May 2010

Dan Ariely: The Irrational Side of Corporate Bonuses

May 27, 2010

In light of the financial crisis of 2008 and the subsequent outrage over the continuing bonuses paid to many of those deemed responsible for it, many people wonder how incentives really affect CEOs and Wall Street executives. Corporate boards generally assume that very large performance- based bonuses will motivate CEOs to invest more effort in their jobs and that the increased effort will result in higher- quality output.* But is this really the case? Through experiments we conducted, all of which can be found in much more depth in my new book, The Upside of Irrationality , we discovered that using money to motivate people can be a double-edged sword. For tasks that require cognitive ability, low to moderate performance-based incentives can help. But when the incentive level is very high, it can command too much attention and thereby distract the person’s mind with thoughts about the reward. This can create stress and ultimately reduce the level of performance. A few years ago, before the financial crisis, I was invited to give a talk to a select group of bankers. The meeting took place in a well-appointed conference room at a large investment company’s office in New York City. The food and wine were delicious and the views from the windows spectacular. I told the audience about different projects I was working on, including the experiments on high bonuses in India and MIT. They all nodded their heads in agreement with the theory that high bonuses might backfire — until I suggested that the same psychological effects might also apply to the people in the room. They were clearly offended by the suggestion. The idea that their bonuses could negatively influence their work performance was preposterous, they claimed. I tried another approach and asked for a volunteer from the audience to describe how the work atmosphere at his firm changes at the end of the year. “During November and December,” the fellow said, “very little work gets done. People mostly think about their bonuses and about what they will be able to afford.” In response, I asked the audience to try on the idea that the focus on their upcoming bonuses might have a negative effect on their performance, but they refused to see my point. Maybe it was the alcohol, but I suspect that those folks simply didn’t want to acknowledge the possibility that their bonuses were vastly oversized. (As the prolific author and journalist Upton Sinclair once noted, “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.”) Somewhat unsurprisingly, when presented with the results of these experiments, the bankers also maintained that they were, apparently, super special individuals; unlike most people, they insisted, they work better under stress. It didn’t seem to me that they were really so different from other people, but I conceded that perhaps they were right. I invited them to come to the lab so that we could run an experiment to find out for sure. But, given how busy bankers are and the size of their paychecks, it was impossible to tempt them to take part in our experiments or to offer them a bonus that would have been large enough to be meaningful for them. Without the ability to test bankers, Racheli Barkan (a professor at Ben-Gurion University in Israel) and I looked for another source of data that could help us understand how highly paid, highly specialized professionals perform under great pressure. I know nothing about basketball, but Racheli is an expert, and she suggested that we look at clutch players — the basketball heroes who sink a basket just as the buzzer sounds. Clutch players are paid much more than other players, and are presumed to perform especially brilliantly during the last few minutes or seconds of a game, when stress and pressure are highest. With the help of Duke University men’s basketball Coach Mike Krzyzewski (“Coach K”), we got a group of professional coaches to identify clutch players in the NBA (the coaches agreed, to a large extent, about who is and who is not a clutch player). Next, we watched videos of the twenty most crucial games for each clutch player in an entire NBA season (by most crucial, we meant that the score difference at the end of the game did not exceed three points). For each of those games, we measured how many points the clutch players had shot in the last five minutes of the first half of each game, when pressure was relatively low. Then we compared that number to the number of points scored during the last five minutes of the game, when the outcome was hanging by a thread and stress was at its peak. We also noted the same measures for all the other “nonclutch” players who were playing in the same games. We found that the non-clutch players scored more or less the same in the low-stress and high-stress moments, whereas there was actually a substantial improvement for clutch players during the last five minutes of the games. So far it looked good for the clutch players and, by analogy, the bankers, as it seemed that some highly qualified people could, in fact, perform better under pressure. But — and I’m sure you expected a “but” — there are two ways to gain more points in the last five minutes of the game. An NBA clutch player can either improve his percentage success (which would indicate a sharpening of performance) or shoot more often with the same percentage (which suggests no improvement in skill but rather a change in the number of attempts). So we looked separately at whether the clutch players actually shot better or just more often. As it turned out, the clutch players did not improve their skill; they just tried many more times. Their field goal percentage did not increase in the last five minutes (meaning that their shots were no more accurate); neither was it the case that non- clutch players got worse. At this point you probably think that clutch players are guarded more heavily during the end of the game and this is why they don’t show the expected increase in performance. To see if this were indeed the case, we counted how many times they were fouled and also looked at their free throws. We found the same pattern: the heavily guarded clutch players were fouled more and got to shoot from the free-throw line more frequently, but their scoring percentage was unchanged. Certainly, clutch players are very good players, but our analysis showed that, contrary to common belief, their performance doesn’t improve in the last, most important part of the game. Obviously, NBA players are not bankers. The NBA is much more selective than the financial industry; very few people are sufficiently skilled to play professional basketball, while many, many people work as professional bankers. As we’ve seen, it’s also easier to get positive returns from high incentives when we’re talking about physical rather than cognitive skills. NBA players use both, but playing basketball is more of a physical than a mental activity (at least relative to banking). So it would be far more challenging for the bankers to demonstrate “clutch” abilities when the task is less physical and demands more gray matter. Also, since the basketball players don’t actually improve under pressure, it’s even more unlikely that bankers would be able to perform to a higher degree when they are under the gun. Could all this mean that sometimes we might actually behave less rationally when we try harder? If that’s so, what is the correct way to pay people without overstressing them? One simple solution is to keep bonuses low — something those bankers I met with might not appreciate. Another approach might be to pay employees on a straight salary basis. Though it would eliminate the consequences of over-motivation, it would also eradicate some of the benefits of performance-based payment. A better approach might be to keep the motivating element of performance-based payment but eliminate some of the nonproductive stress it creates. To achieve this, we could, for example, offer employees smaller and more frequent bonuses. Another approach might be to offer employees a performance-based payment that is averaged over time — say, the previous five years, rather than only the last year. This way, employees in their fifth year would know 80 percent of their bonus in advance (based on the previous four years), and the immediate effect of the present year’s performance would matter less. Whatever approach we take to optimize performance, it should be clear that we need a better understanding of the links between compensation, motivation, stress, and performance. And we need to take our peculiarities and irrationalities into account. Dan Ariely is the author of The Upside of Irrationality .

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Arthur Samberg Pays $28M To Settle Microsoft Insider Trading Charges

May 27, 2010

WASHINGTON — An investment firm and its founder and chairman, Arthur Samberg, have agreed to pay a total of $28 million to settle regulators’ charges of insider trading in Microsoft shares, in a long-running case that prompted scrutiny in Congress and by an agency watchdog. The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement Thursday with Pequot Capital Management Inc., whose core hedge fund was liquidated last year, and with Samberg, a well-known money manager and philanthropist. They neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing in settling the SEC’s civil lawsuit filed in federal court in Connecticut. The SEC alleged that the hedge fund traded shares of Microsoft Corp. on confidential information provided by a former employee of the technology giant whom it later hired. That alleged tipster, David Zilkha, was hired by Pequot in April 2001. The SEC alleges in a new administrative proceeding against him that Zilkha concealed from the agency staff that he had gotten inside information on Microsoft’s earnings and recommended to Samberg that he buy the stock based on the advance information. Zilkha, 41, left Pequot in November 2001. His attorney, Henry Putzel III, didn’t immediately return telephone calls seeking comment Thursday. Pequot Capital and Samberg together are paying $10 million in civil fines and $18 million in restitution of trading profits plus interest. In addition, Samberg is barred under the settlement from working for any investment adviser firm. Samberg, 69, who has been Pequot’s chairman and CEO since founding the firm in 1998, has been winding down Pequot, which was a major investment firm managing about $15 billion in assets at its peak. It had been based in Westport, Conn., but moved its headquarters to Wilton, Conn., in May 2009, when it liquidated its core hedge fund amid the SEC’s insider-trading investigation. Jonathan Gasthalter, a spokesman for Pequot and Samberg, declined to comment. In December 2006, the SEC closed an earlier investigation of Pequot that it had started in late 2004. No enforcement action was taken. The agency reopened the probe in January 2009 after documents emerged in a divorce proceeding in Connecticut that showed that Pequot began paying $2.1 million to Zilkha in mid-2007. As rumors swirled in April 2001 that Microsoft would miss its earnings estimates for the latest quarter, Samberg sought information from Zilkha, who had just accepted Samberg’s offer to work at Pequot, the SEC alleged in its suit. Zilkha then asked a former Microsoft colleague, who told him that the company would meet or exceed the earnings estimates, the agency said. By trading on the information from Zilkha, Pequot and Samberg made more than $14 million for the Pequot funds, the SEC said. “The cases have two particularly troubling aspects – a hedge fund manager trading on illegal insider information, and his tipper source who withheld crucial information about the scheme during an SEC investigation,” SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement. “Both are high-priority targets” for the agency’s enforcement division, he said. The Pequot case created a high-profile controversy for the SEC, starting in 2006. Gary Aguirre, a former SEC attorney who worked on the first Pequot investigation and was fired by the agency in 2005, alleged there was interference in the probe by SEC officials and improper deference to a prominent Wall Street figure whom Aguirre wanted to interview. Aguirre’s allegations became public in 2006 and prompted an investigation by Republican staff of the Senate Judiciary and Finance Committees. Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Arlen Specter, D-Pa., spoke critically on the Senate floor in 2007 about the SEC’s handling of the Pequot investigation. The SEC has “finally followed the evidence to its logical conclusions after years of unnecessary delays and timidity,” Grassley, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said Thursday. “There was clearly a case to be made against Pequot, and the SEC has finally admitted it. Today’s announcement bears out what (Aguirre) argued years ago.” The SEC’s inspector general, David Kotz, found in a 2008 report there were “serious questions” about the impartiality and fairness of the agency’s initial probe of Pequot. An administrative law judge at the SEC declined Kotz’s request for disciplinary action against the agency’s enforcement director at the time and another official over the handling of the probe. The relaunching of the investigation in January 2009 came at a time when the SEC was sustaining intense public and congressional criticism for lapses in its oversight and enforcement efforts. As the scandal involving disgraced money manager Bernard Madoff stunned Wall Street in December 2008, revelations surfaced that staff at the SEC repeatedly failed over the course of a decade to fully investigate credible allegations against him.

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Arthur Samberg Pays $28M To Settle Microsoft Insider Trading Charges

May 27, 2010

WASHINGTON — An investment firm and its founder and chairman, Arthur Samberg, have agreed to pay a total of $28 million to settle regulators’ charges of insider trading in Microsoft shares, in a long-running case that prompted scrutiny in Congress and by an agency watchdog. The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement Thursday with Pequot Capital Management Inc., whose core hedge fund was liquidated last year, and with Samberg, a well-known money manager and philanthropist. They neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing in settling the SEC’s civil lawsuit filed in federal court in Connecticut. The SEC alleged that the hedge fund traded shares of Microsoft Corp. on confidential information provided by a former employee of the technology giant whom it later hired. That alleged tipster, David Zilkha, was hired by Pequot in April 2001. The SEC alleges in a new administrative proceeding against him that Zilkha concealed from the agency staff that he had gotten inside information on Microsoft’s earnings and recommended to Samberg that he buy the stock based on the advance information. Zilkha, 41, left Pequot in November 2001. His attorney, Henry Putzel III, didn’t immediately return telephone calls seeking comment Thursday. Pequot Capital and Samberg together are paying $10 million in civil fines and $18 million in restitution of trading profits plus interest. In addition, Samberg is barred under the settlement from working for any investment adviser firm. Samberg, 69, who has been Pequot’s chairman and CEO since founding the firm in 1998, has been winding down Pequot, which was a major investment firm managing about $15 billion in assets at its peak. It had been based in Westport, Conn., but moved its headquarters to Wilton, Conn., in May 2009, when it liquidated its core hedge fund amid the SEC’s insider-trading investigation. Jonathan Gasthalter, a spokesman for Pequot and Samberg, declined to comment. In December 2006, the SEC closed an earlier investigation of Pequot that it had started in late 2004. No enforcement action was taken. The agency reopened the probe in January 2009 after documents emerged in a divorce proceeding in Connecticut that showed that Pequot began paying $2.1 million to Zilkha in mid-2007. As rumors swirled in April 2001 that Microsoft would miss its earnings estimates for the latest quarter, Samberg sought information from Zilkha, who had just accepted Samberg’s offer to work at Pequot, the SEC alleged in its suit. Zilkha then asked a former Microsoft colleague, who told him that the company would meet or exceed the earnings estimates, the agency said. By trading on the information from Zilkha, Pequot and Samberg made more than $14 million for the Pequot funds, the SEC said. “The cases have two particularly troubling aspects – a hedge fund manager trading on illegal insider information, and his tipper source who withheld crucial information about the scheme during an SEC investigation,” SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement. “Both are high-priority targets” for the agency’s enforcement division, he said. The Pequot case created a high-profile controversy for the SEC, starting in 2006. Gary Aguirre, a former SEC attorney who worked on the first Pequot investigation and was fired by the agency in 2005, alleged there was interference in the probe by SEC officials and improper deference to a prominent Wall Street figure whom Aguirre wanted to interview. Aguirre’s allegations became public in 2006 and prompted an investigation by Republican staff of the Senate Judiciary and Finance Committees. Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Arlen Specter, D-Pa., spoke critically on the Senate floor in 2007 about the SEC’s handling of the Pequot investigation. The SEC has “finally followed the evidence to its logical conclusions after years of unnecessary delays and timidity,” Grassley, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said Thursday. “There was clearly a case to be made against Pequot, and the SEC has finally admitted it. Today’s announcement bears out what (Aguirre) argued years ago.” The SEC’s inspector general, David Kotz, found in a 2008 report there were “serious questions” about the impartiality and fairness of the agency’s initial probe of Pequot. An administrative law judge at the SEC declined Kotz’s request for disciplinary action against the agency’s enforcement director at the time and another official over the handling of the probe. The relaunching of the investigation in January 2009 came at a time when the SEC was sustaining intense public and congressional criticism for lapses in its oversight and enforcement efforts. As the scandal involving disgraced money manager Bernard Madoff stunned Wall Street in December 2008, revelations surfaced that staff at the SEC repeatedly failed over the course of a decade to fully investigate credible allegations against him.

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Arthur Samberg Pays $28M To Settle Microsoft Insider Trading Charges

May 27, 2010

WASHINGTON — An investment firm and its founder and chairman, Arthur Samberg, have agreed to pay a total of $28 million to settle regulators’ charges of insider trading in Microsoft shares, in a long-running case that prompted scrutiny in Congress and by an agency watchdog. The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement Thursday with Pequot Capital Management Inc., whose core hedge fund was liquidated last year, and with Samberg, a well-known money manager and philanthropist. They neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing in settling the SEC’s civil lawsuit filed in federal court in Connecticut. The SEC alleged that the hedge fund traded shares of Microsoft Corp. on confidential information provided by a former employee of the technology giant whom it later hired. That alleged tipster, David Zilkha, was hired by Pequot in April 2001. The SEC alleges in a new administrative proceeding against him that Zilkha concealed from the agency staff that he had gotten inside information on Microsoft’s earnings and recommended to Samberg that he buy the stock based on the advance information. Zilkha, 41, left Pequot in November 2001. His attorney, Henry Putzel III, didn’t immediately return telephone calls seeking comment Thursday. Pequot Capital and Samberg together are paying $10 million in civil fines and $18 million in restitution of trading profits plus interest. In addition, Samberg is barred under the settlement from working for any investment adviser firm. Samberg, 69, who has been Pequot’s chairman and CEO since founding the firm in 1998, has been winding down Pequot, which was a major investment firm managing about $15 billion in assets at its peak. It had been based in Westport, Conn., but moved its headquarters to Wilton, Conn., in May 2009, when it liquidated its core hedge fund amid the SEC’s insider-trading investigation. Jonathan Gasthalter, a spokesman for Pequot and Samberg, declined to comment. In December 2006, the SEC closed an earlier investigation of Pequot that it had started in late 2004. No enforcement action was taken. The agency reopened the probe in January 2009 after documents emerged in a divorce proceeding in Connecticut that showed that Pequot began paying $2.1 million to Zilkha in mid-2007. As rumors swirled in April 2001 that Microsoft would miss its earnings estimates for the latest quarter, Samberg sought information from Zilkha, who had just accepted Samberg’s offer to work at Pequot, the SEC alleged in its suit. Zilkha then asked a former Microsoft colleague, who told him that the company would meet or exceed the earnings estimates, the agency said. By trading on the information from Zilkha, Pequot and Samberg made more than $14 million for the Pequot funds, the SEC said. “The cases have two particularly troubling aspects – a hedge fund manager trading on illegal insider information, and his tipper source who withheld crucial information about the scheme during an SEC investigation,” SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement. “Both are high-priority targets” for the agency’s enforcement division, he said. The Pequot case created a high-profile controversy for the SEC, starting in 2006. Gary Aguirre, a former SEC attorney who worked on the first Pequot investigation and was fired by the agency in 2005, alleged there was interference in the probe by SEC officials and improper deference to a prominent Wall Street figure whom Aguirre wanted to interview. Aguirre’s allegations became public in 2006 and prompted an investigation by Republican staff of the Senate Judiciary and Finance Committees. Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Arlen Specter, D-Pa., spoke critically on the Senate floor in 2007 about the SEC’s handling of the Pequot investigation. The SEC has “finally followed the evidence to its logical conclusions after years of unnecessary delays and timidity,” Grassley, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said Thursday. “There was clearly a case to be made against Pequot, and the SEC has finally admitted it. Today’s announcement bears out what (Aguirre) argued years ago.” The SEC’s inspector general, David Kotz, found in a 2008 report there were “serious questions” about the impartiality and fairness of the agency’s initial probe of Pequot. An administrative law judge at the SEC declined Kotz’s request for disciplinary action against the agency’s enforcement director at the time and another official over the handling of the probe. The relaunching of the investigation in January 2009 came at a time when the SEC was sustaining intense public and congressional criticism for lapses in its oversight and enforcement efforts. As the scandal involving disgraced money manager Bernard Madoff stunned Wall Street in December 2008, revelations surfaced that staff at the SEC repeatedly failed over the course of a decade to fully investigate credible allegations against him.

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LBi Appoints Caroline McGuckian to MD of LBi Milan

May 27, 2010

STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN and AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS–(Marketwire – May 27, 2010) – LBi is pleased to announce that Caroline McGuckian has taken the role of Managing Director of LBi IconMedialab based in Milan. LBi IconMedialab is the leading digital agency in Italy and has been established for 11 years. LBi IconMedialab retains a stellar list of clients such as Lavazza, Alfa Romeo and the European Space Agency. Caroline’s position will be key to ensuring that the Italian office offers a consistent LBi global offering to both international and local clients engaged in that territory.

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Millionaires Targeted as Deficits Prompt Politicians to Cry `Tax the Rich’

May 27, 2010
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Obama Will Cancel Drilling Off Virginia’s Coast as Agency Chief Steps Down

May 27, 2010

By Julianna Goldman and Edwin Chen May 27 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama will cancel a plan to drill for oil off Virginia’s coast and extend for six months a moratorium on new deepwater drilling permits, as the head of agency responsible for issuing the permits stepped down. In addition, planned drilling by Royal Dutch Shell Plc of exploratory wells in the Arctic off Alaska will be delayed while a presidential commission studies the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in an effort to determine how to prevent any future disasters, according an administration aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity in advance of the official announcement. In the wake of criticism of the government’s oversight of energy exploration on public lands, the head of the Minerals Management Service, Elizabeth Birnbaum , has submitted her resignation from the post she’s held since 2009, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said. The changes are the result of a 30-day safety review on offshore drilling the president ordered from Salazar following the explosion and fire aboard a drilling rig leased by BP Plc that resulted in a massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Salazar briefed Obama and senior White House advisers last night. Obama is scheduled to discuss the report and the government’s response to the Gulf oil spill at 12:45 p.m. today at the White House. Tougher Oversight Obama will announce plans to toughen oversight of the oil industry even while the presidential panel continues to investigate the spill, the White House aide said. The lease sale off the Virginia coast is being canceled because of environmental concerns and objections raised by the Defense Department, the aide said. “We are disappointed that he would cancel it,” Paul Cicio , president of the Industrial Energy Consumers of America, a group of energy users such as chemical manufacturers that has lobbied for more offshore drilling, said in a telephone interview. California Congresswoman Lois Capps , a Democrat who represents Santa Barbara, site of a massive spill in 1969, hailed Obama’s decision. ‘Broken’ System “I applaud the president’s decision to call for an extended timeout on new deepwater drilling activities around the country,” she said in a statement. “It’s as plain as the nose on your face that the current system for regulating offshore oil activities is broken.” Obama’s decision signals that two decades of “pro-drilling sentiment appears to have reached its turning point,” Kevin Book, a managing director at ClearView Energy Partners LLC, a Washington-based policy analysis firm, said today in a note to investors. Birnbaum is the first ranking government official to lose her job over the spill. Obama, in remarks made May 15, vowed to end the “cozy relationship” between the MMS and the oil and gas industry. David Axelrod , senior adviser to President Barack Obama, said yesterday in an interview that the MMS was guilty of “appalling” conduct and said the agency itself “needs a top kill of its own.” Salazar told a congressional committee today that Birnbaum resigned of her own volition. “She’s a good public servant,” he said. BP’s latest efforts to plug a leaking well that’s been spewing oil into the gulf for more than a month continued overnight and so far “we are proceeding to plan,” Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward said in an e-mailed transcript of remarks he made in Houston yesterday. BP began pumping mud-like drilling fluid into the well at 2 p.m. New York time yesterday in a procedure known as a “top kill” that Hayward said would take at least 24 hours to work. Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen said the operation has temporarily stopped the flow of oil from the damaged well. To contact the reporter on this story: Julianna Goldman in Washington at jgoldman6@bloomberg.net Edwin Chen in Washington at Echen32@bloomberg.net

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BP `Top Kill’ Operation Temporarily Stops Oil Flow, U.S. Coast Guard Says

May 27, 2010

By Jim Polson May 27 (Bloomberg) — BP Plc made progress toward plugging a leaking well that’s been spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico for more than a month by temporarily stopping the flow, U.S. Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen said. “They’ve had some success overnight,” Allen said today in an interview on WWL radio in New Orleans. “Everybody is cautiously optimistic but there’s no reason to declare victory yet.” The company began pumping mud-like drilling fluid into the well at 2 p.m. New York time yesterday in a procedure known as top kill. Robert Dudley , managing director for London-based BP, said on NBC’s “Today” show this morning it would require another 24 hours before the company can “be sure of success.” The effort is aimed at tamping down the gusher of oil and natural gas and then sealing the well with cement. It has halted the flow of oil and gas and BP now must drop the pressure in the well to zero for the cement seal, Allen said. BP jumped as much as 6.6 percent in London trading after the Los Angeles Times quoted Allen as saying that the top kill had succeeded. The Coast Guard issued a “technical clarification” saying the temporary halt in flow doesn’t mean the effort was successful. Success of top kill would bring to an end a leak that has poured millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf and soiled at least 70 miles (113 kilometers) of coast. BP rose 28.9 pence, or 5.9 percent, to 520.9 pence at 3:06 p.m. in London trading. BP may rise to 550 pence or higher should the company confirm top kill success, Jason Kenney , a London-based analyst for ING Commercial Banking, wrote today in a note to clients. ING rates the shares at “buy.” Lessening Cost “Any early cessation of the leak would only lessen the likely final cost of this episode for BP,” Kenney wrote. The well began leaking after an April 20 explosion and fire on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. BP leased the rig from Geneva-based Transocean Ltd. , the largest deepwater driller. “A whole series of failures,” preceded the blowout, BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward said yesterday on CNN. “It will be Friday night or Saturday at the earliest before we know definitively that the well has been killed,” Robert MacKenzie , a Houston-based analyst for FBR Capital Markets, wrote today in a note to clients. “They are in the process of mixing more mud or perhaps even a junk shot to pump before they switch to cement to seal the well.” BP has said a “junk shot” injection of rubber scraps, may be used as needed to seal leaks in the well piping so that enough pressure can be exerted on the column of oil and gas. Obama Response President Barack Obama will announce today the extension of a moratorium that began after oil started to spill from BP’s well, a White House aide said. The president will also cancel a proposal to drill for oil off of the coast of Virginia and planned drilling by Royal Dutch Shell Plc of exploratory wells in the Arctic off Alaska. Obama will discuss the drilling delays at 12:45 p.m. local time today at the White House. The shift is the result of a 30- day safety review on offshore drilling the president ordered from Interior Secretary Ken Salazar , according to the aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity in advance of the official announcement. Chances of Success BP will need to monitor the well and conduct pressure tests to determine if the oil flow has been stopped, Doug Suttles , chief operating officer for exploration and production, said yesterday at a press conference in Robert, Louisiana. “We are taking great care to make sure we complete this job successfully.” Hayward put the chances of the plan working at 60 percent to 70 percent three days ago. The oil slick and areas that appear to have oil on the surface cover about 29,000 square miles, said John Amos, president of Shepherdstown, West Virginia-based SkyTruth, a non- profit organization that uses satellite imagery to measure the spill. That’s an area almost as large as South Carolina. About 100 miles of Louisiana coastline including marshes and beaches have been affected, Coast Guard Rear Admiral Mary Landry said at yesterday’s press conference in Robert. BP said May 22 that 5,000 barrels a day was the best estimate for the rate that oil is pouring from the well, a figure challenged by some independent scientists. The U.S. Geological Survey said today the flow rate was 12,000 barrels to 19,000 barrels a day. The amount of oil being spilled will help determine BP’s liability for the leak. BP’s Costs The spill has cost BP a total of $760 million, or about $22 million a day, the company said May 24. Average daily profit last year was $45 million a day, according to data compiled by Bloomberg . The federal government has spent more than $100 million responding to the spill and will be reimbursed by BP, Landry of the Coast Guard said. BP said yesterday in an e-mailed statement it has paid more than $36 million in damage claims and will appoint an independent mediator to review and assist claims. BP has said the well can be permanently sealed only by one of two relief wells it’s drilling, which won’t be complete before August. BP will clean up “every drop” of oil, Hayward said May 24. Other Alternatives If the top of the well can’t be plugged, the company plans to replace the damaged riser pipe at the well. That requires cutting away a kink in the existing pipe, at least temporarily increasing the size of the leak, BP Senior Vice President Kent Wells said May 25. Crews would then attach a rubber-sealed cap to the top of the blowout preventer, a series of valves designed to cut off flow from the well. That effort would attempt to divert more oil to the surface than BP has been able to manage with a small pipe inserted in the broken riser on May 16, according to Wells. The top kill “procedure has not been carried out in 5,000- feet (1,524-meter) water depth before and BP has stressed its success cannot be assured,” Andrew Whittock , an analyst in London at Oriel Securities Ltd., said in a note yesterday. “Many commentators believe the chance of success is less than 50 percent.” To contact the reporter on this story: Jim Polson in New York at jpolson@bloomberg.net

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Goldman Says Buy Microsoft Stock After Apple Overtakes Rival in Market Cap

May 27, 2010

By Rita Nazareth May 27 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp . shares have fallen to attractive levels after a selloff that caused the software maker to lose its status as the world’s biggest technology company by market value, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc . Microsoft slumped 18 percent in May through yesterday, when Apple Inc .’s market value exceeded Microsoft’s by $2.94 billion. Technology companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index retreated 11 percent since April 30. Microsoft shares lost 4.1 percent yesterday after Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer said that the effects of the European debt crisis will spread outside the region. “While European contagion is a concern, Ballmer’s comments were not Microsoft specific,” Sarah Friar , an analyst at New York-based Goldman Sachs, wrote in a report to clients dated yesterday. “The shares underperformed large-cap tech despite having relatively lower exposure outside of the U.S. Given significant underperformance and attractive valuation levels, we are buyers of the shares.” Microsoft had the biggest gain in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, surging 5.3 percent to $26.34 at 10:54 a.m. in New York. It jumped 5.4 percent earlier, the most intraday since Oct. 23. To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in New York at rnazareth@bloomberg.net

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Deutsche Bank Bonuses to Be Partly Based on Performance Against Six Peers

May 27, 2010

By Aaron Kirchfeld and Jann Bettinga May 27 (Bloomberg) — Deutsche Bank AG ’s longer-term bonuses for management board members will be partially based on the company’s stock performance compared to six peers, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and BNP Paribas SA. Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank also plans to introduce a system allowing the company to cap or eliminate shorter-term bonuses based on profitability targets, supervisory board Chairman Clemens Boersig said today. The rules are part of a new compensation policy that shareholders will vote on today at the annual meeting in Frankfurt. The longer-term bonuses will be based on share price performance and dividends over three years, compared with a group consisting of Goldman Sachs, BNP Paribas, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Banco Santander SA, Barclays Plc and Credit Suisse Group AG, he said. If Deutsche Bank doesn’t match the lower threshold, no payment is made and if it exceeds the goal it will be capped at 25 percent above the peer group. The short-term bonuses will be based on the bank’s return- on-equity target and absolute ROE over a two-year period, Boersig said. If Deutsche Bank misses the target by more than 50 percent, no short-term bonus will be paid, and the amount by which the goal can be exceeded will be capped at 50 percent for compensation calculations. “Our compensation system ensures that the interests of the management board members are aligned with those of our shareholders on a permanent basis, which very clearly underlines the sustainable, long-term nature of our compensation,” Boersig said. Governments in Europe and the U.S. are facing pressure to limit bankers’ compensation after some financial firms were bailed out by taxpayers. Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann has warned of a regulatory and political “backlash” if his industry doesn’t change its pay practices. To contact the reporters on this story: Aaron Kirchfeld in Frankfurt at akirchfeld@bloomberg.net Jann Bettinga in Frankfurt at jbettinga@bloomberg.net .

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Mortgage Lenders Seek Regulator Relief From Forced Repurchase on Bad Loans

May 27, 2010

By Jody Shenn May 27 (Bloomberg) — Mortgage lenders are seeking relief from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as the government-supported companies force them to buy back more soured debt, said John Courson , president of the industry’s largest trade group. While his members “certainly understand” their contracts require repurchases of defaulted loans when items such as faulty appraisals, inflated borrower incomes or missing documentation are discovered, the Mortgage Bankers Association has started to “aggressively” push the two companies and their regulator to ease up, he said. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, propped up by unlimited taxpayer capital, should acknowledge lenders are unfairly absorbing too many losses, with unemployment that reached a 27- year high among the causes of defaults unrelated to loan quality, Courson said yesterday in an interview at Bloomberg News headquarters in New York. “We’re trying to see if we can’t reach some type of a system that says there is a bright line out there, if this loan has been making payments and defaulted for a reason that is neither fraud nor related to the underwriting of the loan, it shouldn’t be subject to a repurchase,” he said. Last quarter, the companies forced lenders to repurchase $3.1 billion of loans, up 63 percent from a year earlier, after defaults surged to the highest since the Great Depression, according to regulatory filings . Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are among banks that have reported setting aside money to cover such demands. Repurchase Requests Freddie Mac, based in McLean, Virginia, had $4.8 billion of repurchase requests pending as of March 31, up from $3.8 billion on Dec. 31. Washington-based Fannie Mae hasn’t made a similar disclosure. Repurchases are “triggered when loans are out of compliance with our contractual requirements, per the law,” Brad German , a Freddie Mac spokesman, said in a telephone interview. “Because we are trying to be good stewards of taxpayers’ dollars, it is very important that not one of those dollars goes to loans that should have not been sold to us.” Corinne Russell , a spokeswoman for the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the companies’ regulator, declined to immediately comment. Janis Smith , a Fannie Mae spokeswoman, didn’t immediately return a telephone message. The U.S. government seized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which own or guarantee almost $5 trillion of U.S. housing debt, in September 2008, and has guided their actions during their so- called conservatorships. They’ve drawn $145 billion in aid from the Treasury Department. Tough on Put-backs The companies are too tough on so-called put-backs, following the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s encouragement to be aggressive, Courson said. If a borrower made on-time payments for two or three years before defaulting, that’s a sign that underwriting quality wasn’t a problem and a lender shouldn’t be forced to take back the loan, he said. “Lenders are getting repurchase requests on the same loan at multiple times for multiple issues, which shows you they’re going from station one, to station two, to station three” as the companies and their contractors “scrub” loan files looking for errors that weren’t material or never occurred, he said. Mortgage insurer MGIC Investment Corp. and bond guarantor MBIA Inc. are among companies also overcoming potential losses by denying claims or seeking reimbursement because loans didn’t match lenders’ descriptions. Mortgage insurers have been turning down 20 percent to 25 percent of claims in recent quarters, up from 7 percent historically, according to a December report by Moody’s Investors Service. Mortgage Insurance When loan insurers rescind coverage on a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac mortgage, which requires such protection when loan- to-value ratios exceed 80 percent, lenders typically need to buy back the debt. Repurchases by bigger lenders often prompt banks to try to return loans to the lenders from whom they acquired them before selling them to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Repurchases will be “an issue for the next 24 to 36 months for all us,” Steven Jacobson, chief executive officer of Madison, Wisconsin-based Fairway Independent Mortgage Corp., said in a May 24 interview at a conference held in New York by the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers Association. The company last year originated more than $3 billion in mortgages. “Any big bank can put any one of us out of business.” To contact the reporter on this story: Jody Shenn in New York at jshenn@bloomberg.net

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CBOE Holdings Seeks to Raise Up to $339 Million in IPO of Options Exchange

May 27, 2010

By Nick Baker May 27 (Bloomberg) — CBOE Holdings Inc., owner of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, said it plans to sell shares in its initial public offering for between $27 and $29 each. The offering is for 11.7 million shares, meaning CBOE’s deal would raise up to $339 million given the forecast price range.

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Pequot, Chief Samberg to Pay $28 Million in SEC Insider-Trading Settlement

May 27, 2010

By David Scheer May 27 (Bloomberg) — Pequot Capital Management Inc. and the hedge-fund firm’s founder, Arthur Samberg , will pay almost $28 million to settle regulatory claims they illegally tapped information from a Microsoft Corp. employee to bet on the software maker’s stock in 2001. Samberg, who once managed the world’s biggest hedge fund, agreed to be barred from working as an investment adviser, the Securities and Exchange Commission said today in a statement announcing the case. The agency also brought a civil claim against the former Microsoft worker, David Zilkha , saying he concealed his actions during an earlier probe. “The cases have two particularly troubling aspects — a hedge-fund manager trading on illegal insider information, and his tipper source who withheld crucial information about the scheme during an SEC investigation,” Robert Khuzami , the agency’s enforcement director, said in the statement. “Both are high-priority targets.” Senators Charles Grassley , an Iowa Republican, and Arlen Specter , a Pennsylvania Democrat, have criticized the SEC’s decision to close the earlier inquiry in 2006. The case reignited in January 2009, after investigators got copies of e- mails between Zilkha and a Microsoft colleague from a hard drive in possession of Zilkha’s ex-wife. Jonathan Gasthalter , a spokesman for Samberg and Wilton, Connecticut-based Pequot, declined to comment. Zilkha’s attorney, Henry Putzel, didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment. Microsoft Earnings In April 2001, Zilkha, now 41, was planning to leave Microsoft and join Pequot when Samberg e-mailed him, seeking information on whether the company would miss quarterly earnings estimates, according to the SEC’s complaints. Zilkha contacted colleagues, learned that earnings would meet or beat expectations, and advised Samberg to buy the stock. Samberg, 69, invested in Microsoft stock options, helping Pequot funds generate $14.8 million in illegal profits, the SEC said in its lawsuit. Samberg and Pequot agreed to forfeit almost $18 million in profits and interest and pay $10 million in fines, the regulator said in its statement. Samberg started Pequot Partners fund in 1986 while he was at Dawson-Samberg Capital Management Inc., a money-management firm based in Southport, Connecticut. He spun off Pequot Capital at the start of 1999, and by 2001 the firm had $15 billion in assets, making it the largest hedge fund in the world. In a May 2009 letter, Samberg told investors he planned to liquidate his main hedge funds after the new insider-trading investigation “cast a cloud” over the firm. The ban on his work as an investment adviser includes exceptions “aimed solely at winding down Pequot,” the SEC said. To contact the reporter on this story: David Scheer in New York at dscheer@bloomberg.net .

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Stocks Rally on China Commitment to European Investment; Euro Strengthens

May 27, 2010

By Elizabeth Stanton and David Merritt May 27 (Bloomberg) — Stocks surged and the euro snapped a three-day decline against the dollar as China said it remains a long-term investor in Europe, damping concerns that the region’s debt crisis will worsen. Commodities jumped and Treasuries fell. The MSCI World Index , a gauge of equities in 24 developed nations, climbed 2.6 percent at 11:07 a.m. in New York. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index jumped 2.5 percent. The euro strengthened 1 percent against the dollar, rebounding from near a four-year low, and appreciated 1.9 percent compared with the yen. Oil and copper advanced for a second day. Yields on 10-year Treasury notes jumped 15 basis points to 3.34 percent. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose to a one-week high and the Dow Jones Industrial Average rebounded above 10,000 after closing below for the first time since February. China’s foreign exchange regulator said reports it was reviewing euro holdings are “groundless,” boosting optimism the European debt crisis is stabilizing. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi plans $30.4 billion in budget cuts and Spain’s Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero won parliamentary approval for austerity measures. “There is a huge sigh of relief that we’re making progress on the European sovereign debt crisis through some of these budget-deficit-reduction announcements, and the announcement that big players like China are not going to back away from the market,” said Alan Gayle , senior investment strategist at RidgeWorth Investments in Richmond, Virginia. RidgeWorth manages $63 billion. U.S. stocks rallied even after government data showed the economy grew at a slower pace than previously calculated in the first quarter and jobless claims fell less than economists estimated. GDP, Jobless Claims The 3 percent increase at an annual rate in U.S. gross domestic product was less than the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and compares with an advance estimate of 3.2 percent issued last month, Commerce Department figures showed. Initial jobless claims fell by 14,000 to 460,000 in the week ended May 22, Labor Department figures showed. Economists on average forecast claims would drop to 455,000, according to a Bloomberg survey. The Stoxx 600 gained 2.7 percent, extending yesterday’s 2.4 percent surge, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index jumped 2 percent. Man Group Plc, the biggest publicly traded hedge fund firm, soared 8.9 percent in London after reporting earnings that topped analyst estimates. BHP Billiton Plc and Rio Tinto Plc advanced 4 percent each after the Australian newspaper said the Pacific nation may change the rate at which a proposed mining profit tax takes effect. BP Rallies BP Plc gained 5.6 percent as the oil company attempted to plug the Gulf of Mexico leak that cut the stock’s price by a quarter. U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar told a House Appropriations Committee the “top kill” process is continuing and whether it will succeed, “is still an unknown.” The S&P 500 erased yesterday’s 0.6 percent decline. Benchmark U.S. indexes climbed in early trading yesterday after sales of new homes rose to the highest level in two years and growth in durable-goods orders topped economist estimates. Benchmark indexes erased gains in the final hour yesterday following reports that China was evaluating its European investments. China’s sovereign wealth fund later said it’s maintaining its European investments. “Europe has been, and will be one of the major markets for investing China’s exchange reserves,” the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said in a statement on its website today. The official Xinhua News Agency reported China Investment Corp. President Gao Xiqing said yesterday Europe’s turmoil “hasn’t had too big of an impact” on CIC’s investment decisions. ‘Significant Move’ The S&P 500 is down 10 percent from its 19-month high in April after credit-ratings downgrades of Greece, Portugal and Spain heightened concern some European governments will struggle to fund deficits. U.S. stock markets are oversold and may rally strongly in the next few days, said investor Barton Biggs , who runs New York-based hedge fund Traxis Partners LP. “I think they’re going to stabilize in this general area, and then we’re going to have a significant move to the upside,” Biggs, whose flagship fund returned three times the industry average last year, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Emerging Markets The MSCI Emerging Markets Index advanced 2.3 percent, extending yesterday’s 3.2 percent rally and heading for its biggest back-to-back gain since July 2009. Benchmark indexes in China, South Korea and Hungary rose more than 1 percent today. Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius said he’s been buying stocks in Brazil, Russia, India and China in the past month and the slump in emerging markets is a “correction” in a bull market. “Despite the fact that a lot of people think that we are entering into a bear market, we don’t believe so,” Mobius, who oversees about $34 billion in emerging markets as Templeton’s Singapore-based executive chairman, said in an interview yesterday in Cairo. “When the time comes, emerging markets will recover faster and in a big way.” The yen and the dollar declined as the gains in stocks damped demand for the currencies as a haven, encouraging traders to buy higher-yielding assets. The Japanese currency slid against all 16 of its most-traded counterparts while the dollar declined versus all but the yen. The South Korean won appreciated for the first time in three days after the central bank forecast a $2.5 billion current-account surplus for May. Crude Rallies Crude oil for July delivery advanced 3.3 percent to $73.88 a barrel in New York trading. Copper for July delivery jumped 2.3 percent to $3.1515 a pound in New York. Aluminum, nickel and zinc also gained in London. Palladium for immediate delivery increased 4.5 percent to $458.95 an ounce, advancing for the first time in three days. Treasuries fell for a second day as the government prepared to sell $31 billion of seven-year notes today. The German 10- year bund yield rose four basis points to 2.69 percent before a report economists say will show inflation accelerated this month, fueling concern governments will struggle to entice buyers amid record-low yields and improving economic data. The cost of insuring against losses on European corporate bonds fell, with the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of credit- default swaps on 50 mostly high-yield companies dropping about 20 basis points to 581.1, according to Markit Group Ltd. That’s still near the highest level in 10 months. To contact the reporters on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net ; David Merritt in London on dmerritt1@bloomberg.net .

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Middlesex Water Company Announces Leadership Changes

May 27, 2010

ISELIN, NJ–(Marketwire – May 27, 2010) –  Middlesex Water Company ( NASDAQ : MSEX ) today announced that in connection with the company’s ongoing succession plan, J. Richard Tompkins has relinquished his position as Chairman of its Board of Directors. Tompkins will continue his service under his term as a director. In addition to his role as Middlesex President & CEO, Dennis W. Doll has been named Chairman, effective immediately. Mr. Doll had assumed the role of Vice Chairman in May 2009.

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Initial Jobless Claims in U.S. Are Higher Than Forecast as Firings Persist

May 27, 2010
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Melanoma Drug Unleashing Immune System Seen as Bristol Cancer Breakthrough

May 27, 2010

By Shannon Pettypiece May 27 (Bloomberg) — For more than three decades, scientists have dreamed of unleashing one of nature’s most powerful inventions, the human immune system, to treat cancer. Now, a wave of treatments that activate the immune system to attack tumors is emerging from drug-company laboratories, giving hope of longer life to patients with terminal lung cancer, leukemia, brain tumors and melanoma, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its May 31 edition. Leading the push is Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. ’s experimental drug for skin cancer, one of dozens of immunotherapies to be spotlighted next week at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting. In its late stages, melanoma can be lethal within months, killing more than 65,000 people a year. Bristol- Myers’s drug, called ipilimumab, extended life in its deadly final phase, three small trials have found. If those results stand in data reported at the meeting, the drug may get U.S. regulatory approval as early as next year and may be in doctors’ hands in 2012, the company said in March 4 investor call. “We have hundreds of patients who are still alive after taking this treatment, and that is something unheard of” in advanced-stage melanoma, Renzo Canetta , Bristol-Myers’s vice president of oncology clinical research, said in a telephone interview. In the earlier trials, ipilimumab kept more than one-third of patients alive for at least 18 months, about a year longer than existing treatments for terminal melanoma. The trial to be reported at the cancer meeting tested the drug in 676 patients for five years, according to the study’s description. Bristol-Myers, based in New York, fell 16 cents, or less than 1 percent, to $22.72 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday. The company gained 14 percent in the past 12 months before today. 130,000 People Yearly Melanoma affects about 130,000 people a year according to the World Health Organization . No new treatment has been approved for the disease in more than a decade and current medicines keep patients with the advanced stage of the disease alive for six to eight months, said Steven O’Day, who tested the drug for Bristol-Myers at the Angeles Clinic and Research Institute in Santa Monica, California. Ipilimumab is central to Bristol-Myers’s plan to bolster its share of the $52 billion cancer-drug market and counter generic competition during the next six years to drugs with more than $11 billion in annual sales. If approved, the drug may have $1 billion in annual sales within five years, said Linda Bannister a health-care analyst at Edward Jones & Co. Success with ipilimumab will be a sign as to whether the company’s strategy of acquiring small biotechnology companies — they bought the drug’s creator Medarex Inc. for $2.4 billion last year — is paying off. Patent Expirations “Bristol faces a large amount of patent expirations and from that perspective ipilimumab is very important, this could be big for them,” said Bannister, who is based in Des Peres, Missouri. A success “will show that Bristol made a really good acquisition with Medarex,” she said. Jedd Wolchok, a skin cancer researcher at Memorial Sloan- Kettering Cancer Center in New York, is a believer. One of the first patients Wolchok treated with the drug in 2004 was a 24-year-old woman who likely had less than a year to live after failing on other treatments. After getting four doses intravenously, her tumors shrunk and eventually disappeared. She has started a family since and sends Wolchok a Christmas card yearly, he said. “We are resetting the balance between the person and the tumor and the tumor no longer has the upper hand,” Wolchok said in a telephone interview. “We have been talking about turning cancer into a chronic disease, and this shows it is possible.” Derived From Mice The Bristol-Myers’s drug is derived from mice that were genetically altered to create a human version of an antibody, a soldier in the immune system army. The antibody is designed “to push the accelerator down” on the system, said O’Day. The drug blocks a protein called CTLA-4, which when working properly keeps the immune system from getting too revved up and attacking the body’s own tissue. Tweaked by scientists at Medarex, the medicine opens the way for the body to release excessive white-blood cells that attack the tumors the way they would another foreign invader, such as a virus. Along with showing signs of aiding skin cancer patients, the drug’s action may also work against tumors of the lung and prostate, said Trevor Polischuk , an analyst with OrbiMed Advisors LLC in New York. ‘A Game Changer’ “This could be a game changer in cancer,” Polischuk said in a telephone interview. While ipilimumab is now one of Bristol-Myers’s most promising drugs in development, it could have died in testing two years ago had researchers not noticed a strange phenomenon among patients who they thought weren’t benefiting. A study released in December 2007 showed that it failed to meet the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s criteria of benefiting at least 10 percent of melanoma patients. In 2008, when Bristol-Myers had been expecting to file for approval with the FDA, the company said it would delay its application after the agency said the current studies weren’t enough to garner approval. Company researchers, though, kept studying the drug on a hunch it was having a benefit that wasn’t detected in the studies. They noticed an odd trend among some patients whose tumors continued to get larger while they were on the medicine. Once these patients were removed from the study because they weren’t showing a benefit, their tumors unexpectedly began to shrink and the researchers found they were living months and, in some cases, years longer than expected. Bristol-Myers realized that what appeared to be tumor progression was an inflammatory response from the treatment as the white blood cells called T-cells attacked the tumor. Excluded Patients If researchers hadn’t excluded these patients from the data reported to the FDA in 2008, they may have been able to prove the benefit was greater than seen in previous studies, Bristol Myers’s Canetta said. Ipilimumab won’t be the first in the latest family of cancer immunotherapies to show strong success against a cancer. Dendreon’s prostate cancer vaccine Provenge was cleared by the FDA on April 29. That day, Dendreon’s stock rose as much as 38 percent, and the Nasdaq Biotech Index had its biggest rise in six months. Next week, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting, the world’s biggest gathering of cancer doctors, a range of companies will show how their medicines will provoke, redirect, or accelerate the immune system to kill cancer cells. For instance, New York-based Pfizer Inc. , the world’s biggest drugmaker, will present data on a brain tumor vaccine from a study that’s in the second stage of three needed for U.S. regulatory approval. Micromet Technology Micromet Inc. , a Bethesda, Maryland, biotechnology company, will update doctors about a technology it developed that activates T-cells to attack tumors. German drugmaker Merck KGaA and Oxford BioMedica Plc of the U.K. will show how their vaccines work against breast and kidney malignancies. The concept of immunotherapy has taken a long time to bear fruit. In the early 1970s, scientists started developing lab- grown proteins called monoclonal antibodies, designed either to block tumor growth or make tumors visible to other immune-system cells. They do this by homing in on specific molecules or “targets” on the surface of cancer cells. The first success came in 1997, when Genentech Inc. and Biogen Idec Inc. launched Rituxan, a drug for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma that last year had $5.7 billion in revenue. Drug Shortcomings While these drugs are a big business for companies, most have shortcomings as medicines because they only targeted one of multiple growth drivers pushing the tumors, said Steven Rosenberg , chief of surgery at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. “We need to do better than prolonging survival by months,” Rosenberg said. Drugs like ipilimumab may be more effective for longer periods of time because they are training the immune system to recognize and attack cancer cells, researchers say. “The hope is that we aren’t just extending, but that we are really curing people with widespread cancer,” said O’Day, the researcher in California “It is a little early to say that, but there is hope.” To contact the reporter responsible for this story: Shannon Pettypiece in New York at spettypiece@bloomberg.net .

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Deutsche Bank’s Ackermann Said to Hold `Intensive’ Talks on CEO Successor

May 27, 2010

By Jann Bettinga and Aaron Kirchfeld May 27 (Bloomberg) — Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann is in “intensive talks” to find a successor for the top post at Germany’s biggest bank, three years before he is due to step down. Ackermann said he intends to find a successor jointly with Supervisory Board Chairman Clemens Boersig and “we have been in intensive discussions for some months already.” The CEO, speaking at the annual shareholders’ meeting in Frankfurt today, said he doesn’t expect the market is currently interested in the topic. Ackermann, 62, agreed in April 2009 to extend his contract until 2013 after the supervisory board failed to agree on a successor, including Boersig, who had put himself forward as a candidate, people familiar with the matter said at the time. To contact the reporter on this story: Jann Bettinga in Frankfurt at jbettinga@bloomberg.net ; Aaron Kirchfeld in Frankfurt at akirchfeld@bloomberg.net .

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Tiffany Profit, Sales Beat Analysts’ Estimates on Growth in Asia, Europe

May 27, 2010

By Cotten Timberlake May 27 (Bloomberg) — Tiffany & Co. , the world’s second- largest luxury jewelry retailer, reported first-quarter profit and sales that exceeded analysts’ estimates. Earnings from continuing operations totaled 48 cents a share, New York-based Tiffany said today in a statement distributed on Business Wire. Analysts predicted 37 cents a share, the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales jumped 22 percent, led by growth in Asia and Europe. Wealthy consumers have stepped up discretionary purchases as their confidence has improved amid economic recovery. Tiffany rose 99 cents, or 2.3 percent, to $43.59 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday. The shares had gained 1.4 percent this year before today. For the year, Tiffany forecast per-share profit of $2.55 to $2.60 compared with a March 22 projection of $2.45 to $2.50. Twenty analysts estimated $2.50, on average. Net income climbed to $64.4 million, or 50 cents a share, from $24.3 million, or 20 cents, a year earlier. Revenue in the three months ended April 30 gained to $633.6 million. Analysts predicted $613.4 million on average. Gross margin, the fraction of earnings left after subtracting the cost of goods, widened to 57.8 percent. Brian Tunick, an analyst with J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. in New York, estimated 57.2 percent. He rates the shares “neutral.” Tiffany operates 221 stores, 79 of them in the U.S. To contact the reporter on this story: Cotten Timberlake in Washington at ctimberlake@bloomberg.net

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Europe Debt Crisis Likely to Be Contained as U.S., Asia Grow, Bullard Says

May 27, 2010

By Kim McLaughlin and Johan Carlstrom May 27 (Bloomberg) — Europe’s sovereign debt crisis is likely to be contained within the region as the recovery trajectory in the U.S. and Asia protects them from contagion, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard said. “The recovery in the U.S. is strong, Asia is very strong. I just don’t see this coming out of Europe,” he told reporters in Stockholm today. Euro-area ministers agreed on May 2 to provide 110 billion euros ($135 billion) of aid to Greece as the country struggles to control a deficit that reached 13.6 percent of gross domestic product last year, more than four times the European Union limit of 3 percent. When that failed to stop the euro’s slide, the EU an International Monetary Fund offered a financial lifeline of almost $1 trillion to member states. The single currency has lost 14 percent against the dollar this year. “Many countries have restructured or even defaulted over the years. In most cases, or nearly all cases, that has not resulted in any kind if global implications,” Bullard said. “There is no particular reason why a sovereign debt crisis has to mean anything for the global economy.” The euro rose 0.8 percent against the dollar today, appreciating for the first time this week to trade at 1.2273 at 11:28 a.m. in Frankfurt. Against the yen, the euro traded 1.3 percent stronger at 110.94. The gains followed comments by China’s foreign exchange regulator that reports suggesting it was reviewing its euro holdings are “groundless.” Debt Restructuring Nobel Prize winning economist Robert Mundell said yesterday debt restructuring may be “inevitable” in parts of the euro area and Steve Hanke , the architect of currency regimes from Argentina to Estonia, warned a Greek default may become unavoidable. Mundell, who won the economics prize in 1999, predicted debt restructuring for “one or two” euro nations within five years. Hanke of Johns Hopkins University said Greece’s “death spiral” will end in default if debt obligations can’t be renegotiated, in an article published on the website of the Cato Institute in Washington on May 25. “I do not think this is going to derail the global recovery,” Bullard said. Of the U.S. economy, he said “real gross domestic product will reach its previous peak here shortly, maybe in the summer or early fall; globally, growth is looking fairly good.” Growth Outlook The euro area’s economy will grow 0.9 percent this year after contracting 4.1 percent in 2009, the European Commission said on May 5. That compares with the commission’s estimate for U.S. growth of 2.8 percent this year after last year’s 2.4 percent contraction. It will be “very hard to get the contagion effects to move across borders or around the world because the governments have basically said they’re not going to allow the largest institutions to fail,” Bullard said. “Because these government guarantees are in place I don’t think you get the contraction around the world that you saw in the fall of 2008 and 2009.” To contact the reporter on this story: Johan Carlstrom in Stockholm at o jcarlstrom@bloomberg.net .

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Loomis’s Fuss Cuts Treasuries on `Awful Fundamentals,’ Echoes Gross Stance

May 27, 2010

By Candice Zachariahs and Wes Goodman May 27 (Bloomberg) — Dan Fuss , whose Loomis Sayles Bond Fund beat 95 percent of competitors the past year, said he sold all of his Treasury holdings because of prospects interest rates will rise as the U.S. borrows unprecedented amounts. “The fundamentals are awful,” Fuss said in a telephone interview yesterday from Boston. “The incremental borrower of funds in the U.S. capital markets is rapidly becoming the U.S. Treasury. Do you really want to buy the debt of the biggest issuer?” Fuss said he doesn’t own Treasuries in any of the investments he is directly involved with after selling the last of them this week. Loomis Sayles cut the securities to the lowest possible amount in funds with liquidity requirements or a minimum mandated level of U.S. government debt, he said. His comments echo those of Bill Gross , who runs the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co. and warned in his investment outlook for June that the U.S. is in a “debt super cycle.” Moody’s Investors Service said this week the U.S.’s top bond rating will come under pressure unless the government takes steps to reduce projected record budget deficits. Treasuries rallied this month as the spreading credit crisis in Europe led investors to seek the relative safety of U.S. securities. Government debt returned 1.95 percent in May as of yesterday, heading for the biggest monthly gain since March 2009, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note rose three basis points to 3.23 percent as of 6 a.m. in London, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The 3.5 percent security due May 2020 fell 10/32, or $3.13 per $1,000 face amount, to 102 10/32. Record Debt Sales The yield dropped to 3.06 percent on May 25, a level not seen since April 29, 2009. It may rise past 4 percent next year as the U.S. government sells record amounts of debt, Fuss said in a Bloomberg Television interview March 31. “Treasuries are clearly the safest place to be other than cash if you want to quickly raise money,” he said yesterday. “They are the riskiest place to be if you’re concerned with, in our mind, the longer-term trend.” Fuss’s Loomis Sayles Bond Fund returned 27 percent in the past 12 months, Bloomberg data show. Loomis Sayles, based in Boston, oversees $145 billion. President Barack Obama has increased U.S. marketable debt to a record $7.9 trillion to fund spending programs, fueling speculation the supply of Treasuries will outstrip demand. The U.S. budget deficit , which rose to $1.4 trillion in fiscal 2009, will drive Treasury sales to a record $2.43 trillion this year, according to a February survey of bond- trading companies. ‘Silly Risks’ Fuss said his best guess is that figures such as these will send Treasuries down by year-end. “It’s silly in our opinion to take extreme market risk for a low return,” Fuss said. Gross, co-chief investment officer at Pimco, said Treasuries are benefitting for now as investors seek secure places to put their money. “During the many liquidity crises, such as we’ve seen over the last week or two, you want to put it in a safe-haven type of sovereign,” Gross, who is based in Newport Beach, California, said on Bloomberg Television yesterday. “The United States is that at the moment, but as I’ve suggested, that won’t always be the case. Investors have to be leery going forward.” The government’s finances have been “substantially worsened by the credit crisis, recession, and government spending to address these shocks,” Moody’s analysts led by Steven A. Hess wrote in a report May 25. “The ratios of general government debt to GDP and to revenue are deteriorating sharply, and after the crisis they are likely to be higher than the ratios of other Aaa-rated countries.” To contact the reporters on this story: Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net ; Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net .

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U.S. Economy Expands Less Than First Estimated, Highlighting Europe Risks

May 27, 2010

By Timothy R. Homan May 27 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. economy grew in the first quarter at a slower pace than previously calculated, reflecting smaller gains in consumer and business spending and highlighting the risks to the recovery posed by the European debt crisis. The 3 percent increase at an annual rate in gross domestic product was less than the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and compares with an advance estimate of 3.2 percent issued last month, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Corporate profits grew and incomes were revised down. Households are gaining confidence this quarter as employment improves, and manufacturing is powering ahead as business investment and exports keep growing. The setback in stocks and rebound in the dollar caused by Europe’s financial troubles may cool spending here and abroad, giving the Federal Reserve additional scope to keep interest rates low. “We are at a fairly fragile turning point,” said Julia Coronado, a senior U.S. economist at BNP Paribas in New York. “There’s a lot of headwinds that the economy is struggling with.” More Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits last week, indicating firings persist even as the economy rebounds and employment picks up, figures from the Labor Department also showed today. Initial jobless claims fell by 14,000 to 460,000 in the week ended May 22. Economists forecast claims would drop to 455,000, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. Shares Rebound Stock-index futures trimmed earlier gains following the reports. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 2 percent to 1,082.5 at 8:56 a.m. in New York. Treasury securities dropped, pushing the yield on the 10-year note up to 3.27 percent from 3.19 percent late yesterday. GDP was forecast to grow at a 3.4 percent annual pace, according to the median estimate of 79 economists surveyed. Projections ranged from gains of 3 percent to 4.1 percent. Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, rose at a 3.5 percent pace last quarter, compared with the 3.6 percent the government estimated last month and a 1.6 percent gain in the prior three months. The first-quarter increase was the biggest since 2007. Corporate Profits Company earnings increased 5.5 percent in the first quarter after climbing 8 percent in the previous three months. Earnings were up 31 percent from the same time last year, the biggest year-over-year gain since 1984, one reason why hiring and spending on capital equipment is improving. Chrysler Group LLC, the automaker controlled by Fiat SpA, posted a $143 million operating profit in its first quarter and said last week that it will add a second shift to a Detroit factory that makes Jeep Grand Cherokees. The company will add 1,100 workers at the assembly plant to increase production of the redesigned sport-utility vehicle, Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne said at a May 21 news conference. He said he expects to add jobs at other Chrysler plants, without specifying which factories. Today’s report also revised household earnings data covering the past two quarters. Wages and salaries decreased by $13.2 billion in the last three months of 2009, a downward revision of $30.3 billion. The figures, which incorporate new data on bonuses and stock options, indicate employment may have been weaker at the end of last year than current data show. Less Income Today’s report also showed that gross domestic income, or the money earned by the people, businesses and government agencies whose purchases go into calculating growth, grew at a slower pace than GDP before adjusting for inflation during the past two quarters. According to Fed research, GDI is a better gauge of the economy, signaling growth may be overestimated. Since then, mounting concern over the sovereign-debt crisis in Europe has rattled global financial markets. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is down 8.7 percent from March 31 through yesterday, and the dollar index, which tracks the currency’s performance against six major currencies including the euro and yen, is up 7.6 percent. The drop in stocks will damp household wealth, leading to smaller gains in consumer spending over the next year than would otherwise be the case, according to Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. The advance in the dollar will also hurt American exports, he said. ‘Negative’ Influence “The measurable effects of the recent move in financial conditions have been, on net, negative, but not enough to derail the recovery,” Feroli said in a May 24 note to clients. There are also “less quantifiable effects,” he said, that will bear watching in coming months, including banks’ willingness to lend and an increase in uncertainty that may prove a barrier to further gains in hiring and business investment. Business spending on new equipment and software advanced at a 12.7 percent pace last quarter after advancing at a 19 percent rate the previous three months, the biggest gain since 1998, today’s report showed. Spending on structures, including office buildings and factories, dropped at a 15.3 percent pace in the first quarter. Today’s GDP report is the second for the quarter and will be revised in June as more information becomes available to the government. The Fed’s preferred price gauge, which is tied to consumer spending and strips out food and energy costs, rose at a 0.6 percent annual pace, the lowest level since records began in 1959. The reading underscores the Fed’s pledge to keep interest rates near zero in coming months. To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net

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Stocks, U.S. Futures Rally on China Commitment to Europe; Euro Strengthens

May 27, 2010

By David Merritt May 27 (Bloomberg) — Stocks and U.S. futures surged and the euro snapped a three-day decline against the dollar as China said it remains a long-term investor in Europe, damping concerns that the region’s debt crisis will worsen. Commodities rallied. The MSCI World Index , a gauge of equities in 24 developed nations, climbed 0.9 percent at 9:07 a.m. in New York. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index jumped 2 percent. The euro strengthened 0.5 percent against the dollar, snapping a three- day slump that dragged it to near a four-year low, and appreciated 1.1 percent compared with the yen. Oil and copper advanced for a second day. More than ten shares gained for each that fell on the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index and futures indicated the S&P 500 may erase yesterday’s drop. China’s foreign exchange regulator said reports that it was reviewing its euro holdings are “groundless,” boosting sentiment in the wake of a debt crisis that wiped about $6 trillion from the value of equities this month. “The news out of China is providing some relief, while better data out of the U.S. is stoking some cautious optimism in markets,” said Melinda Burgess , a foreign-exchange strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. U.S. futures maintained gains even after government data showed the economy grew at a slower pace than previously calculated in the first quarter and jobless claims fell less than economists estimated. GDP, Jobless Claims The 3 percent increase at an annual rate in U.S. gross domestic product was less than the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and compares with an advance estimate of 3.2 percent issued last month, figures from the Commerce Department showed. Initial jobless claims fell by 14,000 to 460,000 in the week ended May 22, Labor Department figures showed. Economists on average forecast claims would drop to 455,000, according to a Bloomberg survey. The Stoxx 600 gained 1.9 percent, extending yesterday’s 2.4 percent surge, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index jumped 1.9 percent. Man Group Plc, the biggest publicly traded hedge fund firm, soared 6.1 percent in London after reporting earnings that topped analyst estimates. BHP Billiton Plc rose 4.3 percent and Rio Tinto Plc advanced 3.5 percent after the Australian newspaper said the Pacific nation may change the rate at which a proposed mining profit tax takes effect. BP Plc gained 3.3 percent as the oil company attempts to plug the Gulf of Mexico spill that cut the stock’s price by a quarter. S&P 500 Rebound The rally in U.S. futures indicated the S&P 500 may erase yesterday’s 0.6 percent decline. The benchmark index fell in the final hour yesterday as a report that China may review investments in European government bonds spurred concern the debt crisis will worsen. China’s sovereign wealth fund denied reports that it’s reviewing holdings of euro assets and said it’s maintaining its European investments. “Europe has been, and will be one of the major markets for investing China’s exchange reserves,” the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said in a statement on its website today. The official Xinhua News Agency reported China Investment Corp. President Gao Xiqing said yesterday Europe’s turmoil “hasn’t had too big of an impact” on CIC’s investment decisions. U.S. stock markets are oversold and may rally strongly in the next few days, said investor Barton Biggs , who runs New York-based hedge fund Traxis Partners LP. “I think they’re going to stabilize in this general area, and then we’re going to have a significant move to the upside,” Biggs, whose flagship fund returned three times the industry average last year, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Emerging Markets The MSCI Emerging Markets Index advanced 1.5 percent, extending yesterday’s 3.2 percent rally and heading for its biggest back-to-back gain since July 2009. Benchmark indexes in China, South Korea and Hungary rose more than 1 percent today. Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius said he’s been buying stocks in Brazil, Russia, India and China in the past month and the slump in emerging markets is a “correction” in a bull market. “Despite the fact that a lot of people think that we are entering into a bear market, we don’t believe so,” Mobius, who oversees about $34 billion in emerging markets as Templeton’s Singapore-based executive chairman, said in an interview yesterday in Cairo. “When the time comes, emerging markets will recover faster and in a big way.” South Korean Won The yen and the dollar declined as the gains in stocks damped demand for the currencies as a haven, encouraging traders to buy higher-yielding assets. The Japanese currency slid against all 16 of its most-traded counterparts while the dollar declined versus all but the yen. The South Korean won appreciated for the first time in three days after the central bank forecast a $2.5 billion current-account surplus for May. Crude oil for July delivery advanced 2.3 percent to $73.16 a barrel in New York trading. Copper for delivery in three months jumped 1.8 percent to $6,901 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange. Aluminum, nickel and zinc also gained. Palladium for immediate delivery added 3 percent to $452.08 an ounce, advancing for the first time in three days. Treasuries fell for a second day as the government prepared to sell $31 billion of seven-year notes today. The 10-year yield jumped 9 basis points to 3.28 percent. The German 10-year bund yield rose two basis points to 2.67 percent before a report economists say will show inflation accelerated this month, fueling concern governments will struggle to entice buyers amid record-low yields and improving economic data. The cost of insuring against losses on European corporate bonds fell, with the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of credit- default swaps on 50 mostly high-yield companies dropping 25.4 basis points to 575.33, according to Markit Group Ltd. That’s still near the highest level in 10 months. To contact the reporter on this story: David Merritt in London on dmerritt1@bloomberg.net

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Goldman Sachs Preparing Point-By-Point Defense Of SEC’s Charges: CNBC

May 27, 2010

Goldman Sachs is preparing to file a full-blown, point-by-point defense against the fraud allegations filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to people familiar with the matter.

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Geithner: U.S., Europe Broadly Agree On Financial Reform Details

May 27, 2010

BERLIN — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says the U.S. and Europe are in “broad agreement” on the need for regulatory reform of the financial system and is stressing his commitment to “a strong global framework of reforms.” Geithner spoke Thursday after meeting with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble. European countries agreed this month on a euro750 billion (nearly $1 trillion) loan backstop for governments in danger of defaulting on debt – coupled with efforts to cut budget deficits. Geithner welcomed Germany’s “leadership role” in putting together that package. He said all countries understand the need to cut deficits and are working closely together “to make sure that we are strengthening and reinforcing (the) global recovery.” THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below. BERLIN (AP) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is expected in Berlin for talks with his German counterpart as Europe grapples with its debt crisis. Geithner meets with Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble in the German capital Thursday. The talks follow a private dinner Wednesday night with European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet and a stop at Germany’s central bank, the Bundesbank. European countries agreed earlier this month on a euro750 billion (nearly $1 trillion) loan backstop for governments in danger of defaulting on debt. Geithner said in London Wednesday that while the European Union has a good plan for tackling the debt crisis, it must act on it soon. He said he believes European leaders “will do what’s necessary to make it work.”

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Axios Mobile Assets Corp. Corporate Update

May 27, 2010

TORONTO–(Marketwire – May 27, 2010) –  AXIOS MOBILE ASSETS CORP. (formerly Microlab Online Inc.) (Canadian Unlisted Board: MCLB), provides an update on its news release of February 23, 2010.

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Heidi Tucker Joins InsideView as Vice President of Business Development and Alliances

May 27, 2010

Proven Executive to Work With Partners to Scale the Distribution of SalesView

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Chistina Romer, Obama’s Economic Adviser, Urges Congress To Do More To Help Economy

May 27, 2010

PARIS — It would be a mistake for the U.S. to rapidly wind down fiscal stimulus measures to bring down the deficit, one of President Barack Obama’s top advisers said Thursday. Christina Romer, head of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, advocated further measures such as fiscal relief for state and local governments and extension of emergency benefits for the long-term unemployed. “It would be wrong to tighten fiscal policy immediately, as that would nip the nascent economic recovery in the bud,” Romer said at the annual meeting of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a 31-nation watchdog that includes the world’s richest economies. Romer said that “nothing would be more damaging than a protracted recession that brought about permanent high unemployment.” She said that “The American economy is clearly improving, but unemployment is still painfully high.” As the U.S. fiscal stimulus plan winds down next year, “further targeted fiscal actions’” are needed for the U.S. to add oxygen to the “nascent economic recovery,” Romer said. Romer said there is a risk that current high cyclical unemployment in the U.S. could become permanent structural unemployment unless measures are taken to increase the pace of the U.S. economy’s recovery.

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Linda Keenan: Shadow Elite: Wall Street Culture – They Still Don’t Get It (Except Their Bonuses)

May 27, 2010

By Linda Keenan and Janine R. Wedel Have the overpaid, tin-eared members of the financial elite been humbled in the past 2 years, or fearful of coming reform? Hardly. Here’s a bit of an angry email floating around Wall Street this spring. Go ahead and continue to take us down..What’s going to happen when we can’t find jobs on the Street anymore? Guess what: We’re going to take yours. We get up at 5am & work till 10pm or later. We aren’t dinosaurs. We are smarter and more vicious than that, and we are going to survive. Now Wall Street is “popping Champagne” over the gaps in the bill, says one reporter, and maybe not just metaphorical Champagne, either. Arianna Huffington this week noted the resurgence of luxury spending and CEO perks even as the economy staggers. The perks include country club dues, chauffeured drivers, and even “personal financial planning”. Why would top players need financial planning? They seem to succeed and thrive no matter their track record, one of the disturbing trends Janine tackles in her book Shadow Elite . Tales of excess spark outrage, and justifiably so, but the way executives and Wall Street managers are paid is as dangerous as it is garish. As President Obama put it in his Wall Street reform speech, “perverse incentives” encourage players “to take reckless risks”. Where did these incentives, values, the attitude seen in that email come from, and will financial reform change anything? Those who study the issue have far more dramatic reform ideas than Washington does, proposals Wall Street would call draconian and the rest of us would call common sense. One intriguing voice on Wall Street compensation culture is, like Janine, an anthropologist: Karen Ho , author of Liquidated – An Ethnography of Wall Street . She worked on Wall Street herself, and was struck by something that Janine also finds in Shadow Elite : for today’s power brokers, the only constant is change, and ultra-flexibility is now imperative for success. A high-powered think tanker put it this way in Shadow Elite : I tend to operate in a ‘just in time’ mode, sort of like Toyota, because I realize that busy, important people tend not to plan ahead much. They tend to pivot this way and that in a high- flex mode given constantly changing priorities. Ho sees similar attitudes among Wall Street traders and bankers, whom she calls “liquid” workers. Layoffs are common even during boom times, and Wall Street has accepted, embraced the idea that jobs might change fast or disappear. (Until 2008 at least, there was almost always a new banking job to be had.) That “here-today-somewhere-else-tomorrow” mentality has led to the cult of the annual bonus, and the focus on making as many deals as possible in the moment, regardless of the deal’s actual long-term merits, its effect on the parties to the deal, the firm, or on the broader society or economy. That focus on the short-term comes along with what Ho terms, in May’s Anthropology Now : a sacred cultural value….to ‘be one’ with the market. Even those implicated in the worst excesses [of risk] are understood to have excelled in ‘making markets happen’. In this ethos, market simultaneity, not wisdom, is a central goal. For Janine, who spent decades studying eastern Europe, this recalls behavior she saw in the chaotic scramble for power and resources just after the fall of communism: power brokers operated in the moment, taking what they could, because tomorrow their standing and opportunities very well might change. These opportunities might open up for weeks or months, only to close as someone else cornered them, laws or other circumstances changed, or better openings came along. The ambitions and activities of the players of eastern Europe were frequently unfettered by rules and regulations because such restraints did not exist. Bending the rules that did exist was the norm, not the exception, and those who got away with it often were not thought by their peers or themselves to be unethical, but savvy. Loyalty was to oneself and one’s allies, not to any institution. In Shadow Elite , Janine argues that top players in the West today have a similar modus operandi . And Ho zeroes in on that rule-busting attitude on Wall Street: that deal-makers valued “their smartness in inventing new sources of profit taking that circumvented and outwitted both governmental regulators and [internal] risk managers.” Indeed, a banker who didn’t push the limits of risk would be considered dead wood. He wouldn’t benefit in pay or stature by being prudent. And with the perception of job insecurity, bankers feel they have a perfectly rational reason to focus singlemindedly on that bonus, with myopic decisions that would soon prove dangerous. Has the worst crash since the Great Depression upended that culture? Ho has seen no substantial shift . She says “because bonuses are a core part of Wall Streeters’ sense of themselves, totally eliminating [them] would be all but culturally unthinkable.” Unthinkable, but perhaps necessary. Ho thinks to prevent the next crisis, bonuses need to be linked to long- term corporate productivity or shareholder value. Raghuram Rajan, finance professor at University of Chicago’s Booth business school, a bastion of free marketeering no less – goes even further. He’s won praise for his dead-on assessment, years before the crash, that Wall Street pay practices were inviting disaster. And he surprised some by arguing in the Financial Times that “significant portions” of bonuses be held in escrow until the full effect of a manager’s risk-taking decision can play out. If they play out badly, a manager should pay, their compensation should be “clawed back”. And what about compensation culture among CEOs in corporate America? Back in 2002 , John Cassidy in the New Yorker recalled a time that is almost hard to fathom at this point: when, instead of a laser-like focus on the stock price, “many chief executives saw their main task as overseeing the welfare of their employees and customers.” That changed in part because companies started paying CEOs with stock options, which was supposed to align the interest of shareholders with that of the chief executive. In practice, top managers were tempted to mislead investors, and boards could play with option dates and prices to give senior management maximum personal gain. And, like their peers on Wall Street, CEOs took on a more short-term focus: they sought to keep the stock price high at the right times, at the expense of long-term wisdom. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker summed up the new CEO value system to Cassidy: …corporate greed exploded beyond anything that could have been imagined in 1990…traditional norms didn’t exist. That’s a staggering culture shift in just more than a decade, and shifted even further in the decade that followed. [One can see this disconnect from "traditional norms", and perhaps even common decency, in a damning Wall Street Journal report: that in the month after 9/11, many companies rushed to exploit the downturn - doling out lower-priced options to managers, 2.6 times as many as the year before. Had these execs instead chose to actually buy stock rather than take options to buy later, this might have been a powerful vote of confidence for a deeply shaken market, and nation.] CEOs also seemed intent on appearing “bold”, as Linda saw working in TV business news in the mid to late ’90′s, presumably to impress the board and warrant bigger raises. This became a central animating force in a CEO’s identity, and core identity is not easily changed. That attitude brought a shift in how managers both treated and viewed their employees. CEOs who slash payrolls might get called “dynamic”; ones that do not might be viewed as “lumbering” (Ho makes this point as well.) Those “dynamic” CEO’s might be (personally) rewarded with a pop in the stock price, even if that layoff wasn’t a good long-term decision. Ho believes the ideal of constant change permeated from Wall Street, through its advisory role to corporate America, and that consequently managers now think of all workers as “liquid”. This also fits in with Janine’s findings: that today flexibility is everything, employees are expected to constantly reinvent themselves, take job insecurity as a given, go where the wind takes them. Easy, perhaps, for well-heeled Wall Streeters. Not so easy for middle America. The bankers may like to show they prize flexibility, but try telling them they should change bonus culture. On that score, they will not bend. But they needn’t worry – the Champagne will still flow; Washington isn’t going after bonuses. Financial reform doesn’t clamp down executive pay, not much more than giving shareholders more of a “say in pay”, in the form of non- binding votes on compensation packages. Hard to see how that will disrupt a culture of self-interested players who, as Ho says, seem to “produce crises and pass on risk.” Indeed, many on Wall Street expressed shock that the board of Goldman Sachs gave CEO Lloyd Blankfein what Wall Street viewed as an extremely modest bonus in 2009. How modest? Just 9 million dollars.

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USD/JPY Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

USD/JPY Classical 05.27

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USD/CHF Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

USD/CHF Classical 05.27

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USD/CAD Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

USD/CAD Classical 05.27

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NZD/USD Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

NZD/USD Classical 05.27

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GBP/USD Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

GBP/USD Classical 05.27

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GBP/JPY Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

GBP/JPY Classical 05.27

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EUR/USD Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

EUR/USD Classical 05.27

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EUR/JPY Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

EUR/JPY Classical 05.27

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EUR/CHF Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

EUR/CHF Classical 05.27

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AUD/USD Classical 05.27

May 27, 2010

AUD/USD Classical 05.27

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Dollar Sold as Risk Appetite Recovers Ahead of US GDP Report

May 27, 2010

Dollar Sold as Risk Appetite Recovers Ahead of US GDP Report

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Scandi Daily 05.27

May 27, 2010

Scandi Daily 05.27

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Opening Comment 05.27

May 27, 2010

Opening Comment 05.27

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Oil Temporarily Decouples From Stocks

May 27, 2010

Oil Temporarily Decouples From Stocks

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Dollar on the Verge of 14-Month Highs as Dow Drops Below 10,000, OECD Upgrades 2010 Growth

May 27, 2010

Dollar on the Verge of 14-Month Highs as Dow Drops Below 10,000, OECD Upgrades 2010 Growth

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The Challenge of Regaining Lost Equity

May 27, 2010

The Challenge of Regaining Lost Equity

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China’s Lenovo returns to quarterly profit

May 27, 2010

China’s Lenovo returns to quarterly profit

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IMF needs guarantees for Serbia’s $467b loan

May 27, 2010

IMF needs guarantees for Serbia’s $467b loan

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