credit-suisse

May 23 (Bloomberg) — Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief Japan economist at Credit Suisse Group AG in Tokyo and a former Bank of Japan official, talks about the impact of the March 11 earthquake on the country’s economy. Shirakawa speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

The rest is here:
Video: Credit Suisse’s Shirakawa Says Japan Economy Still Weak

Huffington Post…

JPMorgan Chase & Co has received a subpoena from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over failed mortgages, Bloomberg said, citing a person familiar with the investigation. The SEC is probing banks including Credit Suisse Group AG for allegedly failing to share refunds from sellers of faulty debt, Bloomberg said. JPMorgan and SEC declined to comment to Bloomberg. Reuters could not immediately reach either of the parties. The SEC subpoenaed Credit Suisse this week for documents on securitized home loans, according to court documents filed on Thursday by bond insurer MBIA Inc in a lawsuit against the Swiss bank. (Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read more:
SEC Subpoenas JPMorgan Over Failed Mortgages

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

Big Banks Sued For Helping To Bankrupt Home Loan Company

May 3, 2011

WILMINGTON, Delaware (Tom Hals) – The trustee for bankrupt Thornburg Mortgage Inc has sued Goldman Sachs, Barclays and other big banks for a combined $2.2 billion, blaming them for the former home loan company’s bankruptcy. The trustee filed four separate lawsuits, the most extensive of which blames a “collusive scheme” by units of JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup, Royal Bank of Scotland, Credit Suisse and UBS for driving the company into bankruptcy. The trustee, Maryland lawyer Joel Sher, accused the five banks of acting together to use a series of unjustified margin calls to extend their control over Thornburg, which was once a leading provider of “jumbo” home loans. The lawsuit seeks to recover $2 billon for fraudulent conveyances and transfers by the banks, which had financed Thornburg’s mortgage-backed securities. The trustee said the banks eventually drove the Thornburg into Chapter 11 in May 2009. It sought protection from creditors with $36.5 billion in assets, making it one of the larger bankruptcies during the financial crisis. Citigroup and JPMorgan both said the lawsuit was meritless, and JPMorgan also said it would defend its Bear Stearns unit vigorously. Credit Suisse and UBS declined to comment. RBS did not immediately return a call for comment. Sher was appointed to run Thornburg after the company’s executives were accused of using Thornburg’s staff and offices, without creditors’ approval, to start a new company. The trustee also sued Barclays for improperly seizing mortgage bonds from Thornburg in 2007 by undervaluing the securities in a series of margin calls. The trustee is seeking at least $94 million. Barclays declined to comment. Sher sued Goldman Sachs, seeking at least $71 million and accused the bank of scheming to seize hundreds of millions of dollars of investment-grade mortgage bonds that Thornburg had pledged as collateral. Goldman Sachs declined to comment. The final lawsuit claims Countrywide Home Loans Inc, which was acquired by Bank of America, breached representations and warranties on the loans it sold to a unit of Thornburg. Bank of America declined to comment. That lawsuit was also brought on behalf of a group of investors known as the Zuni Investors LLC, who were represented by David Grais of Grais & Ellsworth. Grais has brought numerous “putback” lawsuits that seek to have originators such as Countrywide repurchase mortgages that fell short of promised standards but were packaged into mortgage-backed securities and sold as top-notch investments. Investors holding hundreds of billions of dollars of mortgage bonds have been hoping to shift their losses from the bonds back to the banks that packaged the bonds, but it has been a struggle. In part, that is because the loans are held in trusts that sold the mortgage bonds. The trustees overseeing the trusts have been reluctant to cooperate with investors and go after the originators of the loans, although that may be changing. The Thornburg putback lawsuit is based in part on a “joint prosecution agreement” between the mortgage bond trustee and the Zuni investors. Grais said it was the first lawsuit that he knew of that was based on such an agreement. Thornburg is now known as TMST Inc and the lawsuits were filed as part of the bankruptcy, which is In re TMST Inc U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Maryland, No. 09-17787. (Editing by Steve Orlofsky, Bernard Orr and Richard Chang) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Goldman, Citigroup Among Large Banks Targeted By EU Over Alleged Collusion

April 29, 2011

BRUSSELS — The EU’s competition watchdog is investigating the practices of some the world’s biggest banks, as well as a market data firm and a clearing house, in the market for credit default swaps. The two probes home in on a market that has come under fire for lacking transparency and allegedly worsening debt market turmoil during the financial crisis. While the investigations focus on competition issues, they accompany a broader regulatory crackdown in Europe on credit default swaps and other derivatives. The European Commission said it has “indications” that the 16 banks acting as dealers in the CDS market – practically all the big players in global investment banking – give essential information on pricing and other daily activities only to Markit, the leading financial data provider for that market. Such preferential treatment “could be the consequence of collusion between them or an abuse of a possible collective dominance” and could lock other data providers out of the CDS business, the Commission said. The 16 firms targeted are JP Morgan, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Commerzbank, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Morgan Stanley, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, Wells Fargo, Credit Agricole and Societe Generale. Credit default swaps were invented to help investors insure themselves against the default of a company or a state whose bonds they hold. However, they have also been used for speculation and the profits some banks and hedge funds make from such transactions have come under scrutiny during the financial crisis. “CDS play a useful role for financial markets and for the economy,” said Joaquin Almunia, the EU’s competition commissioner, said in a statement. “Recent developments have shown, however, that the trading of this asset class suffers a number of inefficiencies that cannot be solved through regulation alone.” In a second case, the Commission is also investigating whether nine of those banks received preferential treatment – such as lower fees and profit-sharing deals – from ICE Clear Europe, the biggest CDS clearing house in the EU. “The effects of these agreements could be that other clearing houses have difficulties successfully entering the market and that other CDS players have no real choice where to clear their transactions,” the Commission said. The banks targeted in the second probe are Bank of America, Barclays, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and UBS. Almunia said he hoped that the “investigation will contribute to a better functioning of financial markets and, therefore, to a more sustainable recovery.”

Read the full article →

Credit Suisse Profit Trails Estimates

April 27, 2011

Credit Suisse Profit Trails Estimates

Read the full article →

Client Trust Returns TO UBS’s Wealth Management Arm

April 26, 2011

ZURICH (Emma Thomasson) – UBS looked to put the financial crisis behind it on Tuesday, with money pouring into its core wealth management arm in the first quarter and its struggling investment bank doing better than expected. Inflows of 11.1 billion Swiss francs ($12.6 billion) — the highest since the end of 2007 and outstripping forecasts — showed client trust was returning, the Swiss bank said. Clients had withdrawn nearly 400 billion francs from the world’s second-largest wealth manager in recent years after it was bailed out following huge writedowns on toxic assets and was hit by U.S. charges that it helped wealthy Americans dodge tax. UBS said it had had strong inflows in the Asia Pacific region and emerging markets as well as from the ultra wealthy, although it continued to see outflows in Europe, where countries have been chasing tax evaders using secret Swiss accounts. Vontobel analyst Dirk Becker said the biggest positive was the wealth management inflows: “This … shows that UBS has now left the crisis behind even in this division, where client trust and confidence were shattered.” UBS expected sustainable inflows from now on, outgoing chief financial officer John Cryan told an analyst conference call. UBS shares were up 5.7 percent to 17.53 francs by 1045 GMT, while rival Credit Suisse — which reports quarterly earnings on Wednesday — rose 2.1 percent to 39.66 francs, compared to a 0.7 percent firmer European banking index. FIXED INCOME IN FOCUS UBS reported a pretax profit of 835 million francs at its investment bank, up from 100 million the previous quarter, performing well versus its peers in fixed income — where U.S. rivals have struggled — and in equities trading. But the bank did slip up in equity capital raisings — traditionally one of its strongest businesses — after the division was among the worst hit by departures, including that of global capital markets head Matthew Koder. Chief executive Oswald Gruebel’s plans to turn around the investment bank — which made the massive losses that almost felled UBS — are under scrutiny after an exodus of top bankers. “It was a decent result in investment banking which should reassure after the headcount turbulence of the last few months,” said Matthew Clark, analyst at Keefe Bruyette & Woods. UBS said it expected to see some improvement in parts of the investment bank, despite constraints imposed on some of the fixed income currencies and commodities (FICC) businesses by a focus on controlling risk. It also noted the competition for staff and base salary increases will increase costs. U.S. bank results showed fixed income profits falling from an unusually strong first quarter of 2010, while Goldman Sachs warned of layoffs if trading volumes do not pick up and said investors are holding their money close. UBS said the disaster in Japan, unrest in North Africa and the Middle East and the ongoing euro zone debt crisis had dampened usually strong first-quarter client activity. The bank said it expected second-quarter equity market trading volumes to stay around the levels seen in the first quarter, which should support transaction-based income in wealth management and flow trading in the investment bank. It expects short-term interest rates in the West, including Switzerland, to remain low, continuing to constrain interest margins, although wealth management’s gross margin on invested assets rose by 6 basis points to 98 basis points in the quarter. Florian Esterer of Swisscanto, which holds more than 9 million UBS shares, said the bank should benefit more than peers from the shift from offshore to lower margin onshore business. “Longer-term we expect the margin headwind to be more of an issue for Credit Suisse than UBS,” he said. REGULATORY PRESSURE ON TARGETS Gruebel said the quarterly result was satisfactory but still fell “short of our overall ambitions.” Sarasin analyst Rainer Skierka said the figures might counter recent doubts in the market about Gruebel’s mid-term target for a pretax profit of 15 billion francs — including 6 billion from the investment bank. “However, even after a rebounding first quarter there is still a long way to go especially in investment banking where a high compensation ratio remains a hot topic,” Skierka said. CFO Cryan said UBS was not deviating from those targets today but said the bank was carefully assessing the impact of new regulation, most notably on the capital-intensive FICC business, although it was too early to say what it might do. Gruebel has said stiff Swiss capital standards — which the government sent to parliament last week and could be approved this year — could force UBS to move units abroad. UBS said it was monitoring the effect of new rules in Switzerland, Britain, the United States and elsewhere on the corporate structure and would take action when needed. UBS is not paying a dividend for 2010 or for some time to come as it retains earnings to meet the tough new requirements. (Additional reporting by Martin de Sa’Pinto in Zurich, Edward Taylor in Frankfurt and Sarah White in London; editing by Alexander Smith) ($1 = 0.8843 Swiss franc) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Orenbuch Says BofA’s Stock Has `Value’

April 15, 2011

April 15 (Bloomberg) — Moshe Orenbuch, a bank analyst for Credit Suisse Group AG, talks about Bank of America Corp.’s first-quarter profit and the outlook for U.S. bank stocks. He speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Naseer Says Investors See Risk in Oil Prices, Inflation

March 29, 2011

March 29 (Bloomberg) — Jahanzeb Naseer, product manager for Asian research at Credit Suisse Group AG, discusses investor sentiment for Asia. Chinese stocks and energy companies are expected to lead advances by Asian equities this year, according to a survey of participants attending a Credit Suisse investor conference in Hong Kong last week. Naseer speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Read the full article →

Raymond Baer: Switzerland Must End Its Tax Dispute With U.S.

March 19, 2011

ZURICH — Julius Baer Chairman Raymond Baer called for Switzerland to resolve a banking-related tax row with the United States, in comments reported by Le Temps. “It is surprising to see the U.S. escalation against the Swiss financial center. Such hostility is not diplomatically tolerable with a friendly country,” Baer was quoted as saying in an interview published on Saturday. “A solution must be found, because we cannot change the past. Swiss banks have understood they must change,” Baer said. Michael Ambuehl, the top Swiss negotiator for international financial affairs, is due to travel to Washington to negotiate a sort of armistice for all banks, the newspaper reported. “I hope he does go, and not just him. The departments of interior, finance and foreign affairs should be concerned about the way the Americans are treating us. Without a solution, the attacks against banks, lawyers … will never stop,” Baer said. U.S. officials have said they are investigating other banks after UBS in 2009 paid $780 million to settle tax evasion charges. Earlier this month, a client of Credit Suisse pleaded guilty in U.S. federal court to evading taxes, confirming that the bank had become tangled in the U.S. government’s latest wave of tax evasion probes. Baer also said Julius Baer had the capacity to proceed with further share buybacks. “We listen to the market. But the prices are not as attractive today,” he added. Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Video: Orenbuch Says `Too Early’ for Large-Scale Bank Buybacks

March 18, 2011

March 18 (Bloomberg) — Moshe Orenbuch, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG, talks about the prospects for the Federal Reserve to allow banks to restore dividends and share repurchases. The central bank is telling lenders today whether capital plans they submitted in January were approved, according to people familiar with the process. Orenbuch speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Roach, El-Erian, Geithner Own Words on Japan Economy

March 17, 2011

March 17 (Bloomberg) — Stephen Roach, non-executive chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia Ltd., Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., and U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner speak about the economic impact of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan on the country and the rest of the world. This report also includes comments from Joao Vale de Almeida, the European Union’s ambassador to the U.S., Citigroup Inc.’s Willem Buiter and Credit Suisse Asset Management’s Stefan Keitel. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Japan’s Earthquake Estimated To Cost Insurers Upwards Of $50B

March 12, 2011

NEW YORK — Japan’s massive earthquake has led to untold damages to life and property. Early estimates for the losses for insurers and reinsurers around the globe are ranging from $10 billion to $50 billion. Aflac Inc., which sells health and life insurance to one out of every four people in Japan, says it is monitoring the situation closely. “The sheer devastation is a shock,” said Aflac CEO Dan Amos in an interview. “This will probably impact 3 to 4 million out of the 100 million people in Japan.” Amos says the number of deaths is small compared to the size of the earthquake, but says he expects a lot of people to be treated for injuries. Though he expects the number of claims to be high, Amos says the company is well prepared to cover them. Amos is flying into Japan on Sunday. Aflac stock was down only 0.3 percent on Friday. The losses to property and casualty will likely be higher as entire homes and buildings were washed by the tsunami and many business locations were flooded. A Credit Suisse report says the initial reports estimate a range from $10 billion to $50 billion. In Europe, the stocks of some of the world’s biggest reinsurance companies fell sharply Friday on fears that the earthquake in Japan and the subsequent tsunami will cost them dearly. Reinsurers led many of Europe’s major stock indexes lower. Swiss Re and Munich Re both fell about 4 percent. Hannover Re was down around 5 percent. The companies issue backup insurance to primary insurers so that the system can cover large losses from disasters. Hannover Re already said last week it expected to pay out euro150 million ($207 million) for the earthquake that hit New Zealand.

Read the full article →

First CEO Of The Year Foregoes 2010 Bonus

March 4, 2011

ZURICH/LONDON (Reuters) – Oswald Gruebel, chief executive of UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), is the first head of a major bank to say he will forego his 2010 bonus after the wealth manager’s share price fell during the year. While the Swiss bank has succeeded in stemming wealth management outflows — one of Gruebel’s stated priorities — and returned to profit in 2010, the CEO renounced his payout for the second successive year. “The fact that the share price did not increase in 2010 has led to Mr Gruebel’s decision,” UBS (UBS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said in a statement. The bank said Gruebel, who was brought out of retirement two years ago to revive UBS, was entitled to a bonus based on profit, an improvement in results and progress toward medium-term strategic goals. UBS shares fell 4.4 percent in 2010 but outperformed the Stoxx European Banks index , which dropped 11.6 percent. Like Gruebel, many other CEOs at top banks renounced their bonus for 2009. But many have said they will take their awards for 2010 while others are expected to do so after profits recovered and political pressure eased on them to pass up extra payments. Some have taken their bonus in deferred share awards. PAY SCRUTINY Switzerland had to rescue UBS in 2008 after its flagship bank wrote down $52 billion in the crisis, pushing it to the biggest annual corporate loss in Swiss history. Former chairman Marcel Ospel and other ex-board members agreed to return 33 million Swiss francs in payments from the bank after a media campaign against excessive pay. Gruebel has set an ambitious plan to rebuild UBS’s profit beyond its pre-crisis level and the straight-talking German wants to instill a new culture of strict cost control. UBS is under more scrutiny than most banks to rein in pay. Compensation represented 52.9 percent of income last year, down from 73 percent in 2009, but still one of the highest among investment banks, where the compensation ratio averaged near 40 percent for 2010. “Nomura and the two Swiss majors still have problems with high cost ratios,” analysts at Barclays Capital said in a research note on Friday, although they added that UBS was “moving in the right direction.” In contrast to Gruebel, Brady Dougan, CEO of rival Credit Suisse, took a bonus of almost 18 million Swiss francs for 2009, bringing his total pay to over 19 million francs for the year and making him the second highest paid executive in Switzerland. Last year Credit Suisse, which did not need a government bailout, threw oil on the Swiss debate around executive pay by awarding Dougan shares worth around 71 million Swiss francs under a five-year bonus plan. Pay at 11 European banks totaled $164.5 billion, up 7 percent from 2009, with staff costs rising at all but two firms, according to analysis by Reuters. But on Friday Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) Chief Executive Josef Ackermann said “significant progress” had been made on policies for compensation in the industry. Many politicians and the public remain angry at the scale of pay in the industry so soon after the financial crisis, especially in Europe. The Swiss government has kicked off a legal process to tighten regulation of its top banks, including the right to force those bailed out by the state to make changes to bonuses and even cancel payouts. UBS has brought in a scheme that withholds a portion of bonuses and only pays them out if the bank’s results warrant it. (Additional reporting by Steve Slater; Editing by Will Waterman and David Cowell) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Ford’s $880 Million Bond Priced Late Tuesday -Source

February 16, 2011

NEW YORK -( Dow Jones )- Ford Motor Co.’s (F) $880 million asset-backed bond priced late Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the deal. The bond was originally $586 million in size. The $375 million triple-A rated fixed rate tranche priced at 55 basis points over interpolated swaps to yield 2.131%. The $375 million 2.98-year floating rate portion priced at 60 basis points over one-month London interbank offered rate. Joint leads on the deal are BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland . The asset-backed bond market has had steady issuance so far this year. This market–where consumer loans are bundled into bonds and sold to investors–is essential for the flow of credit in the economy and for lowering the cost of borrowing for consumers. On Tuesday, Redwood Trust Inc. (RWT) issued the year’s first private residential mortgage-backed bond and Honda Motor Co. (HMC, 7267.TO) has a prime retail auto loan-backed $1 billion bond. Honda’s bond is joint led by Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse . It has four tranches, of which the largest triple-A rated portion is for $281 million. While the auto sector has seen the bulk of new deals this year, following a similar trend from last year, industry participants expect to see more unusual or off-the-run deals this year. Investors are eager to get more yield, which is likely in non-traditional or esoteric sectors like receivables from billboard advertising and cell towers. Fast-food chain operator Church’s Chicken is selling a $245 million bond backed by franchise fees and store revenue, the first deal of its sort since the credit crisis. Pricing on the bond is expected later this week. Other auto sector issuers this month include Mercedes-Benz Auto Lease Trust with a $750 million asset-backed bond. Macquarie Equipment Finance also has a $284.5 million three-tranche bond. Barclays Capital is the lead manager on the bond, which is also expected to price later this week. Copyright

Read the full article →

Federal Budget Proposal Reflects Record-Low Tax Revenue

February 14, 2011

As President Barack Obama unveils his plan for the coming year’s federal budget, he confronts a revenue stream that is the weakest its been in decades. With the recession’s legacy dragging down payrolls and with a federal deficit ballooning, the Obama administration is trying to accomplish two difficult tasks: jump-starting economic growth while simultaneously cutting spending. Federal tax revenue, measured as a percentage of economic output, is the lowest it has been since the mid-1970s, according to a new report from Credit Suisse. That figure, 15.1 percent, is slightly recovered from what it was during the recession, but it’s still more than two percentage points below the 50-year average of 17.5 percent. In mid-2009, when the economy had been shrinking, tax revenue was the lowest it had been in at least half a century. “There were very severe job losses and income losses associated with the recession,” said Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse and an author of the report. “If you don’t have income, then you don’t have tax revenues.” Obama’s proposed budget, which outlines cuts to programs that help the working poor and the middle class, reflects a move to trim the federal deficit, which has reached a record high. Currently, federal expenditures outpace revenue by more than $1.3 trillion. The White House expects that figure to increase beyond $1.5 trillion in the coming year. The nation cannot simply grow its way out of debt, Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lockhart said last week, according to Reuters. As the government continues to borrow money to pay for its obligations, lawmakers and economists worry that accumulating too much debt could harm the economy. “What I am concerned about is the structural imbalance between taxes and spending, which means the U.S. government is out there borrowing hundreds of billions of dollars every year,” said Gus Faucher, an economist at Moody’s Analytics. If interest rates rise, he added, “it’s going to make the government’s problem even worse.” Much of the tax drought stems directly from the recession. On the state and local level, the real estate slump has strained government budgets, as property tax collection in some cases has fallen. In cities across the nation, governments have had to slash spending to compensate. But on the federal level, it’s the jobs crisis that has taken a devastating toll on revenue. As nine percent of the workforce is unemployed, and as millions more workers have given up looking for jobs, fewer employees are paying personal income taxes. Since the December 2007 peak in revenue, this taxpayer base has dropped by about 7 million workers, the Credit Suisse report notes. Moreover, a drop in personal tax revenue accounts for about two-thirds of the total decline in tax revenue since the recent peak. “The economy is a lot smaller than it ought to be, given the capacity to produce,” said Gary Burtless, a former Labor Department economist and a current fellow at the Brookings Institution, in Washington. “There’s an automatic decline in the revenues going to the federal government.” Even as some sectors of the economy show signs of recovery, U.S. companies have demonstrated continued reluctance to hire workers. Apparently padding their defenses against future losses, corporations are hoarding cash to a historic degree. In the third quarter of last year, corporations increased their cash holdings 7.3 percent, setting a new record with $1.9 trillion in liquid assets, according to Federal Reserve data. Relative to their short-term liabilities, U.S. corporations haven’t been sitting on this much cash since 1956. In a speech this month before the Chamber of Commerce , the nation’s most powerful business lobby, president Obama urged the business world to use that money to increase payrolls, encouraging businesses to “get in the game.” Coupled with a lackluster employment situation, the recent series of tax cuts has further eroded revenue. After two pieces of tax cut legislation were passed during George W. Bush’s first term as president, Americans received a tax rebate in 2008. Under president Obama, most Americans saw their taxes shrink in 2009, and again in 2010. In less than a decade, a budget surplus turned into a trillion-dollar deficit. These tax cuts inflicted a revenue drop that was “above and beyond those tax reductions that would have occurred just because the economy shrank,” Burtless said. With the economy in the grips of recession, dwindling corporate revenues also affected federal tax income. Wounded bottom lines translated into depreciated taxes, contributing about 28 percent of the drop in tax revenue, the Credit Suisse report notes. As the economy recovers, these sources of revenue will likely improve. But a robust economy on its own might not be enough to resolve the deficit. “The long-term budget problems require massive spending cuts. There’s no other way around them,” Glen Hubbard, dean of Columbia University Business School, said. “You couldn’t raise taxes enough to cover that, without completely killing the economy.”

Read the full article →

GE Makes Big Move Into Oil Business

February 14, 2011

(By Megan Davies): General Electric Co (GE.N) is to buy a unit of British energy services firm John Wood Group (WG.L) for about $2.8 billion, the latest move by the largest U.S. conglomerate to boost its presence in oil services. GE’s acquisition John Wood’s well support division raised hopes of more deals in the oilfield services sector, where GE has recently been an active buyer of assets. GE, which is buying the unit through its oil and gas business, in December agreed to buy Britain’s oil drilling pipemaker Wellstream Holdings Plc for $1.3 billion. That followed a 2008 deal to buy pressure control equipment company Hydril for $1.1 billion and a 2007 deal to buy privately held oil and gas field equipment maker Vetco Gray. The U.S. company has said it could spend up to $30 billion on takeovers in the coming years as CEO Jeff Immelt renews GE’s focus on heavy manufacturing after reaching a deal to sell its media unit and scaling back the GE Capital finance arm. John Wood said it intends to return cash of no less than $1.7 billion to shareholders, helping to boost the company’s shares by 14.6 percent to 657 pence at 0921 GMT on Monday, their highest ever level. “We definitely think they John Wood got an attractive price. It was considerably more than what we were expecting,” said Royal Bank of Canada analyst Todd Scholl. “I would expect that, based on this valuation all of the oilfield services stocks would trade higher. The space certainly is very hot from an M&A perspective. We wouldn’t be surprised to see more deals.” Shares in oil services firm Petrofac (PFC.L) traded up 3.1 percent while London-listed pump and valve-maker Weir Group (WEIR.L), which has an oil field services division, rose 5 percent, with the latter helped by speculation that German conglomerate Siemens (SIEGn.DE) could be interested in it. GE said the John Wood unit acquisition would allow it to tap fast growing demand for enhanced oil recovery from mature oil fields. “Five years ago, drilling and production in GE did not exist,” John Krenicki, CEO of GE Energy said in a telephone interview. “Over the last five years we’ve built it up to be an industry leader.” He said that GE expects the deal to be ‘slightly accretive’ in 2011 assuming it closes by the end of the second quarter. Krenicki doesn’t anticipate more deals in the medium term in the specific area of drilling and production, but said there could be deals elsewhere. “Specific to this space — drilling and production — we think we have got what we needed for the medium term,” Krenicki said. “But the rest of the energy portfolio has capability to do more and we’ll look for things that make sense.” UNLOCKING PUZZLE Wood Group’s Well Support division is comprised of three business platforms — electric submersible pumps (ESPs), pressure control and logging services. GE said that deployment of electric submersible pumps are one of the most effective methods of enhancing production. “If you look at world oil production today, about two-thirds comes from 300 giant wells that are depleting about six percent a year,” said Krenicki. “Of those giant wells, only about one third of the oil has been extracted — for lots of reasons – cost, technology, difficulty. And world oil demand is to grow about 20 million barrels per day over the next decade.” “We know that these (electric submersible pumps) are the key to unlock this puzzle,” Krenicki said. John Wood said earlier in February it was looking into the possible sale of the well support unit. Sources previously told Reuters the company had put the division on the block and had hired Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX) to advise on the sale. Chief Executive Allister Langlands told reporters on Monday that John Wood would use some of the funds to pay for its purchase of oil production services company PSN, which it bought for $955 million in December, and added that the company will also look to make more acquisitions. “We’d like to expand our engineering business in Brazil, we’d like to grow our brownfield support business in Canada so those will be two areas that we continue to look at,” he said, adding that no deal was imminent. GE said on Sunday that Wood Group’s board intends to unanimously recommend the deal to its shareholders. It is expected to close later in 2011, GE said. (Additional reporting by Sarah Young; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Erica Billingham) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Credit Suisse raises capital

February 14, 2011

Credit Suisse raises capital

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Van Nostrand Expects Treasuries to Rally

December 30, 2010

Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) — Eric Van Nostrand, U.S. interest-rate strategist at Credit Suisse Securities, Jonathan Lemco, senior analyst at Vanguard Group Inc., and John Brynjolfsson, chief investment officer at Armored Wolf LLC, talk about the outlook for U.S. Treasuries. They speak with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Jersey Says 10-Year Treasury Yield May Decrease to 3%

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Ira Jersey, director of U.S. interest-rate strategy at Credit Suisse Securities, talks about the outlook for the U.S. bond market. He speaks with Julie Hyman on Bloomberg Television’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Parker Says Stocks Will `Start to Recover’ on Irish Aid

November 29, 2010

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) — Bob Parker, senior advisor at Credit Suisse Asset Management, discusses the outlook for equity markets after European governments agreed to hand Ireland an 85 billion-euro ($113 billion) aid package. He talks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Read the full article →

Robert Lenzner: Paul Calello Steered Credit-Suisse Through The Financial Crisis

November 17, 2010

Don’t Follow Robert Lenzner I was very saddened to hear of the death of Paul Calello, 49, the former chief executive officer of Credit Suisse investment banking. He had been ill and under treatment for non-Hodgkins lymphoma for well over a year. Paul’s death is a great loss because of his unique character and qualities. Unpretentious, matter-of-fact, thoughtful and completely honest and dependable, I found him to be a true prince of a person and wise about the frailties of Wall Street and the proper course of leadership in crisis. His global firm can thank him for the way he steered a prudent course through the worst crisis in Wall Street in 80 years. Calello understood the dangers of too much leverage. He made a careful study of the risks faced by the other large banks in Credit-Suisse’s class-Merrill Lynch, Lehman Bros., Citigroup and Morgan Stanley-and recognized that he had little time to ensure a solid, safe condition for Credit-Suisse. To his immense credit and vision, Paul recognized the need to radically reduce risk in the fourth quarter of 2008 in order to be in a strong position at the start of 2009. He reduced risky assets on Credit-Suisse’s balance sheet by 16% in late 2008. He sold off assets that weren’t earning a proper return, and most significantly increased the firm’s capital position so that Tier 1 capital was 13.3% in early 2009, the best ratio on Wall Street. Then Calello had the strength of purpose not to pay huge cash bonuses to his staff as other failing firms did but to use other troubled assets in the distribution of bonuses that might improve in price in the future. No other financial executive had the brilliant courage and tenacity to accomplish such a fair and worthwhile solution. Calello was a quiet leader. You knew his word was good. You recognized you were in the company of an exceptional person. I’m just sure his loss cut short a productive life that would have made this nation an improved place to cope with all of our many problems. Rest in peace.

Read the full article →

Video: O’Sullivan Says Test of Recovery Is Corporate Spending

October 29, 2010

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Michael O’Sullivan, head of U.K. research and global asset allocation at Credit Suisse Private Banking, talks about the outlook for economic growth in the U.S. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

Read the full article →

Video: Herrmann Expects $100 Billion of Fed Quantitative Easing: Video

October 29, 2010

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Herrmann, an economist at Credit Suisse, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy and the possibility of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve. He speaks from Zurich with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Read the full article →

Video: Ellinghorst Sees `Massive’ Recovery in Earnings at Ford

October 26, 2010

Oct. 26 (Bloomberg) — Arndt Ellinghorst, head of automotive research at Credit Suisse Group AG, talks about the outlook for Ford Motor Co.¶ Ford may report the biggest third-quarter profit in its 107-year history today as Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally’s overhaul of the model lineup boosts the company’s share of the U.S. auto market. Net income was $1.37 billion, based on the average projection of five analysts, up from $997 million. Ellinghorst speaks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Read the full article →

Credit Suisse third-quarter earnings miss analysts forecasts on lower trading volume

October 21, 2010

Credit Suisse third-quarter

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Parker Sees Stocks Rising 5% by Year-End

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Bob Parker, senior advisor at Credit Suisse Group AG, discusses the outlook for currency and equity markets. He talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move.”

Read the full article →

Video: Grant Says Quantitative Easing Is Just Money Printing: Video

October 8, 2010

Oct. 8 (Bloomberg) — James Grant, editor of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, and Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse Holdings USA Inc., talk about the outlook for Federal Reserve monetary policy, the labor market and the dollar. They speak with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

World Economy ‘Decoupling’ From The U.S.

October 4, 2010

Oct. 4 (Bloomberg) — Wall Street economists are reviving a bet that the global economy will withstand the U.S. slowdown. Just three years since America began dragging the world into its deepest recession in seven decades, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Credit Suisse Holdings USA Inc. and BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research are forecasting that this time will be different. Goldman Sachs predicts worldwide growth will slow 0.2 percentage point to 4.6 percent in 2011, even as expansion in the U.S. falls to 1.8 percent from 2.6 percent.

Read the full article →

UBS AG, Credit Suisse Group assets need to increase

October 4, 2010

UBS AG, Credit Suisse Group assets need to increase

Read the full article →

Video: Garcha Says RIM’s Earnings Forecast Is Credible: Video

September 17, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — Kulbinder Garcha, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG, discusses Research In Motion Ltd.’s profit forecast. The maker of the BlackBerry smartphone said revenue this quarter will be as much as $5.55 billion and earnings per share will be as much as $1.70, beating analyst estimates. Garcha, speaking from London, talks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Garcha Says RIM’s Earnings Forecast Is Credible: Video

September 17, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — Kulbinder Garcha, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG, discusses Research In Motion Ltd.’s profit forecast. The maker of the BlackBerry smartphone said revenue this quarter will be as much as $5.55 billion and earnings per share will be as much as $1.70, beating analyst estimates. Garcha, speaking from London, talks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Credit Suisse’s ‘Greedy Antics’ Cost It $229 Million

September 8, 2010

BILLINGS, Mont. — A federal bankruptcy judge says he will not reward the “greedy antics” of Swiss bank Credit Suisse by ordering the repayment of a $229 million loan it arranged for the exclusive Yellowstone Club. Bankruptcy Judge Ralph Kirscher’s order Tuesday says Credit Suisse was complicit in diverting the money to club founder Tim Blixseth for his personal use. Kirscher says Blixseth owes more than $40 million to other creditors, but Credit Suisse should not benefit from the judgment against him. Blixseth says the $40 million figure was inflated by “bogus claims” and that federal authorities are investigating his ex-wife, Edra, on fraud allegations stemming from the case. She denies the accusation. The U.S. Attorney’s office says it can neither confirm nor deny there is an investigation.

Read the full article →

Video: Morse Says Oil May Dip Below $70, Has Rebound `Momentum’: Video

September 7, 2010

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) — Edward Morse, head of commodities research at Credit Suisse Group AG, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton about crude oil prices and the natural gas market. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Koch Says M&A Market Shows Long-Term Investor Confidence: Video

August 31, 2010

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Steven Koch, co-chairman of global mergers and acquisitions at Credit Suisse, discusses the U.S. economy and activity in the mergers and acquisitions market. Koch talks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Herrmann Doubts More Fed Asset Purchases Are Imminent

August 27, 2010

Aug. 27 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Herrmann, an economist at Credit Suisse, talks about the outlook for the Federal Reserve’s annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. He speaks from Zurich with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Read the full article →

Video: Cliggott Says U.S. Government `Frozen’ on Fiscal Policy: Video

August 26, 2010

Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) — Doug Cliggott, U.S. equity strategist with Credit Suisse, and John Brady, senior vice president at MF Global, talk about the outlook for U.S. stocks and bonds, Federal Reserve monetary policy and U.S. government fiscal policy. They speak with Matt Miller, Julie Hyman and Dominic Chu on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart”. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Morse Says Wheat Price Gains `Overdone’: Video

August 23, 2010

Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) — Edward Morse, head of commodities research at Credit Suisse Group AG, talks about the outlook for agricultural and industrial commodities. Morse also discusses his investment strategy. He speaks from New York with Bloomberg’s Susan Li. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Parker Rates Chinese Equities `A Buy’

August 16, 2010

Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) — Bob Parker, senior adviser at Credit Suisse Group AG, talks about his investment strategy for Chinese stocks and emerging market debt. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Read the full article →

Video: Cliggott Sees `Steady, But Very Slow’ Economic Growth: Video

July 30, 2010

July 30 (Bloomberg) — Doug Cliggott, U.S. equity strategist at Credit Suisse, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy. Cliggott and George Dowd of Newedge USA LLC talk with Matt Miller, Adam Johnson and Dominic Chu on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Cliggott Sees `Steady, But Very Slow’ Economic Growth: V

July 30, 2010

July 30 (Bloomberg) — Doug Cliggott, U.S. equity strategist at Credit Suisse, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy.¶ Cliggott and George Dowd of Newedge USA LLC talk with Matt Miller, Adam Johnson and Dominic Chu on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Kelly Likes Kroger Among Grocery Stores: Video

July 6, 2010

July 6 (Bloomberg) — Edward Kelly, an analyst at Credit Suisse, talks with Bloomberg’s Lori Rothman about his investment strategy for consumer-staple retailers. Kelly also discusses Walgreen Co.’s June sales, and the outlook for drugstores and grocery stores. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Karsh Sees Short-Term Volatility for Oil, Long-Term Gain: Video

June 28, 2010

June 29 (Bloomberg) — Andrew Karsh, who helps manage $4.8 billion for the Credit Suisse Total Commodity Return Strategy team, talks in Hong Kong with Rishaad Salamat about the outlook for crude oil, copper and gold, and his investment strategy. Oil, heading for its first quarterly decline since the end of 2008, may fall in the second half on signs that the economic recovery in developed countries is slowing. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Cliggott Discusses U.S. Equities, Investment Strategy: Video

June 18, 2010

June 18 (Bloomberg) — Doug Cliggott, U.S. equity strategist at Credit Suisse, talks about the U.S. stock market. He talks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (This report is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Herrmann Says Spanish Debt Auction Results `Promising’

June 18, 2010

June 18 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Herrmann, an economist at Credit Suisse, talks about the impact of yesterday’s Spanish debt auction on investor confidence and the European Union’s decision to publish the results of stress tests on the region’s lenders. He speaks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Start Up.”

Read the full article →

Private Banks Touting Asia Expansion Plans Make Clariden Leu’s Lee `Puke’

June 16, 2010

By Joyce Koh June 17 (Bloomberg) — Private banks touting plans to step up hiring in Asia are undermining the industry by driving up compensation expectations, said the regional head of Credit Suisse Group AG ’s Clariden Leu unit. “If you go by the numbers, it makes me puke: I don’t know who these people are, and why they’re talking like that,” Singapore-based Jimmy Lee , a 20-year private banking veteran, said in an interview on June 11. “They’re shooting themselves in the foot.” UBS AG , Standard Chartered Plc and Morgan Stanley are among companies that have announced plans to hire more private bankers to help Asia’s swelling ranks of millionaires manage their money. Wealth in the Asia-Pacific region outside Japan is expected to grow at twice the global rate, the Boston Consulting Group said this month. Increased competition for Asia’s riches has led to a shortage of qualified private bankers in Singapore, and turnover among advisers in search of bigger paychecks is antagonizing clients concerned about privacy, said Lee, who joined Clariden Leu in March 2009. “It takes time to build these people,” he said. “It affects me because when I talk to other relationship managers, they’ll say if so many banks are growing, they’ll feel good, and they tend to ask for much higher salaries which are unrealistic sometimes.” The Asia-Pacific region’s share of global wealth will rise to almost 20 percent in 2014 from 15 percent last year, with China and India driving growth, according to the Boston Consulting Group report. ‘Merry Go-Round’ The industry may need an additional 900 wealth managers in the next five years to cope with growth in the region, according to a September research note from UBS. Switzerland’s biggest bank said last month it is reviving an effort to recruit and train people who don’t have industry experience for its Asian unit as competition for private bankers heats up. Many private banks expect “instant gratification” and look for wealth managers who can bring existing relationships and assets, Chris Claridge, managing partner at the Consulting Partnership , a Singapore-based headhunting firm, said in an interview yesterday. Pay increases for advisers who switch firms is averaging about 15 percent to 30 percent amid a “ridiculous merry go- round” among staff, Claridge said. “There’s a fair bit of wishful thinking going on,” he said. Banks in Asia are talking about hiring “without really thinking through” where the new employees will come from. Private banking clients are concerned the turnover in advisers will threaten privacy, said Lee, 48. Hiring at Clariden Leu, 89 percent owned by Credit Suisse, will depend on the availability of qualified people, he said. “My information is shared with six other banks if my private banker moves to six banks, and that is a problem,” he said. “You’re actually causing trouble for your clients if you keep moving around. That’s something this industry should look to minimize.” To contact the reporter on this story: Joyce Koh in Singapore at jkoh38@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Credit Suisse Opens Onyx Internal Electronic Trading Platform to Clients

June 11, 2010

By Daniel Kruger June 11 (Bloomberg) — Credit Suisse Group AG, one of the Federal Reserve’s 18 primary dealers, has opened to clients its internal electronic system for trading U.S. government securities, the firm said. The algorithmic platform, known as Onyx, gives traders direct control over order entry and trading, Credit Suisse said. It allows them to enter parameters for trades, such as bets on a flatter or steeper yield curve , into the system and monitor execution themselves. The move comes amid a decline in Treasury market trading volumes. “It really was about improving execution efficiency and building a competitive advantage in market-making, which results in deeper liquidity for our clients,” Timothy Blake , co-head of U.S. interest rates at Credit Suisse in New York, said in an interview. “It’s going to lead to much higher volume.” Credit Suisse says it’s the first primary dealer to give clients direct electronic access to its internal trading capabilities. Since opening the platform to fixed-income trading clients in April, about 40 firms have adopted it for at least a portion of their transactions, the firm said. They range from hedge funds to insurance companies, it said. Average weekly trading volume for U.S. government debt reported to the Federal Reserve by primary dealers fell 26 percent in 2009 to $409.7 billion, from $553 billion the year before. Volume has picked up this year, Fed data show, averaging $501.6 billion as Europe’s debt crisis pushed investors to the relative safety of Treasuries. Volume Increase “We expect that when clients have this tool, trades that would have been too difficult to do before because it required too much manual work, or too many pieces, they will now do,” said Ryan Sheftel , part of Credit Suisse’s electronic market- making group in New York. “We think that this will actually increase market volumes and liquidity.” Onyx users can trade about 100 pairs of securities in the futures and cash markets, with liquidity from other users and Credit Suisse’s market-making operation, the firm said. Onyx has been used internally by Credit Suisse since 2006, it said. Algorithmic trading uses mathematical models to assist in transactions. Additional features that are planned include an application for Apple Inc.’s iPad, the firm said. To contact the reporters on this story: Daniel Kruger in New York at dkruger1@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

SEC Approves Five-Minute Trading Halts for S&ampP 500 Companies That Move 10%

June 10, 2010

By Nina Mehta June 10 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved rules that will halt trading in Standard & Poor’s 500 Index stocks during periods of volatility, a response to the May 6 plunge that wiped out $862 billion in 20 minutes. The circuit-breaker test, scheduled to last through Dec. 10, will pause trading for five minutes when a company rises or falls 10 percent in five minutes or less. The SEC said in an e- mailed statement that trading venues and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority will begin implementing the curbs tomorrow. The regulator delayed the start of the pilot program last week. Halts “will help reduce the likelihood of this type of unusual trading activity from recurring,” SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said on June 2. The circuit breakers have been agreed to by executives from the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq Stock Market and other venues. The SEC has posted more than 25 letters commenting on the plan on its website. Investors and a former chief economist at the agency said regulators should guard against a repeat of the May 6 selloff by imposing limits on how far shares can fall instead of halting trading. Hudson River Trading LLC , Quantlab Financial LLC, Credit Suisse Group AG and Lawrence Harris said in letters that the circuit breakers approved today by the SEC risk making equity plunges worse. They recommended a system used on futures markets such as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange that subject rapidly falling securities to what are known as limit-down restrictions. “Halts will attenuate volatility if liquidity or rationality arrives before markets return to operation,” wrote Harris, now a finance professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. “Allowing markets to reverse as soon as they are ready to do so is optimal because such reversals restore confidence.” Schapiro, NYSE, Nasdaq A limit-down rule preventing executions below a certain level may “minimize the costs associated with interrupting continuous trading and denying market participants a continuous flow of market data during critical time periods,” New York- based Hudson River and Quantlab in Houston told the SEC yesterday. Executives at Chicago-based Allston Trading LLC and RGM Advisors LLC in Austin, Texas, also signed the letter. The firms are automated trading companies. Creating price boundaries during times of volatility would prevent transactions from occurring “outside of the acceptable range, and ‘clearly erroneous’ trades would become a thing of the past,” Dan Mathisson , the New York-based head of the Advanced Execution Services unit at Credit Suisse, told the SEC in a June 3 letter . Such rules “have been effective in curtailing severe errors or market dislocations” in futures trading, he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Nina Mehta in New York at nmehta24@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →