brothers

March 30 (Bloomberg) — Martin Connor, chief financial officer of Toll Brothers Inc., talks about the state of the housing market. Connor speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Toll’s Connor Says U.S. Should Let Housing `Heal Itself’

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Dan Dorfman: The Return of the Brothers Grimm

by Dan Dorfman on February 28, 2011

Huffington Post…

Fairy tales are supposed to be the province of the young. Not anymore. The brothers Grimm wrote their first volume of them in 1812. And now, nearly 200 years later, they seem to be making the trek to Wall Street. Here’s the story. If I told you that the overseas uprisings are almost kaput, that rising oil prices (now around $100 a barrel) are hardly a big deal since the price is still well below its July 2008 high of $147, that European debt woes are history, that our housing and job problems should soon take a decided turn for the better amid an improving economy, that inflation fears are way overdone and that higher interest rates are simply out of question in a struggling economic environment, what would you tell me? Probably, that I ought to rejoin the real world. In other words, leave the fairy tales to the brothers Grimm. Well, these rosy views, in a nutshell, are what a fair number of Wall Streeters are pitching and what London money manager Raymond Stahler suggests investors seem to be swallowing by continuing to bid up U.S. stock prices in the face of a giant 86 percent rebound from their March 2009 lows (roughly 6,500 to 12,100 in the Dow Industrials) and a bevy of risks and uncertainties. A couple of weeks ago, I caught up with Stahler, who told me he thought investors were recklessly ignoring the negative ramifications of the sudden outbreak of revolutions and the clear and present danger of them spreading. Now he’s taking it one step further, noting, “Nero fiddled while Rome burned and U.S. investors appear to be doing the same thing when it comes to the stock market.” In effect, he thinks they’re blinded by the signs of economic improvement, accordingly seeing only sunshine and no clouds. “There’s just too much euphoria,” he says, “totally unjustifiable.” Some of those euphoric signs: heavy leveraging by many hedge funds to be as fully invested in stocks, a lively pace of corporate buybacks a growing risk appetite, very low institutional cash reserves and inflows of nearly $25 billion worth of U.S. equity mutual funds the past couple of months (although there has been some recent outflows due to the riots in Egypt and Libya and the rising price of oil). You may be one of those struck by the euphoric wave, but it’s worth knowing that one of the more respected investment and economic minds around, David Rosenberg, the chief investment strategist and economist at Glusken Sheff, a leading Canadian-based wealth management firm, is hoisting cautionary flags. In a weekend note to clients, he kicked off with six of them: declining home prices, contracting bank credit, listless jobs market, soaring oil prices, accelerating spending cuts and tax hikes at state and local government levels and policy tightening overseas. Granted there are tailwinds, such as quantitative easings, strong corporate balance sheets, manufacturing renaissance and the lagged impact of last year’s stimulus announcement. But Rosenberg notes, “If I was keeping score, headwinds are in the lead by six to four.” It also seems clear to our worrywart that the tenor of the global economic recovery is undergoing a bit of change here, and not for the better unfortunately. But U.S. growth projections, he observes, have almost doubled to nearly 4 percent for current quarter GDP even though data on new home sales, real estate prices (resale values are down to 2002 levels) and durable goods orders offer some cause for pause. Rosenberg also takes issue with what he regards as another fairy tale — the emerging view that Saudi Arabia can just step in and replace Libyan oil, which strikes him as totally off base. The reason: Libya’s crude is a perfect feed for ultra low sulfur diesel. The oil the Saudis would use to replace it is not. Apparently, you need three barrels of Saudi crude to get the same number of barrels of diesel sulfur you get from one Libyan barrel. Further, Saudi crude is very high in sulfur and the refineries that process the Libyan crude cannot remove the sulfur. Rosenberg also raises the question of what happens if we lose Libyan crude (an estimated 1.8 million barrels a day) and strategic stocks are not released? Then, as he sees it, $150 a barrel oil would certainly not be out of the question. And that, he points out, is not factoring in Algeria, which has also experienced recent protests. Rosenberg figures the rent rise in oil from $80 to $100 a barrel will subtract 1 percent off real GDP growth. He went on to note that about half of this quarter’s fiscal stimulus from the payroll tax cut has been wiped out by what’s happening at the gas pump. Another economic revelation that he believes is worth thinking about centers on the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s monthly National Activity Index (NAI) that covers the entire economy and is viewed as close to a GDP proxy as you can get. The index has been negative for eight straight months and came in below zero in five of the last six months. The NAI swung from 0.18 in December to 0.16 in January. One has to view these numbers with alarm since Rosenberg says anything below 0.70 and the chances are good the economy is heading back into a recession. “Illusion is the most dangerous thing,” wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson. As far as Wall Street goes, so too may be the return of the brothers Grimm. But just maybe they never left since fairy tales are a good part of what Wall Street is all about. What do you think? E-mal me at Dandordan@aol.com.

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Dan Dorfman: The Return of the Brothers Grimm

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Lehman Weighs Archstone Sale

September 27, 2010

Lehman Brothers Holdings is mulling the sale of its apartmentcomplex owner Archstone

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Wyly Brothers Gave Millions To Over 200 Republican Candidates

July 29, 2010

The billionaire brothers from Dallas who were charged by the Securities and Exchange Commission with orchestrating a massive securities fraud scheme that netted them $550 million are well-known philanthropists and fundraisers for conservative politicians. Charles and Samuel Wyly, along with their wives, have donated $2.5 million to more than 200 Republican candidates and committees over the past 20 years, including over $1.3 million to the Republican National Committee, according to an analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics. The top recipients of their largesse have been Texas Republicans. George W. Bush received at least $100,000 raised by the Wyly clan during the 2000 presidential election. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson has received $30,400 from the family; Rep. Pete Sessions, $29,000. Other Republican senators who’ve received their donations include John Cornyn of Texas, Sam Brownback of Kansas, Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, John Thune of South Dakota and Kit Bond of Missouri. Sam Wyly also funded the Swift Boat campaign that torpedoed Massachusetts Democrat John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign. And the Wyly brothers have been busy in the 2010 election cycle, most recently writing a check dated June 10 for $10,000 to the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee. Charles Wyly has contributed to FreedomWorks PAC, which has been instrumental in the Tea Party movement. The Wylys and their companies have also reportedly contributed $353,500 to Texas Gov. Rick Perry in recent years. As reported by HuffPost’s Sam Stein, the brothers played an instrumental role in helping Bush defeat John McCain during the 2000 Republican presidential primary, with a $2.5-million advertising campaign that marked the “very first ad” launched by a 527 — “the oft-maligned political groups that came about due to a loophole in campaign finance laws.” Sam Wyly’s son Andrew ended up being a major fundraiser (or “Texas Aviator”) for McCain in the 2008 election. In the 2010 cycle, Andrew has contributed to Marco Rubio’s Florida Senate campaign and Pat Toomey’s Pennsylvania Senate campaign, among other Republican candidates. Beyond politics, the charges are sure to shake up the close-knit community in Dallas, where the brothers wielded enormous influence. Charles Wyly donated millions to the Dallas Center for the Performing Arts to have a building named after him, which was designed by famed architect Rem Koolhaas and billed as the world’s only “vertical theater.” A prominent lawyer for the Wylys, Michael C. French, and stockbroker Louis J. Schaufele III were also charged in the case. Schaufele III is the Investment Committee chairman of the Episcopal Foundation of Dallas. The case, which caps a six-year investigation prompted by inquiries about overseas trusts kept by the Wylys, also serves as a vindication of sorts for Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich.), who along with former Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) issued a damning 2006 report on tax haven abuses that primarily focused on the Wyly brothers. Through a lawyer, the brothers said the charges are “without merit.”

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Campbell Brothers (ASX:CPB) Expects Record Half Year Underlying NPAT

June 29, 2010

Campbell Brothers (ASX:CPB) Expects Record Half Year Underlying NPAT

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Fuld, Former Lehman Brothers Executives Seek to Dismiss Repo 105 Lawsuit

June 4, 2010

By Linda Sandler June 4 (Bloomberg) — Former Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. executives including ex-Chief Executive Officer Richard Fuld asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit over Repo 105, a financing method allegedly used by the bank to conceal billions of dollars of debt, according to court records. To contact the reporter on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net

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Institutional Investor Magazine Names Toll Brothers to Its 2010 All-America Executive Team

February 9, 2010

HORSHAM, Pa., Feb. 9, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Toll Brothers, Inc. (NYSE:TOL), (www.tollbrothers.com), the nation’s leading builder of luxury homes, today announced that Institutional Investor has ranked Toll Brothers’ chairman and chief executive officer Robert I. Toll as the top CEO in the Homebuilders & Building Products industry for the third year in a row, chief financial officer Joel H. Rassman as the top CFO within the Homebuilders & Building Products industry for the fifth year in a row, Toll Brothers as the company with the “Best Investor Relations” for the Homebuilders & Building Products industry for the second year in a row and Frederick Cooper, Senior Vice President Finance, International Development and Investor Relations, as the top Investor Relations professional within the Homebuilders & Building Products industry. Institutional Investor went on to name Toll Brothers as the 2010 All-America Executive Team for the Homebuilders & Building Products industry.

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Video: Robert Toll Says U.S. Housing Market Is `Coming Back’: Video

December 11, 2009

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) — Robert Toll, chief executive officer of Toll Brothers Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Carol Massar about the outlook for the U.S. housing market. Toll Brothers is the largest U.S. luxury-home builder. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Michelin Guide Promotes Three Brothers’ Restaurant to Three Stars in Spa

November 25, 2009

By Richard Vines Nov. 26 (Bloomberg) — Michelin & Cie. creates a new three- star restaurant and elevates four establishments to two stars in the new guide to Spain & Portugal, which goes on sale today. El Celler de Can Roca , the Girona venue run by head chef Joan Roca and his brothers Josep and Jordi, is Spain’s latest to attain top ranking in the French dining guide. Seven now hold the coveted third star, including Ferran Adria’s El Bulli. Another 19 restaurants gain their first stars in the guide, taking the total to 130, compared with 12 that hold two. The new two-star establishments are Casa Marcial, Lasarte (Hotel Condes de Barcelona), La Terraza del Casino and Les Cols. Clermont-Ferrand, France-based Michelin, the world’s second-largest tiremaker, has been publishing dining guides for more than a century. Three stars denote “Exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey;” two stars, “Excellent cooking, worth a detour;” one star, “Very good cooking in its category.” El Celler de Can Roca came fifth in the World’s 50 Best Restaurants awards in April, jumping 21 places in a year. “Spain & Portugal 2010” costs 25.50 euros ($38) and will also go on sale in France in mid-December. To contact the writer on the story: Richard Vines in London at rvines@bloomberg.net .

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Toll Brothers Announces Redemption of Senior Subordinated Notes Due 2011

October 28, 2009

HORSHAM, Pa., Oct. 28, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Toll Brothers, Inc. (NYSE:TOL) (www.tollbrothers.com), today announced that Toll Corp., its wholly-owned subsidiary, is calling for redemption on December 1, 2009 all of the remaining $47.872 million outstanding principal amount of its 8.25% Senior Subordinated Notes due December 2011 (the “December 2011 notes”) at a cash redemption price of 100.00% of the principal amount plus accrued and unpaid interest.

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Bernie Sanders: The Middle Class Today Is In Desperate Shape (VIDEO)

October 17, 2009

Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-Vermont) was on fire in his weekly YouTube video, ” Senator Sanders Unfiltered .” “The reality is that the middle class today in this country is in desperate shape and the gap between the very very wealthy and everyone else is going to grow wider,” he begins, and goes on to detail why he gets so very tired of hearing that this recession is over. While markets surged past 10,000, the official unemployment rate stood near 10 percent. The United States is in a unique historical position. People on top are doing extraordinarily well, but in the real world the middle class is collapsing. The top 1 percent owns more wealth then the bottom 90 percent. CEOs of large corporations earn 400 times what their workers make. That is not what America is supposed to be about. With all the issues we are dealing with – from health care to global warming to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq – please do not forgot what is happening to tens of millions of our brothers and our sisters out there who are struggling hard to keep their heads above water. Watch the video below:

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Sen. Bernie Sanders: The Dow and the Down and Out

October 16, 2009

Track Bernie on Twitter and the “Senator Sanders Unfiltered” weekly webisode on Facebook . While markets surged past 10,000, the official unemployment rate stood near 10 percent. The United States is in a unique historical position. People on top are doing extraordinarily well, but in the real world the middle class is collapsing. The top 1 percent owns more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. CEOs of large corporations earn 400 times what their workers make. That is not what America is supposed to be about. With all the issues we are dealing with — from health care to global warming to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq — please do not forgot what is happening to tens of millions of our brothers and our sisters out there who are struggling hard to keep their heads above water. Senator Sanders Unfiltered is a weekly web program produced by Brave New Films . Submit your own video question for next week’s show here . Stay up-to-date with the goings on in the Senate by signing up for the Bernie Buzz newsletter and joining his Facebook page today. Take our most recent web poll here.

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Nick Jefferson: The Kennedy and Leadership: A Reappraisal

September 12, 2009

Much has been written over the years about the Kennedy family and leadership. But the focus has tended to be on JFK and RFK, rather than their younger brother. So in the wake of Senator Edward Kennedy’s death, let us revisit this. I have never been so naïve as to set out what I believe to be the inalienable, definitive characteristics of effective leadership: because I do not believe that is possible. But I do know, however, that leadership is — in part – about vision and that it is — in part – about single-mindedness. In which case, one is hard-pressed to find better examples than Jack and Bobby respectively. President Kennedy was nothing if not a great orator, capable of creating and communicating a vision of America’s future. I have blogged before about the sheer power of his 1961 “man on the moon” speech (quite possibly the best ever example of a well-deployed smart objective) but that is merely one part of a vast anthology of epochal speeches which includes such gems as “Ask Not What Your Country Can Do For You”, as well as the iconic “Ich Bin Ein Berliner”. Vision by the bucket-load from Jack, then. His brother Robert’s relentless, often unfashionable, championing of minority interests, particularly those of black America, was doubtless instrumental in the development and furtherance of equality in the United States. As Attorney-General, Bobby was asked in May 1962, “What do you see as the big problem ahead for you, is it crime or internal security?” The reply? “Civil rights”. Single-mindedness was never a problem for this Kennedy. Inspirational stuff, all right, as countless leadership books and courses will tell you. But are these (admittedly fascinating) examinations of Jack’s stirring rhetoric and Bobby’s unremitting pursuit of justice genuinely helpful to today’s leaders? Or do they — in fact — miss the mark by appearing remote from the leadership challenges experienced by most leaders today? Because unlike the former President and Attorney-General, most of us do not occupy a world where great speeches and noble thoughts suffice. And most of us do not, moreoever, die so young and so rich that our legacies are forever preserved and polished. Instead, as leaders we find ourselves locked into lives which are necessarily stacked with painful obstacles, hard nitty-gritty and a huge amount of compromise. This doesn’t, of course, mean that we shouldn’t aspire to the lofty heights to which Jack and Bobby so effortlessly ascended, just that – very often – our immediate leadership concerns are a good deal more prosaic. So step forward Ted. Because — having been denied the Presidency — the Kennedy family’s baby brother had no chance but to carve out a different type of leadership: and a much more realistic one. Like us, Ted Kennedy didn’t have the “benefit” of dying young and being frozen in time, as his brothers have been. Rather, this leader was unmistakably human. And a flawed human at that. But that is what makes his brand of leadership so much more accessible than those of his brothers. Over forty years of public life, this Kennedy, like us, encountered those painful obstacles, that hard nitty-gritty and the concomitant, necessary compromise. And he achieved so much in spite of that. Perhaps even because of it. Forced by history into becoming the deal-doer’s deal-doer, with his sleeves rolled up and an understanding that political enemies could also become legislative friends, Senator Edward Kennedy was arguably significantly more influential during his lifetime than either of his brothers were during theirs. A man who eschewed the glamour bestowed upon, and perhaps even sought by, both Bobby and Jack. A man who chose to envelop himself in the dry, hard, bureaucratic process that is law-making. A man who was prepared to let others take the credit for work that was largely his own, even if the ‘other’ in question happened to be a certain Republican President that had ‘history’ with the Kennedy family. Too many leaders, in government and outside it, believe that leadership is about ideas and speeches. These are, of course, important. Necessary, in fact. But ideas and speeches do not bring about change. Only action brings about change. And Ted Kennedy knew that. The rhetoric and mythology that had served his brothers so well was never — post Chappaquidick — going to be sufficient to sustain for him a serious, long-term career in the Senate. And so was formed perhaps the greatest of all the Kennedy leaders: the ultra-liberal who co-authored laws with Orrin Hatch, the anti-Iraq war voter who partnered with President Bush on No Child Left Behind, the scion of an establishment dynasty who refused to create another and endorsed a risky candidate called Barack Obama instead. Above all else, the Kennedy who learned, perhaps the hard way, of the overwhelming importance of doing. Richard Lacayo put it eloquently in Newsweek recently: “He took the mythology and shaped it into something real and enduring.” Indeed. A life defined not by one singular choice but instead by a clear, deliberate direction. Whether TMK chose that direction or whether it chose him, his life’s journey now stands as one of the finest examples of American leadership that we have yet encountered. At his wake, Senator Dodd said, “John Fitzgerald Kennedy inspired America. Robert F. Kennedy challenged America. Our Teddy changed America” He sure did. That’s real leadership. With special thanks to both Tom Fletcher of 10 Downing Street, London and Marc Adelman of Adelmania Consulting, Washington, D.C.

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