist at Tokyo-based Toyota Asset Management Co., which oversees the equivalent of $14 billion. “I don’t expect huge economic growth, but I do see things recovering.” U.S. stocks gained as metal and energy producers rallied with commodities prices. Exxon Mobil Corp. , the biggest U.S. oil company, and Barrick Gold Corp. , the world’s largest producer of the precious metal, climbed as crude rose a fourth day and gold advanced. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index that tracks metal, agricultural product and energy prices added 0.6 percent. Gains in Europe Germany’s DAX Index climbed 0.7 percent, while France’s CAC 40 rallied 1 percent. ArcelorMittal, the world’s biggest steelmaker, and Boliden AB led European basic-resources companies higher as metal prices rose. Seadrill Ltd., the drilling company founded by billionaire John Fredriksen , and Aker Solutions ASA gained as crude oil traded approached $79 a barrel in New York. Asian stocks rose, led by South Korean engineering companies after they won a $20 billion nuclear order, and as China raised its economic growth figures and Japan said industrial production increased. Brazil’s real rose the most among 16 major currencies against the dollar, appreciating 1.5 percent to 1.7378. The U.S., the world’s largest economy, will expand 3.5 percent in 2010, according to Maki, the chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. The rebound in stocks and rising incomes will prompt Americans to do what they do best — consume, said Maki, a former economist at the Federal Reserve. Faced with dwindling inventories and growing demand, companies will soon become confident the expansion will be sustained, he said. Treasury two-year note yields touched the highest levels since October before the U.S. sells a record-tying $44 billion of the securities, the first of three note sales this week totaling $118 billion. To contact the reporters for this story: Nicolas Johnson in Tokyo at nicojohnson@bloomberg.net ; Matthew Brown in London at mbrown42@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Video: Dergarabedian Expects `Booming’ Movie Sales to Continue: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Paul Dergarabedian, a film analyst for Hollywood.com, talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu about the outlook for movie attendance. U.S. ticket sales this year have surpassed $10 billion for the first time, according to Hollywood.com, buoyed by 3-D movies and the higher tickets prices they command, as well as increased attendance. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Dolan, Ratner Stay at Cablevision; Qualcomm COO Resigns: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Jon Erlichman reports on major newsmakers in today’s Movers & Shakers. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Organize your loan options with a spreadsheet (The Record and Herald News)

December 28, 2009

“Ask the Realtor” is a weekly column from the 3,500-member RealSource Association of Realtors, serving Northern New Jersey.

Read the full article →

Written agreement with AMB Financial Services Corporation

December 28, 2009

Written agreement with AMB Financial Services Corporation

Read the full article →

HomeBanc Expands Mortgage Lending Staff in Bonita Springs

December 28, 2009

Bank Hires Michael Bottiglio and Scott Jannasch

Read the full article →

Video: Sony to Combine Units; Virgin in Talks to Buy UK Bank: Video

December 28, 2009

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Betty Liu reports on the latest breaking business news and top stories in today’s Business Briefs. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

eEye Names Kevin Hickey Chief Executive Officer

December 28, 2009

Chief Financial Officer and VP of Strategy Also Appointed

Read the full article →