March 2010

Obama Said to Name Health Scholar Berwick as Head of Medicare, Medicaid

March 27, 2010

By Hans Nichols and Viola Gienger March 27 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama plans to nominate Donald Berwick , a Harvard University health-policy professor, to oversee the Medicare and Medicaid programs, an administration official said. As head of the Centers for- Medicare and Medicaid Services, Berwick would run nation’s health insurance programs for the elderly and the poor. The agency, part of the Department of Health and Human Services, will play a large role in implementing the president’s health care overhaul. The position requires Senate confirmation. Obama announced plans today to install 15 nominees to other administration positions by recess appointments, which bypass the need for Senate confirmation. Berwick wasn’t on that list because he hasn’t yet been nominated by the president, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Berwick is a pediatrician and health policy expert who runs the nonprofit Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Massachusetts. To contact the reporter on this story: Hans Nichols in Washington at hnichols2@bloomberg.net

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Ford’s Mulally, Netflix’s Hastings Join Barron’s Most Respected CEO List

March 27, 2010

By Dan Hart March 27 (Bloomberg) — Ford Motor Co. Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally and Netflix Inc. Chairman and co-founder Reed Hastings are among the new names added to Barron’s list of the 30 most respected chief executive officers worldwide. The annual list, published this year in the March 29 issue, includes top executives who have been on the job at least three years and made shrewd acquisitions or took advantage of the economic recession to expand at the expense of rivals. Also new to the list are Reckitt Benckhiser Group Plc’s Bert Becht , Larry Ellison of Oracle Corp., Alstom SA’s Patrick Kron , EOG Resources Inc.’s Mark Papa , Bruce Rockowitz of Hong Kong’s Li & Fung Ltd., Standard Chartered Plc’s Peter Sands , Tim Solso of Cummins Inc. and Wang Chuanfu of BYD Co., the Chinese carmaker backed by Warren Buffett . Royal Bank of Canada’s Gordon Nixon was singled out by the weekly newspaper for helping keep the country’s biggest lender strong. Barron’s compiled the list by looking at how well a company’s shares performed and after asking investors, analysts and executives to name those chiefs who have made a difference within their companies and with shareholders. Barron’s didn’t identify the sources it used and said the rankings aren’t based on any statistical formula. ArcelorMittal’s Lakshmi Mittal was removed from this year’s list because he took on too much debt to build the world’s largest steelmaker, Barron’s said. Mittal, Levinson, Levy Arthur Levinson of Genentech Inc. dropped from the list when he became chairman of the company after it was acquired by Roche Holding AG last year for $46.8 billion. Vivendi SA’s Jean-Bernard Levy fell out of favor after the French media company failed to benefit from last year’s market recovery, Barron’s said. Completing the Barron’s list, in alphabetical order, are James Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis , co-chiefs of BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd.; Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com Inc., Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.; Cisco Systems Inc.’s John Chambers ; Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase & Co., BlackRock Inc.’s Laurence Fink ; Jose Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo of Petroleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras; Ma Huateng of China’s Tencent Holdings Ltd.; Mark Hurd of Hewlett-Packard Co.; Apple Inc.’s Steve Jobs ; Tesco Plc’s Terry Leahy ; Canon Inc.’s Fujio Mitarai ; Sam Palmisano of International Business Machines Corp.; Michael O’Leary of Ryanair Holdings Plc; James Sinegal of Costco Wholesale Corp.; McDonald’s Corp.’s James Skinner ; Fred Smith of FedEx Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp.’s Rex Tillerson and Miles White of Abbott Laboratories. To contact the reporter on this story: Dan Hart in Washington at dahart@bloomberg.net .

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London Luxury-Home Prices Climb at Slower Pace on Smaller Banker Bonuses

March 27, 2010

By Simon Packard March 27 (Bloomberg) — Luxury-home prices in central London rose 3 percent in the first quarter from the prior three months, the smallest gain since a recovery started a year ago, on expectations of lower bonuses from banks, Savills Plc said. The average value of houses and apartments costing more than 1 million pounds ($1.5 million) rose almost 17 percent from the first quarter of 2009, when prices bottomed out after an 18- month slide, according to the London-based property broker. “Some of the heat has come out of the market,” said Yolande Barnes , head of residential research. “We’ve also yet to see any significant influx of bonus money, suggesting buyers are still keeping their options open.” The British government announced in December a one-time 50 percent tax on bonuses exceeding 25,000 pounds paid to bankers in the current fiscal year. This was in response to the outcry over their compensation following state bailouts or aid that enabled banks to weather the financial crisis. Barnes predicts that prices will decline 1 percent this year, following an 8.8 percent gain in 2009, as the fragile economic recovery and higher taxes on luxury properties damp buyers’ appetite to buy homes in neighborhoods like Chelsea, Kensington and Belgravia. To contact the reporter on this story: Simon Packard in London at packard@bloomberg.net .

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Washington Mutual Files Reorganization, Supported by Creditors, JPMorgan

March 27, 2010

By Dawn McCarty March 27 (Bloomberg) — Washington Mutual Inc., the former parent of the biggest bank to fail, filed a bankruptcy reorganization plan and disclosure statement supported by creditors and JPMorgan Chase & Co. Washington Mutual , or WaMu, will establish a liquidating trust that will distribute funds in excess of about $7 billion, including $4 billion of previously disputed assets on deposit with JPMorgan , according to court documents filed yesterday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Delaware. “The proposed plan will provide substantial recoveries for the company’s creditors and reflects Washington Mutual Inc.’s diligent efforts over the last 18 months to maximize the value of the bankruptcy estate,” WaMu said yesterday in a statement. The money is being held by New York-based JPMorgan, which bought Seattle-based Washington Mutual’s bank for $1.9 billion in September 2008 after it was shut by federal regulators. WaMu no longer has any banking operations and is liquidating itself under bankruptcy court supervision. The plan implements and incorporates terms of a global settlement accord reached among WaMu, JPMorgan and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., according to the statement. A May 19 hearing has been requested for approval of the disclosure statement with a confirmation plan by July 20. March 12 Agreement “The FDIC has not agreed to all of the provisions contained in the draft settlement agreement,” WaMu said in the statement. “However, discussions are ongoing among the parties and they are hopeful that such agreement will be obtained in the near future.” The agreement was announced March 12 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington. Shareholders had estimated in court papers that the company may collect $20 billion from deposits, tax refunds and lawsuits. WaMu, JPMorgan and the FDIC will also share two tax refunds expected to be worth between $5.4 billion and $5.8 billion. WaMu estimated its share to be in the range of $1.8 billion and $2 billion, according to court papers. “Preferred and common equity securities previously issued by WaMu will be cancelled,” WaMu said in the statement. The bankruptcy case is In re Washington Mutual Inc., 08- 12229, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware (Wilmington). The dispute over the cash is Washington Mutual Inc. v. JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, 09-50934, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware (Wilmington). To contact the reporter on this story: Dawn McCarty in Wilmington, Delaware, at dmccarty@bloomberg.net .

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Bunds Fall, Greek Bonds Rise as European Union Leaders Agree on Aid Plan

March 27, 2010

By Paul Dobson March 27 (Bloomberg) — German bunds had their biggest weekly decline since March 5 after European policy makers and lawmakers agreed on plans to help Greece overcome its debt crisis, damping demand for the safest government debt. Greek securities advanced after European Union leaders backed a framework to rescue the nation should it be unable to narrow the bloc’s biggest budget deficit. The yield premium, or spread, investors demand for Greek debt instead of bunds narrowed as European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said policy makers will extend emergency collateral rules beyond 2010, boosting the likelihood Greek debt will remain eligible in refinancing operations. “Finally we have a deal and Greek bond spreads have come down quite substantially,” said Michael Leister , a fixed-income strategist at WestLB AG in Dusseldorf, Germany. “Confidence is returning, which is obviously negative for bunds.” The bund yield rose 4 basis points in the week to 3.15 percent as of 5:14 p.m. in London yesterday. The 10-year Greek bond yield fell 15 basis points to 6.23 percent. The yield spread for Greek 10-year securities over bunds narrowed 19 basis points to 308 basis points. Borrowing costs for Europe’s most-indebted nations soared this year amid concern the countries would struggle to manage their debt burdens. Greece’s 10-year yield reached 7.16 percent on Jan. 28 as Prime Minister George Papandreou sought to convince investors he could reduce the country’s deficit, which at 12.9 percent of gross domestic product is more than four times the EU limit. ‘Mixed Mechanism’ Leaders of the 16-nation euro region endorsed a Franco-German proposal for a mix of International Monetary Fund and bilateral loans at market interest rates, while expressing confidence that Greece won’t need outside help. The March 25 agreement is “an extremely clear political message,” EU President Herman Van Rompuy told reporters after the leaders met in Brussels. “It’s a mixed mechanism but with Europe playing the dominant role. It will be triggered as a last resort.” Bunds may decline next week on speculation European inflation accelerated in March. The EU statistics office in Luxembourg will say consumer prices in the 16-nation euro region rose 1.1 percent from a year earlier after increasing 0.9 percent in February, according to a Bloomberg survey. German bonds returned 2.4 percent so far this year, compared with a gain of 0.8 percent for U.S. Treasuries and a 0.7 percent decline for Greek bonds, according to Bloomberg/EFFAS indexes. To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Dobson in London at pdobson2@bloomberg.net

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Washington Mutual Files For Chapter 11

March 27, 2010

DOVER, Del. — Washington Mutual Inc. filed a Chapter 11 reorganization plan, two weeks after resolving a $4 billion dispute with JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The FDIC seized Washington Mutual’s flagship bank in 2008 and sold its assets to JPMorgan for $1.9 billion. The sale resulted in the two banking companies and the government agency trading lawsuits over roughly $4 billion in disputed deposit accounts following the largest bank failure in U.S. history. The bank holding company filed its 521-page plan late Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware. The plan, which still has to be approved by a judge, would set up a $7 billion trust fund for paying creditors, including the $4 billion in deposit accounts that JPMorgan had claimed for itself. As part of a compromise reached this month, JPMorgan has agreed to turn over the $4 billion to Washington Mutual in return for 70 percent of the tax refunds expected from WaMu’s prior operating losses, which are valued at about $3 billion. WaMu would get about 40 percent of the tax refunds resulting from a second round of operating losses, which are valued at about $2.6 billion. The remaining 60 percent would go to the FDIC.

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Washington Mutual Files For Chapter 11

March 27, 2010

DOVER, Del. — Washington Mutual Inc. filed a Chapter 11 reorganization plan, two weeks after resolving a $4 billion dispute with JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The FDIC seized Washington Mutual’s flagship bank in 2008 and sold its assets to JPMorgan for $1.9 billion. The sale resulted in the two banking companies and the government agency trading lawsuits over roughly $4 billion in disputed deposit accounts following the largest bank failure in U.S. history. The bank holding company filed its 521-page plan late Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware. The plan, which still has to be approved by a judge, would set up a $7 billion trust fund for paying creditors, including the $4 billion in deposit accounts that JPMorgan had claimed for itself. As part of a compromise reached this month, JPMorgan has agreed to turn over the $4 billion to Washington Mutual in return for 70 percent of the tax refunds expected from WaMu’s prior operating losses, which are valued at about $3 billion. WaMu would get about 40 percent of the tax refunds resulting from a second round of operating losses, which are valued at about $2.6 billion. The remaining 60 percent would go to the FDIC.

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Washington Mutual Files For Chapter 11

March 27, 2010

DOVER, Del. — Washington Mutual Inc. filed a Chapter 11 reorganization plan, two weeks after resolving a $4 billion dispute with JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The FDIC seized Washington Mutual’s flagship bank in 2008 and sold its assets to JPMorgan for $1.9 billion. The sale resulted in the two banking companies and the government agency trading lawsuits over roughly $4 billion in disputed deposit accounts following the largest bank failure in U.S. history. The bank holding company filed its 521-page plan late Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware. The plan, which still has to be approved by a judge, would set up a $7 billion trust fund for paying creditors, including the $4 billion in deposit accounts that JPMorgan had claimed for itself. As part of a compromise reached this month, JPMorgan has agreed to turn over the $4 billion to Washington Mutual in return for 70 percent of the tax refunds expected from WaMu’s prior operating losses, which are valued at about $3 billion. WaMu would get about 40 percent of the tax refunds resulting from a second round of operating losses, which are valued at about $2.6 billion. The remaining 60 percent would go to the FDIC.

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AIG’s Plueger Retires as Plane-Leasing Chief; Lund Is Interim Successor

March 27, 2010
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Swiss Court May Force UniCredit to Pay $321 Million in Communist-Era Case

March 27, 2010

By Tony Czuczka and Zoe Schneeweiss March 27 (Bloomberg) — UniCredit SpA’s Austrian unit may be forced to pay 240 million euros ($321 million) to the German government in a court case involving assets of the former East German Communist Party. The Zurich District Court of Appeal yesterday ruled in favor of the German government in a lawsuit that accuses UniCredit Bank Austria AG’s former AKB Privatbank Zuerich unit of helping to embezzle funds from companies in the former East Germany, Vienna-based Bank Austria said yesterday in a statement. The court reversed an initial ruling of the Zurich District Court, which had rejected Germany’s claim. Bank Austria, which is an intervening party in the case, will file an appeal to the Court of Cassation of the Canton of Zurich and to the Swiss Federal Supreme Court, according to the statement. The potential risk is about 128 million euros, or 240 million euros including interest as of yesterday, Bank Austria said. Court officials couldn’t be reached for comment after business hours yesterday. When the case went to court in 1994, Germany said that the bank helped launder 250 million deutsche marks ($171.5 million) that vanished from the accounts of two former East German trading companies after communism fell. Germany said that the funds were East German state assets that AKB helped shift to the Austria Communist Party in the 1990s after German reunification. Germany is being represented by Bundesanstalt fuer Vereinigungsbedingte Sonderaufgaben, the legal successor of Deutsche Treuhandanstalt, which was in charge of managing the assets of the former East Germany. To contact the reporters on this story: Tony Czuczka in Berlin at aczuczka@bloomberg.net ; Zoe Schneeweiss in Vienna at zschneeweiss@bloomberg.net .

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Why The iPad Will Change Everything: Newsweek

March 27, 2010

What’s the big deal about Apple’s iPad, currently arriving in stores on the biggest wave of hype since, well, Apple’s iPhone? The easy answer is that the iPad comes from Apple, and we always expect big things from Apple because it is run by Steve Jobs, whose California garage was the birthplace of the personal computer in 1976. Since then, Jobs has transformed computing by making machines people actually like to use.

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Wendell Potter: State Insurance Commissioners Take Baton from Congress

March 27, 2010

Now that Congress has taken final action on its health care reform legislation, the reform debate has now shifted to, of all places, Denver. The legislation that is now the law of the land was just the first step. Despite its size — more than 2,000 pages — the bill in many cases only lays out Congressional intent. In that sense, it is a framework for reform. The law requires that numerous new regulations be written to govern the way health insurers do business, a responsibility that Congress passed on not only to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services but also to one very influential non-governmental organization: the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC). The bill mentions the NAIC — an acronym most Americans probably only see once a year when they renew their cars’ license plates — at least 10 times, and it gives the organization some very important assignments. The NAIC, which comprises the insurance commissioners from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. territories, is having its spring meeting this weekend in Denver. The fact that more than 1,700 insurance industry executives are also at the meeting should give you an idea of how important the NAIC is to insurers. Just as members of Congress are far out-numbered by lobbyists on any given day in Washington, the commissioners are far, far outnumbered by insurance company executives who come to NAIC’s conferences to try to influence everything the commissioners do, as a group and individually. The NAIC exists to help state insurance regulators achieve five primary goals: “protect the public interest; promote competitive markets; facilitate the fair and equitable treatment of insurance consumers; promote the reliability, solvency and financial solidity of insurance institutions; and support and improve state regulation of insurance.” Insurance company licensed to do business in the U.S. is regulated by state insurance departments and is assigned an NAIC code. (This is where your car’s license plate comes in. The renewal forms you get from your state, if you live in one that requires you to buy auto insurance, as most do, ask for your insurance company’s NAIC code.) Congress gave the NAIC so much responsibility because the legislation it passed will largely be implemented at the state level, States will have substantial flexibility to create new insurance marketplaces and to set and enforce standards. To ensure that the marketplaces be as uniform as possible, Congress gave the NAIC the responsibility of developing specific standards pertaining to the creation of the health insurance “exchanges” created by the new law. Because insurance companies will want to sell their policies through the exchanges, they will be “advising” the NAIC as it goes about its work. The NAIC also will play a key role in making sure insurers spend at least 80% to 85% of what they collect in premiums on medical care for their policyholders as the new law requires. The amount insurers pay for care is called the medical-loss ratio (MLR). (It’s telling that insurers consider the amount of premium dollars they spend on medical care a loss.) The average medical-loss ratio was 95% in 1993, meaning that 95 cents of every premium dollar insurers collected was paid out in claims. By 2008, the average MLR had dropped to around 80%. At many insurers, the MLR often dips into the 70s or lower. The insurance industry tried unsuccessfully to strip the minimum medical-loss ratio provision from the bill, It wanted to have the freedom to keep spending less and less on medical care because every dollar not paid out in claims is a dollar that can be used instead to increase profits and to pay CEOs millions of dollars every year. Having lost the battle on Capitol Hill, the insurers are now turning their attention to the NAIC, which Congress gave the responsibility of determining the nitty-gritty details of how insurers will have to comply with the law. Rest assured that the insurers will be pulling out all the stops to persuade the insurance commissioners to make it easy for them to meet the requirements of the new law by manipulating the definition of medical care. One of the things insurers will try to do, for example, is to get the NAIC to let them shift a lot of what insurers now count as administrative expenses into their medical expense category. If that happens, the insurers will look like they’re suddenly spending more on medical care without changing anything at all. The law also requires the NAIC to help the Department of Health and Human Services develop numerous other regulations, ranging from making sure that documents pertaining to benefits and coverage limitations be standard throughout the industry, to determining how health insurance can be sold across state lines while maintaining consumer protections. The NAIC has to tackle its new responsibilities immediately. In order to provide the states with enough time to prepare for implementation of health care reform, HHS has to have regulations and standards in place within the next 12 to 15 months, if not sooner, which means the NAIC will need to complete a tremendous amount of work in a short period of time. To ensure that consumers’ interests are at least taken into consider as the NAIC fulfills its mission, the organization several years ago established a consumer liaison committee. This year the NAIC expanded the committee to include 29 consumer representatives from across the country. I was selected to be one of them, representing the Center for Media and Democracy. Like the commissioners, my colleagues and I are vastly outnumbered by the hundreds of insurance industry executives here at the Denver meeting, but at least we have seats at the table. At a meeting with the commissioners yesterday, we stressed how essential it is that the consumer perspective not get lost as the NAIC rushes to get the work done. We asked specifically that the NAIC: * Create a publicly accessible “plan of action” developed with input from consumer representatives * Fully incorporate consumer advocates into the NAIC health reform work plan * Prioritize their tasks based on the needs of consumers * Significantly expand consumer participation at NAIC proceedings. Many of the commissioners — in particular Mila Kofman of Maine, who once served as a consumer representative, and Joel Ario of my state of Pennsylvania, and Maurice Chavez of New Mexico, who chairs the consumer liaison committee–expressed support for our requests. We’re hopeful. I am in very good company on the NAIC consumer liaison committee, by the way. Here are the other members: Elizabeth Abbott, Health Access (California) Stephen Alexander, Insurance Consumer Advocate and Actuary (Florida) Amy Bach, United Policyholders (California) Deeia Beck, Office of Public Insurance Counsel (Texas) Brendan Bridgeland, Center for Insurance Research Bonnie Burns, California Health Advocates Kimberly Calder, National Multiple Sclerosis Society Sabrina Corlette, National Partnership for Women and Familes Brenda Cude, University of Georgia Stephen Finan, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network Evelyn DeCalos Gay (Langga)< Georgia Legal Services Elder Rights Projecdt Howard Goldblatt, Coalition Against Insurance Fraud Melvin Butch Hollowell, Michigan Insurance Consumer Advocate Bonita Kallestad, Mid-Minnesota Legal Assistance, Western Minnesota Legal Services Timothy Jost, Washington & Lee University Karrol Kitt, The University of Texas at Austin Peter Kochenburger, University of Connecticut School of Law Sonja Larkin-Thorne, Consumer Advocate (Connecticut) Kevin Lucia, Georgetown University Health Policy Institute Georgia Maheras, Health Care for All (Massachusetts) Stacey Pogue, Center for Public Policy Priorities (Texas) Lynn Quigley, Consumers Union Barbara Rea, Equality State Policy Center (Wyoming) Mark Schoeberl, American Heart Association Dan Schwarcz, University of Minnesota Law School Naomi Senkeeto, American Diabetes Association Barbara Yondorf,Colorado Health Care Institute

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Simon Johnson: Hard Pressed, Senator Dodd Gives Ground

March 27, 2010

Senator Chris Dodd has good political antennae. He knows that his financial reform bill will come under severe pressure because it has a weak heart — the provisions that deal with “too big to fail” are simply “too weak to make any sense.” Stung by the hard-hitting critique of Senator Ted Kaufman earlier on Friday and unsure exactly where an increasingly combative White House is heading on the broader strategy vis-à-vis banks, Mr. Dodd took to the Senate floor yesterday afternoon – actually immediately after Senator Kaufman – in an attempt to sustain the momentum behind his approach to “reform”. Note the prominent and rather defensive mention of Delaware, Senator Kaufman’s state, in what Senator Dodd said (the wording here is from the verbatim recording, not the official transcript): “A business, as I say respectfully, in Connecticut or Delaware or Colorado, a homeowner in those states shouldn’t have to pay the price because a handful of financial institutions got too greedy, too risky, they were unwilling to examine what they were doing or did, recognizing that the federal government would bail them out if they made a bad choice, which they did.” Perhaps it was this picture that did it: Senator Dodd asserts that “never again should a financial problem of a major financial institution put the rest of the country at risk”. But there is no mention of the specific reforms that would prevent this. Mr. Dodd does express exactly the right general idea, “First and foremost, never, ever again should a financial institution get so large, so interconnected, produce products that put the rest of us at risk.” But the cognitive dissonance here is extreme. The only purported mechanism to rein in megabanks in the Dodd bill is the resolution authority, but this by definition cannot work for large complex cross-border financial institution – this is the point insisted upon by Senator Kaufman today. Dodd recognizes the validity of Kaufman’s argument at some level, but just cannot bring himself to say that he agrees – or to acknowledge that his legislation does nothing to deal with financial institutions that have already proved themselves to be so large they can damage society. So we reach an impasse – at least for now. Dodd concedes that too big to fail is the central issue and he implicitly acknowledges that his bill has no way to address the concerns raised by Senator Kaufman (and Paul Volcker and others). The White House has cleared the way for major progress vs. the financial sector lobby (nice speech by Neal Wolin to the Chamber of Commerce), but does not yet press home its advantage. Barney Frank knows there is a deep flaw in the current legislation and waits in the wings with a sharp pencil. He previously thought “too big to fail” firms could be taxed down to size; increasingly this seems unrealistic and at odds with the shifting consensus on systemic risk. Chris Dodd wants to go out in blaze of glory, not with a bill that makes no sense at all on its most critical points. Ted Kaufman is turning into a relentless critic, Elizabeth Warren is fast becoming a folk hero, and Paul Volcker is poised to make a major speech in Washington on Tuesday. Is Volcker likely to toe the party line and defer to Senator Dodd – or will he lay out in forceful terms what reforms would really mean, i.e., what are the true Volcker principles, who has them, and how would you know? Financial reform might make for good television after all.

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US Set To Make $8 Billion Profit From Citigroup Bailout

March 27, 2010

Among the banks that rule Wall Street, Citigroup got a bailout that was bigger than the rest. Now the company is about to pay a king’s ransom for its federal rescue.

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AT&T Plans $1 Billion Charge For Health Care

March 27, 2010

NEW YORK — AT&T Inc. will take a $1 billion non-cash accounting charge in the first quarter because of the health care overhaul and may cut benefits it offers to current and retired workers. The charge is the largest disclosed so far. Earlier this week, AK Steel Corp., Caterpillar Inc., Deere & Co. and Valero Energy announced similar accounting charges, saying the health care law that President Barack Obama signed Tuesday will raise their expenses. On Friday, 3M Co. said it will also take a charge of $85 million to $90 million. All five are smaller than AT&T, and their combined charges are less than half of the $1 billion that AT&T is planning. The $1 billion is a third of AT&T’s most recent quarterly earnings. In the fourth quarter of 2009, the company earned $3 billion on revenue of $30.9 billion. AT&T said Friday that the charge reflects changes to how Medicare subsidies are taxed. Companies say the health care overhaul will require them to start paying taxes next year on a subsidy they receive for retiree drug coverage. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Thursday that the tax law closed a loophole. Under the 2003 Medicare prescription drug program, companies that provide prescription drug benefits for retirees have been able to receive subsidies covering 28 percent of eligible costs. But they could deduct the entire amount they spent on these drug benefits – including the subsidies – from their taxable income. The new law allows companies to only deduct the 72 percent they spent. AT&T also said Friday that it is looking into changing the health care benefits it offers because of the new law. Analysts say retirees could lose the prescription drug coverage provided by their former employers as a result of the overhaul. Changes to benefits are unlikely to take effect immediately. Rather, the issue would most likely come up as part of contract negotiations between the company and unions representing its employees and retirees. AT&T is the largest private employer of union workers in the U.S. Candice Johnson, spokeswoman for the Communications Workers of America, which represents more than 160,000 AT&T workers, said these employees have contracts in place until 2012. An agreement covering retirees also runs through 2012. AT&T rival Verizon Communications Inc. was among 10 companies that sent a letter to congressional leaders in December warning that their costs would increase with the health care changes. Verizon spokesman Peter Thonis said the company had no comment. Also on Friday, Reps. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., and Bart Stupak, D-Mich., said they are asking the CEOs of Caterpillar, Verizon, Deere and others to testify at an April 21 House subcommittee hearing on claims that the health care law could hurt their ability to provide health insurance to workers. Shares in AT&T, which is based in Dallas, climbed 9 cents to close Friday at $26.24.

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Dollar Heads for Biggest Quarterly Gain Versus Euro Since 2008

March 27, 2010
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Dollar Heads for Biggest Quarterly Gain Versus Euro Since 2008

March 27, 2010
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Pakistan Keeps Benchmark Rate at 12.5% to Curb Inflation, Sustain Recovery

March 27, 2010

By Farhan Sharif March 27 (Bloomberg) — Pakistan’s central bank refrained from cutting its benchmark interest rate as inflation of above 13 percent prevents it from reducing borrowing costs to spur economic growth. The State Bank of Pakistan maintained its discount rate at 12.5 percent, the central bank said in an e-mailed statement from Lahore today. The decision was expected by 13 of 14 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. “Inflation is expected to stay on the higher side as commodity prices remain high and subsidies are ended,” Sayem Ali, an economist at Standard Chartered Pakistan in Karachi, said before the decision. Pakistan wants to keep borrowing costs low to revive consumer and investment demand, derailed by terrorist attacks that claimed 3,000 lives in 2009. Risks to economic growth have “increased considerably” due to the country’s deteriorating security situation, according to the central bank. “An upward adjustment in the policy rate at this juncture runs the risk of impeding the still nascent recovery,” the central bank said in its statement today. “A downward adjustment runs the risk of fuelling already high inflation.” The central bank’s next move may be to reduce interest rates, Governor Salim Raza indicated in a Feb. 5 interview, saying he expects the effect of higher energy costs to wear off. Inflation slowed in February for the first time in four months. Power Rates The government will increase domestic fuel and electricity rates from April 1, the Dawn Newspaper reported on March 24, without saying where it got the information. Fuel costs will rise by about 5 percent and power rates will be increased by more than 16 percent, the newspaper said. Pakistan increased gas and electricity tariffs by an average 13.5 percent on March 1 as part of a directive by the International Monetary Fund to end subsidies. The economy grew 2 percent in the last financial year ended June 30, the slowest pace in eight years. Gross domestic product may expand 3.4 percent this year, the government forecasts. The South Asian economy needs to grow at an average annual pace of 6 percent over the next five years to reduce poverty, according to the government. Raza kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged on Jan. 31 after cutting it three times in 2009 by a cumulative 2.5 percentage points. Consumer Prices Consumer prices in Pakistan rose 13.04 percent in February from a year earlier after climbing 13.68 percent in January, after the government raised electricity and gas tariffs. The central bank’s efforts to accelerate growth will be a boost to Abdul Hafeez Shaikh , who was appointed Pakistan’s finance adviser by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani this month after Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin resigned to pursue his business interests. Shaikh became the fourth person to take charge of Pakistan’s finance ministry in the past two years and faces the challenge of attracting investment to accelerate economic growth amid terrorism and political instability. He also has to tackle food and power shortages that have caused riots in the nation of 170 million people. Demand for power in Pakistan is three times the supply, forcing factories to shut. Food shortages have caused inflation to average 16.6 percent since January 2008. Foreign direct investment in Pakistan dropped 53 percent to $1.32 billion in the first eight months of the fiscal year that started July 1. More than 300 people have died since Jan. 1 as militants retaliated against the army’s offensive that targeted Taliban extremists in the country’s northwest. To contact the reporter on this story: Farhan Sharif in Karachi, Pakistan at Fsharif2@bloomberg.net

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Pakistan Keeps Benchmark Rate at 12.5% to Curb Inflation, Sustain Recovery

March 27, 2010

By Farhan Sharif March 27 (Bloomberg) — Pakistan’s central bank refrained from cutting its benchmark interest rate as inflation of above 13 percent prevents it from reducing borrowing costs to spur economic growth. The State Bank of Pakistan maintained its discount rate at 12.5 percent, the central bank said in an e-mailed statement from Lahore today. The decision was expected by 13 of 14 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. “Inflation is expected to stay on the higher side as commodity prices remain high and subsidies are ended,” Sayem Ali, an economist at Standard Chartered Pakistan in Karachi, said before the decision. Pakistan wants to keep borrowing costs low to revive consumer and investment demand, derailed by terrorist attacks that claimed 3,000 lives in 2009. Risks to economic growth have “increased considerably” due to the country’s deteriorating security situation, according to the central bank. “An upward adjustment in the policy rate at this juncture runs the risk of impeding the still nascent recovery,” the central bank said in its statement today. “A downward adjustment runs the risk of fuelling already high inflation.” The central bank’s next move may be to reduce interest rates, Governor Salim Raza indicated in a Feb. 5 interview, saying he expects the effect of higher energy costs to wear off. Inflation slowed in February for the first time in four months. Power Rates The government will increase domestic fuel and electricity rates from April 1, the Dawn Newspaper reported on March 24, without saying where it got the information. Fuel costs will rise by about 5 percent and power rates will be increased by more than 16 percent, the newspaper said. Pakistan increased gas and electricity tariffs by an average 13.5 percent on March 1 as part of a directive by the International Monetary Fund to end subsidies. The economy grew 2 percent in the last financial year ended June 30, the slowest pace in eight years. Gross domestic product may expand 3.4 percent this year, the government forecasts. The South Asian economy needs to grow at an average annual pace of 6 percent over the next five years to reduce poverty, according to the government. Raza kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged on Jan. 31 after cutting it three times in 2009 by a cumulative 2.5 percentage points. Consumer Prices Consumer prices in Pakistan rose 13.04 percent in February from a year earlier after climbing 13.68 percent in January, after the government raised electricity and gas tariffs. The central bank’s efforts to accelerate growth will be a boost to Abdul Hafeez Shaikh , who was appointed Pakistan’s finance adviser by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani this month after Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin resigned to pursue his business interests. Shaikh became the fourth person to take charge of Pakistan’s finance ministry in the past two years and faces the challenge of attracting investment to accelerate economic growth amid terrorism and political instability. He also has to tackle food and power shortages that have caused riots in the nation of 170 million people. Demand for power in Pakistan is three times the supply, forcing factories to shut. Food shortages have caused inflation to average 16.6 percent since January 2008. Foreign direct investment in Pakistan dropped 53 percent to $1.32 billion in the first eight months of the fiscal year that started July 1. More than 300 people have died since Jan. 1 as militants retaliated against the army’s offensive that targeted Taliban extremists in the country’s northwest. To contact the reporter on this story: Farhan Sharif in Karachi, Pakistan at Fsharif2@bloomberg.net

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Fed’s Sack Defends Securitization, Says Financial System Requires Leverage

March 27, 2010

By Vivien Lou Chen and Candice Zachariahs March 27 (Bloomberg) — Brian Sack , head of the markets group at the New York Fed, said the financial system can’t operate well without leverage and signaled that he supports the return of a “properly” structured securitization market. “Securitization is a powerful vehicle that should play an important role in the intermediation of credit in the economy,” Sack said in a speech delivered by video conference from New York to an audience in Sydney. “We should also understand that a reduction in leverage to near zero in the financial system is not desirable.” Sack’s comments come as U.S. lawmakers revamp regulation to prevent a recurrence of the financial crisis, which began with the collapse of the U.S. subprime-lending market in 2007 and led to about $1.76 trillion in losses and writedowns by banks and other financial institutions worldwide. Fed Governor Kevin Warsh , speaking yesterday in New York, said the securitization market will ultimately come back. “To be sure, the expansion of securitized credit was much too extensive and its subsequent collapse was terribly disruptive, contributing significantly to the damage to the economy,” said Sack, 39, a former Fed economist and section head who returned to the central bank system last year. “Those developments do not mean that securitized credit, if structured properly, should not return in size,” he said during the speech at the ACI 2010 World Congress. Derivatives are also “integral” to the functioning of financial markets, allowing risks to be redistributed, Sack said. ‘Operate Efficiently’ “The financial system cannot operate efficiently without leverage,” he said. “Of course, much of the turmoil we witnessed across financial markets was due to the build-up of excessive leverage in the system, and we cannot miss the chance to learn from this painful lesson,” Sack said. Even so, the focus now should be in part “on how to make the use of leverage less pro-cyclical.” Since December 2008, the Federal Open Market Committee has held the federal funds rate target for overnight loans between banks in a range of zero to 0.25 percent. Policy makers have also created unprecedented emergency programs to revive credit. The FOMC in its public comments has “retained its flexibility” to extend the programs, Sack said in response to an audience question. “It has not clarified under what conditions it would do so and presumably those conditions would depend on the behavior of long-term interest rates and on economic conditions more broadly,” he said. “I don’t think anything has been taken off the table.” To contact the reporters on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net ; Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net

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Fed’s Sack Defends Securitization, Says Financial System Requires Leverage

March 27, 2010

By Vivien Lou Chen and Candice Zachariahs March 27 (Bloomberg) — Brian Sack , head of the markets group at the New York Fed, said the financial system can’t operate well without leverage and signaled that he supports the return of a “properly” structured securitization market. “Securitization is a powerful vehicle that should play an important role in the intermediation of credit in the economy,” Sack said in a speech delivered by video conference from New York to an audience in Sydney. “We should also understand that a reduction in leverage to near zero in the financial system is not desirable.” Sack’s comments come as U.S. lawmakers revamp regulation to prevent a recurrence of the financial crisis, which began with the collapse of the U.S. subprime-lending market in 2007 and led to about $1.76 trillion in losses and writedowns by banks and other financial institutions worldwide. Fed Governor Kevin Warsh , speaking yesterday in New York, said the securitization market will ultimately come back. “To be sure, the expansion of securitized credit was much too extensive and its subsequent collapse was terribly disruptive, contributing significantly to the damage to the economy,” said Sack, 39, a former Fed economist and section head who returned to the central bank system last year. “Those developments do not mean that securitized credit, if structured properly, should not return in size,” he said during the speech at the ACI 2010 World Congress. Derivatives are also “integral” to the functioning of financial markets, allowing risks to be redistributed, Sack said. ‘Operate Efficiently’ “The financial system cannot operate efficiently without leverage,” he said. “Of course, much of the turmoil we witnessed across financial markets was due to the build-up of excessive leverage in the system, and we cannot miss the chance to learn from this painful lesson,” Sack said. Even so, the focus now should be in part “on how to make the use of leverage less pro-cyclical.” Since December 2008, the Federal Open Market Committee has held the federal funds rate target for overnight loans between banks in a range of zero to 0.25 percent. Policy makers have also created unprecedented emergency programs to revive credit. The FOMC in its public comments has “retained its flexibility” to extend the programs, Sack said in response to an audience question. “It has not clarified under what conditions it would do so and presumably those conditions would depend on the behavior of long-term interest rates and on economic conditions more broadly,” he said. “I don’t think anything has been taken off the table.” To contact the reporters on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net ; Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net

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Pound Drops Against Dollar on Concern at Budget Deficit, Pace of Recovery

March 27, 2010

By Lukanyo Mnyanda March 27 (Bloomberg) — The pound declined for a second week against the dollar on concern the recovery has yet to take hold and as investors bet the government isn’t acting fast enough to cut the budget deficit. Reports this week showed inflation slowed more than forecast last month and business investment had the biggest annual drop on record in the fourth quarter. A ComRes Ltd. survey conducted after Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling ’s budget speech on March 24 showed the government moved ahead of the Conservatives on who voters trust most to run the economy. Other polls signaled an election that must be held by June will leave the government without a parliamentary majority. “I don’t see much that could cause a massive appreciation in the pound,” said Neil Jones , head of European hedge-fund sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. in London. “The market doesn’t like political uncertainty and is happy to remain short,” betting that the pound will decline, he said. Sterling depreciated 0.9 percent in the week to $1.4876 as of 5:38 p.m. in London yesterday, and traded as low as $1.4799, its weakest level since March 1. It fell against the dollar in three of the five trading days. Against the euro, the pound was little changed on the week at 90.08 pence. Election Concern Britain’s currency lost 8 percent versus the dollar this year amid speculation the election will produce a government too weak to reduce the deficit, which at 11.8 percent of gross domestic product is the highest among the Group of Seven nations. Darling said in his March 24 budget report that the government plans to cut the deficit to 89 billion pounds ($132.7 billion) by 2014, from 167 billion pounds this fiscal year. The pound may extend losses next week on speculation a report from Nationwide Building Society will show house-price gains slowed this month. Prices probably rose 8.2 percent in March from a year earlier, down from 9.2 percent in February, according to the median of 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Business investment in equipment, vehicles and buildings dropped 23.5 percent from a year earlier, the biggest decline since records began in 1967, the Office for National Statistics said on its Web site yesterday. The annual inflation rate declined to 3 percent in January, the statistics office said March 23. Economists predicted a 3.1 percent rate, according to a Bloomberg survey. Gilt Issuance U.K. 10-year government bonds fell this week, sending the yield 7 basis points higher to 4.02 percent, even after the Debt Management Office said gilt sales will drop 18 percent this year. The U.K. will issue 187.3 billion pounds of securities in fiscal 2010/2011, down from the record 227.6 billion last year, the London-based debt office said. “In the medium to long term, there’s still a question mark on how the new supply will be absorbed,” said Karsten Linowsky , a fixed-income strategist at Credit Suisse Group AG in Zurich. Investors should favor German bunds over gilts in the next 12 months as long as the Bank of England decides not to resume bond purchases, he said. Gilts returned 0.4 percent in the year through March 25, compared with 2.4 percent for bunds, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. The securities lost 1.3 percent in 2009, trailing a 2 percent gain by bunds even as the Bank of England embarked on a bond-purchase program of 200 billion pounds, equivalent to 88 percent of gilt sales. To contact the reporter on this story: Lukanyo Mnyanda in London at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net

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Pound Drops Against Dollar on Concern at Budget Deficit, Pace of Recovery

March 27, 2010

By Lukanyo Mnyanda March 27 (Bloomberg) — The pound declined for a second week against the dollar on concern the recovery has yet to take hold and as investors bet the government isn’t acting fast enough to cut the budget deficit. Reports this week showed inflation slowed more than forecast last month and business investment had the biggest annual drop on record in the fourth quarter. A ComRes Ltd. survey conducted after Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling ’s budget speech on March 24 showed the government moved ahead of the Conservatives on who voters trust most to run the economy. Other polls signaled an election that must be held by June will leave the government without a parliamentary majority. “I don’t see much that could cause a massive appreciation in the pound,” said Neil Jones , head of European hedge-fund sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. in London. “The market doesn’t like political uncertainty and is happy to remain short,” betting that the pound will decline, he said. Sterling depreciated 0.9 percent in the week to $1.4876 as of 5:38 p.m. in London yesterday, and traded as low as $1.4799, its weakest level since March 1. It fell against the dollar in three of the five trading days. Against the euro, the pound was little changed on the week at 90.08 pence. Election Concern Britain’s currency lost 8 percent versus the dollar this year amid speculation the election will produce a government too weak to reduce the deficit, which at 11.8 percent of gross domestic product is the highest among the Group of Seven nations. Darling said in his March 24 budget report that the government plans to cut the deficit to 89 billion pounds ($132.7 billion) by 2014, from 167 billion pounds this fiscal year. The pound may extend losses next week on speculation a report from Nationwide Building Society will show house-price gains slowed this month. Prices probably rose 8.2 percent in March from a year earlier, down from 9.2 percent in February, according to the median of 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Business investment in equipment, vehicles and buildings dropped 23.5 percent from a year earlier, the biggest decline since records began in 1967, the Office for National Statistics said on its Web site yesterday. The annual inflation rate declined to 3 percent in January, the statistics office said March 23. Economists predicted a 3.1 percent rate, according to a Bloomberg survey. Gilt Issuance U.K. 10-year government bonds fell this week, sending the yield 7 basis points higher to 4.02 percent, even after the Debt Management Office said gilt sales will drop 18 percent this year. The U.K. will issue 187.3 billion pounds of securities in fiscal 2010/2011, down from the record 227.6 billion last year, the London-based debt office said. “In the medium to long term, there’s still a question mark on how the new supply will be absorbed,” said Karsten Linowsky , a fixed-income strategist at Credit Suisse Group AG in Zurich. Investors should favor German bunds over gilts in the next 12 months as long as the Bank of England decides not to resume bond purchases, he said. Gilts returned 0.4 percent in the year through March 25, compared with 2.4 percent for bunds, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. The securities lost 1.3 percent in 2009, trailing a 2 percent gain by bunds even as the Bank of England embarked on a bond-purchase program of 200 billion pounds, equivalent to 88 percent of gilt sales. To contact the reporter on this story: Lukanyo Mnyanda in London at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net

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Chris Dodd Gives Ground On Financial Reform Bill After Tough Criticism: Simon Johnson

March 27, 2010

Senator Chris Dodd has good political antennae. He knows that his financial reform bill will come under severe pressure because it has a weak heart – the provisions that deal with “too big to fail” are simply “too weak to make any sense.”

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Chipmaker NXP Planning IPO

March 27, 2010

NEW YORK/AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Dutch semiconductor company NXP [NXP.UL], owned by private equity firms, including KKR and Silver Lake, is planning an initial public offering (IPO), a source familiar with the matter said. A potential IPO, earlier reported by Bloomberg, could raise about $1 billion, the source said. A number of banks would handle the sale, Bloomberg reported — Morgan Stanley ( MS.N ), Barclays Plc ( BARC.L ), Credit Suisse Group AG ( CSGN.VX ), Deutsche Bank AG ( DBKGn.DE ) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc ( GS.N ). NXP was spun off from Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV ( PHG.AS ) in 2006 in a leveraged buyout. A consortium of private equity investors, including Silver Lake and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co ( KKR.AS ) bought a majority of the company. The banks and private equity firms either declined comment, or could not be reached. NXP and Philips declined to comment. Philips said in January its remaining 19.8 percent stake in NXP had a value of 207 million euros as of December 2009, implying a valuation for the whole company of more than one billion euros. KKR has already written down its stake in NXP substantially, saying in December that the fair value of its investment was $75 million on a cost of $250 million. NXP’s Chief Executive Rick Clemmer told Reuters earlier this year he expected sales to be flat to slightly higher during the first quarter, but was waiting for more clarity about the market in the second half. Private equity firms buy companies with the aim of exiting them a few years later, either through a sale or an initial public offering. During the financial crisis, leaving investments was very difficult, but the markets have opened up recently, allowing some firms to exit. (Reporting by Megan Davies and Jui Chakravorty in New York and Greg Roumeliotis and Harro Ten Wolde in Amsterdam; editing by Mike Peacock)

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Housing Signals Easing activity, While the Economy Expanded by 5.6% in the Final Quarter of 2009

March 27, 2010

Housing Signals Easing activity, While the Economy Expanded by 5.6% in the Final Quarter of 2009

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Housing Signals Easing activity, While the Economy Expanded by 5.6% in the Final Quarter of 2009

March 27, 2010

Housing Signals Easing activity, While the Economy Expanded by 5.6% in the Final Quarter of 2009

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The end of a week full of fundamentals from Asia

March 27, 2010

The end of a week full of fundamentals from Asia

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The end of a week full of fundamentals from Asia

March 27, 2010

The end of a week full of fundamentals from Asia

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UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

March 27, 2010

UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

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UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

March 27, 2010

UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

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Mexico’s KATCON, Korea’s KDAC sign strategic alliance

March 27, 2010

Mexico’s KATCON, Korea’s KDAC sign strategic alliance

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Polaris acquires IndigoTX, a SaaS Software Company

March 27, 2010

Polaris acquires IndigoTX, a SaaS Software Company

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US District Court returns binding verdit of invalidity

March 27, 2010

US District Court returns binding verdit of invalidity

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OECD: German economy to grow 1.3% this year

March 27, 2010

OECD: German economy to grow 1.3% this year

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Singapore visitor arrivals hit February record

March 27, 2010

Singapore visitor arrivals hit February record

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Germany reaches tax information deal with Switzerland

March 27, 2010

Germany reaches tax information deal with Switzerland

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Russia cuts key interest rate to 8.25%

March 27, 2010

Russia cuts key interest rate to 8.25%

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Editorial: Euro zone woes

March 27, 2010

Editorial: Euro zone woes

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Time is ripe to modify your existing commercial real estate loans, which can help you avoid foreclosure

March 27, 2010

I have been a real estate lawyer in New England for 22 years, having represented several large national retailers and developers, and have found that through my association with American Consultants, Inc., I have been

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Asian Currencies Decline as Concern at Greece Talks Curb Appetite for Risk

March 27, 2010

By Yumi Teso and Bob Chen March 27 (Bloomberg) — Asian currencies declined this week, led by the Singapore dollar and South Korean won, as discord among leaders in European nations on how to solve Greece’s debt woes curbed investor appetite for emerging- market assets. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index pared the week’s losses and the euro climbed from a 10-month low a day after European leaders endorsed a plan to assist Greece. Asian currencies and stocks weakened on March 25 after a Fitch Ratings downgrade of Portugal fanned concern Greece will not be alone in struggling to pay its debt. “We’ve seen a big move in the euro on concerns in Greece, that’s led to a pretty buoyant dollar against Asian currencies across the board,” said Bernard Yeung , Hong Kong- based head of currency trading for Asia at National Australia Bank Ltd. The won declined 0.5 percent for the week to 1,138.80 against the dollar in Seoul and yesterday touched 1,148.40, the lowest level since March 3. The Singapore dollar fell 0.6 percent to S$1.4043. Leaders of the 16-nation euro region agreed on a Franco- German proposal in Brussels on March 25 for a mix of bilateral and International Monetary Fund loans for Greece at market interest rates. European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said he was “happy” a solution had been found, toning down earlier criticism over the IMF’s involvement. Euro Gains The euro advanced 1 percent to $1.3410 at 5 p.m. in New York yesterday, from $1.3272 on March 25, its lowest level since May. The Asia Dollar Index , which tracks the region’s 10 most-traded currencies, trimmed the week’s loss to 0.2 percent. Central banks in Thailand and Taiwan this week stressed they will intervene in currency markets after their respective exchange rates reached the strongest levels in at least 18 months. Bank of Thailand Governor Tarisa Watanagase said on March 25 that the central bank will act if the baht is “too volatile.” The currency has weakened 0.5 percent from its highest in 22 months touched a week ago. The baht traded little changed yesterday at 32.43 against the dollar and dropped 0.4 percent from March 19, the first weekly slide in almost two months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “The risks in the euro zone increased demand for the dollar and that puts downward pressure on Asian currencies,” said Hideki Hayashi , a global economist at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo. “There has also been intervention concern after the recent appreciation in the baht.” Taiwan Intervention Taiwan’s dollar traded unchanged yesterday at NT$31.88 against the greenback, and fell 0.3 percent during the five- day period, according to Taipei Forex Inc. It has dropped 0.7 percent from a September 2008 high of NT$31.667 on March 18. The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) said on March 25 it will enter the currency market when necessary to “maintain order” if “irregular factors caused large fluctuations.” “The central bank will intervene if the Taiwan dollar rises too fast,” said Tommy Huang , a fixed-income securities trader at Taiwan International Securities Corp. in Taipei. “It will probably accept slow appreciation.” Indonesia’s rupiah posted its first weekly decline in almost two months on speculation Japanese manufacturers based in Indonesia were sending earnings home before the end of their fiscal year on March 31. Japanese Companies The currency reached a 19-month high on March 17 as overseas investors plowed funds into local stocks and bonds. The rupiah has since retreated 0.4 percent. The volatility is being “managed” by Bank Indonesia, according to Bambang Eko Joewono , head of the global-markets division at PT Bank UOB Buana. “There’s some dollar demand from Japanese companies,” Jakarta-based Joewono said. “BI has been matching the flows coming from offshore” with demand for the greenback from oil company PT Pertamina and other state-owned firms, he said. The rupiah fell 0.3 percent this week to 9,128 per dollar, while Malaysia’s ringgit lost 0.2 percent to 3.3070. The Philippine peso and China’s yuan were little changed at 45.507 and 6.8274, respectively. To contact the reporter on this story: Yumi Teso in Bangkok at at yteso1@bloomberg.net ; Bob Chen in Hong Kong at bchen45@bloomberg.net

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Chicago-area home sales are hot, prices not: Distressed properties creating ripple throughout market

March 27, 2010

buying season. But for every 10 single-family homes and condominiums sold within the city last month, four were distressed properties. Foreclosures, once dismissed as unseemly, are increasingly in upscale neighborhoods and in move-in condition, and their

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China Banks Ordered to Tighten Real-Estate Loans to Avert Risk of Bubble

March 27, 2010

By Bloomberg News March 27 (Bloomberg) — China’s banking regulator ordered lenders to take more care when making real-estate loans, widening efforts to prevent property speculators from causing asset bubbles and bad debt. Banks should not lend to developers found by state agencies to have held land without building houses, the government said in a statement posted online yesterday evening. They should also stop approving new lines of credit to 78 government-controlled companies whose core business isn’t property development if they use collateral other than construction projects already in progress, the statement said. China’s property prices rose 10.7 percent last month, the fastest pace in almost two years, fueling concern that record lending and inflows of capital from abroad are creating asset bubbles in the world’s third-biggest economy. The government this month raised deposit requirements for buyers at land auctions to 20 percent of the minimum price to raise costs for developers. It also lifted banks’ reserve requirements twice this year and re-imposed a tax on home sales. “We have to closely monitor China’s asset bubbles,” Liu Mingkang , chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said yesterday at a conference in Beijing. Property prices have changed “quite a lot in the past five years,” he said. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan yesterday said there are “bubbles” in China, without indicating whether they were in property and stocks. “There are significant bubbles in Shanghai and along the coastal provinces, but there’s some of that going back into the hinterlands as well,” Greenspan said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. Clampdown The regulator’s latest order underlines concerns that banks may be at risk from companies that are speculatively raising capital backed by property investments. Banks must carry out “serious” examinations of developers that are repeatedly using the same pieces of land as collateral for loans, the regulator said in the statement. “These measures are intended to urge developers with land to build houses and sell them quickly to increase market supply,” said Zhao Qingming , a Beijing-based senior analyst at China Construction Bank Corp., the nation’s second largest lender. “It may curb fast growth in housing prices, but more measures are needed to tackle the root issue, including controls on land prices and speculative house-purchase investments.” “We ask banks to check the qualifications of the developers and they must have a face-to-face check,” the CBRC’s Liu said yesterday. Earlier this month he told banks China will carefully scrutinize housing loans this year. There are “serious” bubbles in property prices in China’s big cities as about 60 percent of the residents can’t afford to buy a ordinary apartment, China Construction’s Zhang said. — Belinda Cao , Yidi Zhao . Editors: Terje Langeland , Adrian Kennedy To contact the Bloomberg news staff on this story: Belinda Cao in Beijing at lcao4@bloomberg.net

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China Banks Ordered to Tighten Real-Estate Loans to Avert Risk of Bubble

March 27, 2010

By Bloomberg News March 27 (Bloomberg) — China’s banking regulator ordered lenders to take more care when making real-estate loans, widening efforts to prevent property speculators from causing asset bubbles and bad debt. Banks should not lend to developers found by state agencies to have held land without building houses, the government said in a statement posted online yesterday evening. They should also stop approving new lines of credit to 78 government-controlled companies whose core business isn’t property development if they use collateral other than construction projects already in progress, the statement said. China’s property prices rose 10.7 percent last month, the fastest pace in almost two years, fueling concern that record lending and inflows of capital from abroad are creating asset bubbles in the world’s third-biggest economy. The government this month raised deposit requirements for buyers at land auctions to 20 percent of the minimum price to raise costs for developers. It also lifted banks’ reserve requirements twice this year and re-imposed a tax on home sales. “We have to closely monitor China’s asset bubbles,” Liu Mingkang , chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said yesterday at a conference in Beijing. Property prices have changed “quite a lot in the past five years,” he said. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan yesterday said there are “bubbles” in China, without indicating whether they were in property and stocks. “There are significant bubbles in Shanghai and along the coastal provinces, but there’s some of that going back into the hinterlands as well,” Greenspan said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. Clampdown The regulator’s latest order underlines concerns that banks may be at risk from companies that are speculatively raising capital backed by property investments. Banks must carry out “serious” examinations of developers that are repeatedly using the same pieces of land as collateral for loans, the regulator said in the statement. “These measures are intended to urge developers with land to build houses and sell them quickly to increase market supply,” said Zhao Qingming , a Beijing-based senior analyst at China Construction Bank Corp., the nation’s second largest lender. “It may curb fast growth in housing prices, but more measures are needed to tackle the root issue, including controls on land prices and speculative house-purchase investments.” “We ask banks to check the qualifications of the developers and they must have a face-to-face check,” the CBRC’s Liu said yesterday. Earlier this month he told banks China will carefully scrutinize housing loans this year. There are “serious” bubbles in property prices in China’s big cities as about 60 percent of the residents can’t afford to buy a ordinary apartment, China Construction’s Zhang said. — Belinda Cao , Yidi Zhao . Editors: Terje Langeland , Adrian Kennedy To contact the Bloomberg news staff on this story: Belinda Cao in Beijing at lcao4@bloomberg.net

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Treasuries Rise as Lift in Yields After Government Auctions Spurs Buying

March 27, 2010

By Cordell Eddings March 27 (Bloomberg) — Treasuries fell, pushing 10-year note yields up the most since December, as lower-than-average demand at $118 billion in note auctions raised concern that investor interest is waning as the deficit climbs to a record. U.S. interest-rate swap spreads plunged to the lowest levels in more than two decades as investor focus shifted from the plight of financial institutions to the ability of nations to finance rising fiscal deficits. Bill Gross , manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, said the almost three-decade bond rally may be ending. Two-year notes dropped for a fourth week in the longest stretch of decreases since August before next week’s March payrolls report. “Supply and the realization that there is more to come is starting to weigh on Treasuries,” said Larry Milstein , managing director of government and agency debt trading in New York at R.W. Pressprich & Co., a fixed-income broker and dealer for institutional investors. “Swap spreads turning negative forced investors to cover shorts and dump Treasuries going into the auction, exacerbating the weakness.” A short is a bet that a security will decrease. The 10-year note’s yield rose 15 basis points, or 0.15 percentage point, to 3.85 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. The price of the 3.625 percent note due in February 2020 decreased 1 7/32, or $12.19 per $1,000 face amount, to 98 5/32. The increase in the yield was the biggest since an advance of 27 basis points for the week that ended Dec. 25. The yield touched 3.92 percent on March 25, the highest level since June 11. The two-year note’s yield rose 5 basis points to 1.04 percent and reached 1.12 percent this week, the highest level since Jan. 4. Auction Demand Demand waned at this week’s auctions of two-, five- and seven-year notes as signs of improvement in the economy boosted appetite for higher-yielding assets. At the $32 billion seven-year note sale on March 25, investors bid for 2.61 times the amount of debt on offer, the least in 10 months. The $42 billion auction of five-year debt a day earlier drew a yield of 2.605 percent, compared with the average forecast of 2.556 percent in a survey of eight of the Fed’s 18 primary dealers. The difference of 4.9 basis points was the largest since July, based on Bloomberg surveys. Investors bid for 3 times the $44 billion of two-year notes sold on March 23, the lowest since December’s sale. President Barack Obama has increased U.S. marketable debt to a record $7.4 trillion as he borrows to sustain the U.S, economic expansion. Gross on Borrowing Excess borrowing in nations including the U.S., U.K. and Japan will eventually lead to inflation as governments sell record amounts of debt to finance surging deficits, Gross said in an interview this week with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Radio from the headquarters of Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California. Pimco, which announced in December that it would offer stock funds, is advising that investors buy the debt of countries such as Germany and Canada that have low deficits and higher-yielding corporate securities. Treasuries have lost 1.3 percent this month, paring their first-quarter returns to 0.7 percent, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday that the recent increase in yields represents a “canary in the mine” reflecting investor concern over the U.S. budget deficit Economic Expansion The world’s largest economy expanded at a 5.6 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2009, figures from the Commerce Department showed yesterday. The increase, while smaller than the government’s previous estimate issued last month, marked the best performance in six years. Employers added 190,000 jobs this month after eliminating 36,000 positions in February, according to the median forecast of 62 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The unemployment rate held at 9.7 percent. The Labor Department’s payrolls report is due on April 2. The 10-year swap spread , or the difference between the rate to exchange the payment streams and the Treasury yield, turned negative for the first time on March 23. The gap dropped as low as negative 10.19 basis points this week. A negative swap spread means the Treasury yield is higher than the swap rate, which typically is greater given that the floating payments are based on interest rates that contain credit risk, such as the London interbank offered rate. “Rates have been unsettled for the past few days since swap spreads started going negative,” said Aaron Kohli , an interest-rate strategist in Stamford, Connecticut, at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, a primary dealer. “Since then, we’ve seen lots of instability in the market, which continues to make investors nervous.” To contact the reporter on this story: Cordell Eddings in New York at ceddings@bloomberg.net

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Treasuries Rise as Lift in Yields After Government Auctions Spurs Buying

March 27, 2010

By Cordell Eddings March 27 (Bloomberg) — Treasuries fell, pushing 10-year note yields up the most since December, as lower-than-average demand at $118 billion in note auctions raised concern that investor interest is waning as the deficit climbs to a record. U.S. interest-rate swap spreads plunged to the lowest levels in more than two decades as investor focus shifted from the plight of financial institutions to the ability of nations to finance rising fiscal deficits. Bill Gross , manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, said the almost three-decade bond rally may be ending. Two-year notes dropped for a fourth week in the longest stretch of decreases since August before next week’s March payrolls report. “Supply and the realization that there is more to come is starting to weigh on Treasuries,” said Larry Milstein , managing director of government and agency debt trading in New York at R.W. Pressprich & Co., a fixed-income broker and dealer for institutional investors. “Swap spreads turning negative forced investors to cover shorts and dump Treasuries going into the auction, exacerbating the weakness.” A short is a bet that a security will decrease. The 10-year note’s yield rose 15 basis points, or 0.15 percentage point, to 3.85 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. The price of the 3.625 percent note due in February 2020 decreased 1 7/32, or $12.19 per $1,000 face amount, to 98 5/32. The increase in the yield was the biggest since an advance of 27 basis points for the week that ended Dec. 25. The yield touched 3.92 percent on March 25, the highest level since June 11. The two-year note’s yield rose 5 basis points to 1.04 percent and reached 1.12 percent this week, the highest level since Jan. 4. Auction Demand Demand waned at this week’s auctions of two-, five- and seven-year notes as signs of improvement in the economy boosted appetite for higher-yielding assets. At the $32 billion seven-year note sale on March 25, investors bid for 2.61 times the amount of debt on offer, the least in 10 months. The $42 billion auction of five-year debt a day earlier drew a yield of 2.605 percent, compared with the average forecast of 2.556 percent in a survey of eight of the Fed’s 18 primary dealers. The difference of 4.9 basis points was the largest since July, based on Bloomberg surveys. Investors bid for 3 times the $44 billion of two-year notes sold on March 23, the lowest since December’s sale. President Barack Obama has increased U.S. marketable debt to a record $7.4 trillion as he borrows to sustain the U.S, economic expansion. Gross on Borrowing Excess borrowing in nations including the U.S., U.K. and Japan will eventually lead to inflation as governments sell record amounts of debt to finance surging deficits, Gross said in an interview this week with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Radio from the headquarters of Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California. Pimco, which announced in December that it would offer stock funds, is advising that investors buy the debt of countries such as Germany and Canada that have low deficits and higher-yielding corporate securities. Treasuries have lost 1.3 percent this month, paring their first-quarter returns to 0.7 percent, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday that the recent increase in yields represents a “canary in the mine” reflecting investor concern over the U.S. budget deficit Economic Expansion The world’s largest economy expanded at a 5.6 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2009, figures from the Commerce Department showed yesterday. The increase, while smaller than the government’s previous estimate issued last month, marked the best performance in six years. Employers added 190,000 jobs this month after eliminating 36,000 positions in February, according to the median forecast of 62 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The unemployment rate held at 9.7 percent. The Labor Department’s payrolls report is due on April 2. The 10-year swap spread , or the difference between the rate to exchange the payment streams and the Treasury yield, turned negative for the first time on March 23. The gap dropped as low as negative 10.19 basis points this week. A negative swap spread means the Treasury yield is higher than the swap rate, which typically is greater given that the floating payments are based on interest rates that contain credit risk, such as the London interbank offered rate. “Rates have been unsettled for the past few days since swap spreads started going negative,” said Aaron Kohli , an interest-rate strategist in Stamford, Connecticut, at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, a primary dealer. “Since then, we’ve seen lots of instability in the market, which continues to make investors nervous.” To contact the reporter on this story: Cordell Eddings in New York at ceddings@bloomberg.net

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European Stocks Climb for Fourth Week on Greek Rescue; EFG, Alpha Advance

March 27, 2010

By Julie Cruz March 27 (Bloomberg) — European stocks rose for a fourth straight week as European leaders agreed on a Greek rescue proposal, putting the International Monetary Fund on standby. EFG Eurobank Ergasias SA and Alpha Bank SA led gains as governments reached an agreement to help Greece cut its budget deficit. Hochtief AG and Next Plc rose after reporting earnings that topped analysts’ estimates. Infineon Technologies AG climbed 14 percent as Europe’s second- biggest maker of semiconductors said this week it sees increasing demand across all units. Stora Enso Oyj and UPM- Kymmene Oyj led gains in basic-resource stocks as BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research raised its recommendations on Europe’s two largest papermakers. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 1.3 percent to 263.58, a fourth straight weekly advance. The measure has gained 7.2 percent so far in March amid optimism the European Union will help Greece rein in Europe’s biggest budget deficit and as the Federal Reserve pledged to maintain record-low borrowing costs for an extended period. The gauge has surged 67 percent since March 9 last year as governments and central banks around the world maintained low interest rates and committed more than $12 trillion to stimulate the economy. “Generally the market has accepted the Greek matter and we have an agreement now, which at least in the short term will have a positive effect on markets,” said Raimund Saxinger , a fund manager at Frankfurt Trust, which oversees about $22 billion. “The market is now looking for other topics and the news flow is positive.” Greek Aid Leaders of the 16-nation euro region endorsed a Franco- German proposal for a mix of International Monetary Fund and bilateral loans at market interest rates, while voicing confidence that Greece won’t need outside help to cut Europe’s biggest budget deficit. “We had to answer the question: how can people place long-term trust in the euro as a stable currency and how can a currency union combine solidarity and stability?” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after a European Union summit in Brussels. “In this context, we really broke new ground.” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said this week that the U.S. economy still needs low interest rates and that the central bank will be ready to tighten credit “at the appropriate time.” National Benchmarks National benchmark indexes rose in 17 out of 18 western European markets. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 rose 0.9 percent and Germany’s DAX advanced 2.3 percent, while France’s CAC 40 increased 1.6 percent. Greece’s ASE Index jumped 4.8 percent as banks led gains. EFG Eurobank Ergasias, Greece’s second-largest bank, gained 11 percent to 7.20 euros, while Alpha Bank, the third-largest, rose 13 percent to 7.61 euros. Infineon climbed 14 percent to 5.05 euros, the biggest weekly gain since July. “The warehouses are empty and need to be filled even quicker as demand increases,” Christian Hoenicke , a company spokesman, said via telephone on March 24. Infineon has full order books and is struggling to meet demand, Arunjai Mittal, the head of the industrial unit, was cited as saying by Handelsblatt. His comments were confirmed by Hoenicke. Stora Enso and UPM-Kymmene Oyj increased 9.6 percent to 5.58 euros and 7.5 percent to 9.89 euros, respectively. BofA Merrill Lynch lifted its recommendations on both stocks to “neutral” from “underperform.” Anglo American, Hochtief Anglo American Plc, the world’s sixth-largest copper producer, advanced 4.9 percent to 2,795.5 pence. Copper posted its first weekly gain in three weeks on the London Metal Exchange. Hochtief rose 10 percent to 61.75 euros after reporting net income of 195 million euros ($259 million). Analysts had on average predicted a net income of 178 million euros, according to nine estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Next Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest clothing retailer, advanced 5.8 percent to 2,197 pence after the U.K. retailer said net income for the full year was 364.1 million pounds. In the U.S., the economy expanded at a 5.6 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2009, and corporate profits climbed, setting the stage for gains in employment that may broaden and preserve the expansion. The rise in gross domestic product, while smaller than the government’s previous estimate issued last month, marked the best performance in six years, figures from the Commerce Department showed. Company earnings increased 8 percent, capping the biggest year-over-year gain in a quarter century. To contact the reporter on this story: Julie Cruz in Frankfurt at jcruz6@bloomberg.net .

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European Stocks Climb for Fourth Week on Greek Rescue; EFG, Alpha Advance

March 27, 2010

By Julie Cruz March 27 (Bloomberg) — European stocks rose for a fourth straight week as European leaders agreed on a Greek rescue proposal, putting the International Monetary Fund on standby. EFG Eurobank Ergasias SA and Alpha Bank SA led gains as governments reached an agreement to help Greece cut its budget deficit. Hochtief AG and Next Plc rose after reporting earnings that topped analysts’ estimates. Infineon Technologies AG climbed 14 percent as Europe’s second- biggest maker of semiconductors said this week it sees increasing demand across all units. Stora Enso Oyj and UPM- Kymmene Oyj led gains in basic-resource stocks as BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research raised its recommendations on Europe’s two largest papermakers. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 1.3 percent to 263.58, a fourth straight weekly advance. The measure has gained 7.2 percent so far in March amid optimism the European Union will help Greece rein in Europe’s biggest budget deficit and as the Federal Reserve pledged to maintain record-low borrowing costs for an extended period. The gauge has surged 67 percent since March 9 last year as governments and central banks around the world maintained low interest rates and committed more than $12 trillion to stimulate the economy. “Generally the market has accepted the Greek matter and we have an agreement now, which at least in the short term will have a positive effect on markets,” said Raimund Saxinger , a fund manager at Frankfurt Trust, which oversees about $22 billion. “The market is now looking for other topics and the news flow is positive.” Greek Aid Leaders of the 16-nation euro region endorsed a Franco- German proposal for a mix of International Monetary Fund and bilateral loans at market interest rates, while voicing confidence that Greece won’t need outside help to cut Europe’s biggest budget deficit. “We had to answer the question: how can people place long-term trust in the euro as a stable currency and how can a currency union combine solidarity and stability?” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after a European Union summit in Brussels. “In this context, we really broke new ground.” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said this week that the U.S. economy still needs low interest rates and that the central bank will be ready to tighten credit “at the appropriate time.” National Benchmarks National benchmark indexes rose in 17 out of 18 western European markets. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 rose 0.9 percent and Germany’s DAX advanced 2.3 percent, while France’s CAC 40 increased 1.6 percent. Greece’s ASE Index jumped 4.8 percent as banks led gains. EFG Eurobank Ergasias, Greece’s second-largest bank, gained 11 percent to 7.20 euros, while Alpha Bank, the third-largest, rose 13 percent to 7.61 euros. Infineon climbed 14 percent to 5.05 euros, the biggest weekly gain since July. “The warehouses are empty and need to be filled even quicker as demand increases,” Christian Hoenicke , a company spokesman, said via telephone on March 24. Infineon has full order books and is struggling to meet demand, Arunjai Mittal, the head of the industrial unit, was cited as saying by Handelsblatt. His comments were confirmed by Hoenicke. Stora Enso and UPM-Kymmene Oyj increased 9.6 percent to 5.58 euros and 7.5 percent to 9.89 euros, respectively. BofA Merrill Lynch lifted its recommendations on both stocks to “neutral” from “underperform.” Anglo American, Hochtief Anglo American Plc, the world’s sixth-largest copper producer, advanced 4.9 percent to 2,795.5 pence. Copper posted its first weekly gain in three weeks on the London Metal Exchange. Hochtief rose 10 percent to 61.75 euros after reporting net income of 195 million euros ($259 million). Analysts had on average predicted a net income of 178 million euros, according to nine estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Next Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest clothing retailer, advanced 5.8 percent to 2,197 pence after the U.K. retailer said net income for the full year was 364.1 million pounds. In the U.S., the economy expanded at a 5.6 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2009, and corporate profits climbed, setting the stage for gains in employment that may broaden and preserve the expansion. The rise in gross domestic product, while smaller than the government’s previous estimate issued last month, marked the best performance in six years, figures from the Commerce Department showed. Company earnings increased 8 percent, capping the biggest year-over-year gain in a quarter century. To contact the reporter on this story: Julie Cruz in Frankfurt at jcruz6@bloomberg.net .

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