earnings

Travelers Earnings

January 25, 2011

Travelers Earnings

Read the full article →

How Will US 4Q Earnings Affect the FX Markets?

January 18, 2011

How Will US 4Q Earnings Affect the FX Markets?

Read the full article →

FOREX: Dollar Sold as Earnings Outlook Weighs on US Recovery Bets

January 18, 2011

FOREX: Dollar Sold as Earnings Outlook Weighs on US Recovery Bets

Read the full article →

Oracle Earnings…

December 17, 2010

Oracle Earnings…

Read the full article →

Ryanair posts higher earnings in the three months through Sep.

November 1, 2010

Ryanair posts higher earnings in the three months

Read the full article →

Chevron Corp Earnings

October 29, 2010

Chevron Corp Earnings

Read the full article →

FOREX: Markets Look Past Euro Data to Focus on US Earnings, Fed Speak

October 21, 2010

FOREX: Markets Look Past Euro Data to Focus on US Earnings, Fed Speak

Read the full article →

Video: Tyler Says Goldman May Have Advantage Over Lending Banks: Video

October 19, 2010

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) — Jason Tyler, senior vice president of Ariel Investments LLC, talks about the possible advantage Goldman Sachs Group Inc. may have over competitors and the earnings outlook for U.S. banks. Tyler speaks with Deirdre Bolton and Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Dollar Rally Struggles to Maintain Traction as the Fed Keeps Talking up Stimulus, Earnings Feed Appetites

October 19, 2010

Dollar Rally Struggles to Maintain Traction as the Fed Keeps Talking up Stimulus, Earnings Feed Appetites

Read the full article →

European Stocks Close Higher Amid Better-than-Expected Earnings

October 18, 2010

European Stocks Close Higher Amid Better-than-Expected Earnings

Read the full article →

European Stocks Close Higher Amid Better-than-Expected Earnings

October 18, 2010

European Stocks Close Higher Amid Better-than-Expected Earnings

Read the full article →

Dollar on the Verge of Reversal as the Intensity in Fed Speculation Eases and Earnings Heats Up

October 16, 2010

Dollar on the Verge of Reversal as the Intensity in Fed Speculation Eases and Earnings Heats Up

Read the full article →

Fed Chatter, 3Q Earnings and Chinese GDP May Help Spur a Dollar Reversal

October 15, 2010

Fed Chatter, 3Q Earnings and Chinese GDP May Help Spur a Dollar Reversal

Read the full article →

FOREX: Dollar Marks a Delayed Slide to Yearly Lows after a Strong Risk Response to 3Q Earnings

October 14, 2010

FOREX: Dollar Marks a Delayed Slide to Yearly Lows after a Strong Risk Response to 3Q Earnings

Read the full article →

Dollar Looks to Data, Bernanke Discussion and Earnings for Follow Through on Yearly Low

October 14, 2010

Dollar Looks to Data, Bernanke Discussion and Earnings for Follow Through on Yearly Low

Read the full article →

Dollar Sets a New Low for the Year as Earnings Join Stimulus Forecasts

October 14, 2010

Dollar Sets a New Low for the Year as Earnings Join Stimulus Forecasts

Read the full article →

The 3Q Earnings Season Kicks off with a Rally for the Dow but Steady EURUSD

October 13, 2010

The 3Q Earnings Season Kicks off with a Rally for the Dow but Steady EURUSD

Read the full article →

Investors Prepare for FOMC Minutes, Inflation, and the Earnings Season

October 10, 2010

Investors Prepare for FOMC Minutes, Inflation, and the Earnings Season

Read the full article →

Video: U.S. Stocks Fall As Analysts Turn Cautious on Earnings: Video

October 4, 2010

Oct. 4 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Courtney Donohoe reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks fell, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its biggest drop in almost a month, as analyst rating cuts of companies including Microsoft Corp., Macy’s Inc. and J.C. Penney Co. triggered caution before the start of the earnings season. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

The Jobs Report Dominates the Week, as Investors Look for Clues ahead of the Earnings Season

October 3, 2010

The Jobs Report Dominates the Week, as Investors Look for Clues ahead of the Earnings Season

Read the full article →

Bob Samuels: Defending the Middle-Class: Why We Need Unions, Pensions, and Public Employees

September 13, 2010

Politicians and media pundits have joined the conservative effort to demonize unions, pensions, and public employees. In fact, if you landed on the planet today, you would think that the global financial meltdown was caused by greedy unionized public employees. Instead of blaming the super-wealthy for their huge gambling losses, there is a growing consensus claiming that the working poor and the downsized middle class are the cause of all of our problems. In the case of pensions for public employees, the popular sentiment is that these benefits will starve local and state governments, and so they should be eliminated or at least severely reduced. Leading the media frenzy against pensions is the misunderstanding of the cause and effects of unfunded pension liabilities. What no one seems to be saying is that due to the unethical and possibly illegal activities of Wall Street, most pension funds lost close to a third of their value in 2007 and 2008. While the banks and financial institutions were bailed out, no relief came to these pension funds, and new accounting rules forced public pensions to declare all of their present and future pension liabilities. However, we should remember that these liabilities do not have to be paid for today; in, fact, the pension liabilities cover the present and future retirement costs of all people in the system. Since reporters and the general public do not understand how pensions work, they are easily scared by what looks to be giant deficits. Furthermore, employers are using these huge numbers to get employees to accept reduced benefits, and the side effect of this scare tactic is that the public has turned on pensions, public employees, and unions. Unintentionally, the media, public employers, and the general public are playing into the hands of the wealthiest people in America who do not want to pay middle-class workers a decent wage with acceptable benefits. While it may be necessary to restructure pensions, it is important to stress that many employees have been contributing large parts of their salaries to ensure that they would have a viable income when they retired. Moreover, many employers have profited from being able to attract and retain workers earning reduced salaries because of the promised retirement packages. If these plans are not protected, not only will employers be breaking their promises, but more senior citizens will fall into poverty, which will present another drag on the economy through the reduction of consumer demand. Driving this attack on the middle class benefits and the working poor is the discovery by wealthy corporations and individuals that the best way for them to increase their earnings is to decrease the income and benefits of everyone else. In this move to concentrate wealth at the top, we find that nearly two-thirds of the income growth since 1979 has gone to the top 10 percent of US taxpayers. This tremendous concentration of wealth has been coupled with a decrease in tax rates for these wealthiest Americans, which in turn has resulted in giant state deficits and the reduction of needed social programs. If current trends continue, the top ten percent will continue to increase their earnings, while everyone else suffers. Of course, the great magic trick in all of this is that the Republican party has convinced many Americans that the real threat to their economic survival comes from the poor and the middle class. Perhaps no state better exemplifies this situation than California where the consolidation of wealth has surpassed the national average. Since these rich Californians are not paying their fair share of taxes, the state cannot support even its basic functions, and a huge deficit has resulted in massive budge cuts. Making matters worse is the law that requires a two-thirds supermajority to pass any budget or tax increase. The result is that even the Terminator cannot get a budget passed. To resolve this impasse, California is considering billionaire Meg Whitman for governor. Not only is she spending over a hundred million dollars of her own money on her campaign, but she is running on a very scary platform, which is basically to blame welfare for all of the states problems. Once again, we have the super wealthy blaming the poor for the problems in our economy. This is like a billionaire blaming her maid for the fall in her investment portfolio. Of course, Whitman, like so many other Republicans, also wants to attack unions, public employees, and pensions for our fiscal woes. She believes that we should replace defined benefit plans with defined contribution plans so that the next time the stock market tanks, everyone will lose all of their money. Whitman is as superficial as her commercials, and her only hope of winning is if she convinces workers and middle class people to vote according to their prejudices. What we need is a candidate who will stand up for workers, organized labor, and the middle class. Jerry Brown may not be the perfect candidate, but he does have a history of supporting rational policies that do not cater to the super wealthy. A key to this election will be the passing of Proposition 25, which allows a budget to be passed by the legislature with a simple majority vote. If Brown wins and Proposition 25 passes, California will be able to escape from its paralysis and start putting people back to work.

Read the full article →

Bob Samuels: Defending the Middle-Class: Why We Need Unions, Pensions, and Public Employees

September 13, 2010

Politicians and media pundits have joined the conservative effort to demonize unions, pensions, and public employees. In fact, if you landed on the planet today, you would think that the global financial meltdown was caused by greedy unionized public employees. Instead of blaming the super-wealthy for their huge gambling losses, there is a growing consensus claiming that the working poor and the downsized middle class are the cause of all of our problems. In the case of pensions for public employees, the popular sentiment is that these benefits will starve local and state governments, and so they should be eliminated or at least severely reduced. Leading the media frenzy against pensions is the misunderstanding of the cause and effects of unfunded pension liabilities. What no one seems to be saying is that due to the unethical and possibly illegal activities of Wall Street, most pension funds lost close to a third of their value in 2007 and 2008. While the banks and financial institutions were bailed out, no relief came to these pension funds, and new accounting rules forced public pensions to declare all of their present and future pension liabilities. However, we should remember that these liabilities do not have to be paid for today; in, fact, the pension liabilities cover the present and future retirement costs of all people in the system. Since reporters and the general public do not understand how pensions work, they are easily scared by what looks to be giant deficits. Furthermore, employers are using these huge numbers to get employees to accept reduced benefits, and the side effect of this scare tactic is that the public has turned on pensions, public employees, and unions. Unintentionally, the media, public employers, and the general public are playing into the hands of the wealthiest people in America who do not want to pay middle-class workers a decent wage with acceptable benefits. While it may be necessary to restructure pensions, it is important to stress that many employees have been contributing large parts of their salaries to ensure that they would have a viable income when they retired. Moreover, many employers have profited from being able to attract and retain workers earning reduced salaries because of the promised retirement packages. If these plans are not protected, not only will employers be breaking their promises, but more senior citizens will fall into poverty, which will present another drag on the economy through the reduction of consumer demand. Driving this attack on the middle class benefits and the working poor is the discovery by wealthy corporations and individuals that the best way for them to increase their earnings is to decrease the income and benefits of everyone else. In this move to concentrate wealth at the top, we find that nearly two-thirds of the income growth since 1979 has gone to the top 10 percent of US taxpayers. This tremendous concentration of wealth has been coupled with a decrease in tax rates for these wealthiest Americans, which in turn has resulted in giant state deficits and the reduction of needed social programs. If current trends continue, the top ten percent will continue to increase their earnings, while everyone else suffers. Of course, the great magic trick in all of this is that the Republican party has convinced many Americans that the real threat to their economic survival comes from the poor and the middle class. Perhaps no state better exemplifies this situation than California where the consolidation of wealth has surpassed the national average. Since these rich Californians are not paying their fair share of taxes, the state cannot support even its basic functions, and a huge deficit has resulted in massive budge cuts. Making matters worse is the law that requires a two-thirds supermajority to pass any budget or tax increase. The result is that even the Terminator cannot get a budget passed. To resolve this impasse, California is considering billionaire Meg Whitman for governor. Not only is she spending over a hundred million dollars of her own money on her campaign, but she is running on a very scary platform, which is basically to blame welfare for all of the states problems. Once again, we have the super wealthy blaming the poor for the problems in our economy. This is like a billionaire blaming her maid for the fall in her investment portfolio. Of course, Whitman, like so many other Republicans, also wants to attack unions, public employees, and pensions for our fiscal woes. She believes that we should replace defined benefit plans with defined contribution plans so that the next time the stock market tanks, everyone will lose all of their money. Whitman is as superficial as her commercials, and her only hope of winning is if she convinces workers and middle class people to vote according to their prejudices. What we need is a candidate who will stand up for workers, organized labor, and the middle class. Jerry Brown may not be the perfect candidate, but he does have a history of supporting rational policies that do not cater to the super wealthy. A key to this election will be the passing of Proposition 25, which allows a budget to be passed by the legislature with a simple majority vote. If Brown wins and Proposition 25 passes, California will be able to escape from its paralysis and start putting people back to work.

Read the full article →

Wall Street Marks Best Month In A Year In July

July 31, 2010

NEW YORK (Reuters) — U.S. stocks closed little changed on Friday, but Wall Street wrapped up its best month in a year after the earnings season rounded the final turn with a group of strong results that offset the impact of poor economic data.

Read the full article →

Michael Pento: Are Stocks Currently Cheap?

July 14, 2010

Perma-shills have been claiming of late that the stock market is now trading at an enticing valuation. Their main evidence for this, as they are fond to claim, is that the forward Price to earnings multiple is 12 times next year’s earnings for the S&P 500. And, of course, a 12 PE multiple makes stocks cheap and the overall market a buy. But for investors who want to accurately assess that number, there are two issues they should be aware of. First, the PE ratio isn’t a good measure of the near term direction for the market. And second, nobody knows what the forward PE will actually be. Some pundits like to use that forward looking number because, when corporate earnings are projected to rise–as they almost always are–the PE ratio will look better. So let’s get into some real numbers that will help determine if the market is indeed cheap. For Q1 2010, the PE ratio on an operating trailing twelve month earnings basis for the S&P 500 is 15.5. Historically speaking, the average PE ratio on the S&P is about 15 times earnings. So therefore, if one isn’t promoting an ebullient guess as to what earnings will be in the future, the market is currently just fairly priced on a PE basis. Also, the PE ratio on an inflation adjusted average over the previous ten year period has ranged from 4.78 in December of 1920 to 44.2 in December of 1999. With such a wide range of valuations, it is difficult at best to make a case to buy or sell stocks solely on a PE basis. There are other factors like; the direction of inflation and interest rates that are necessary to consider when evaluating the PE ratio. Some market cheerleaders also like to use the inverse of the PE ratio called the earnings yield when comparing stock prices to bonds. They say; with the current earnings yield being 6.4% and the Ten year note yielding around 3% that stocks are a great value. Again, there are problems here too. Firstly, investors don’t earn the earnings yield as they do with dividends. And as mentioned, the earnings yield is merely the reciprocal of the PE ratio. The fact that the yields on government bonds are significantly below the earnings yield on stocks is merely an indication of the egregiously overvalued state of the U.S. debt market. Rather than pick one or two statistics like the forward PE ratio or the earnings yield to convey an opinion on stocks, here are several important facts that will help you decide the future direction of the market. A good metric to determine the valuation of stocks is the dividend yield. The current dividend yield on the S&P is a paltry 2.1%. The historical average dividend yield is a much greater 4.36%. The lowest dividend yield was 1.11%, which was reached in August of 2000. The highest dividend yield was 13. 84%, this was achieved in June 1932. Therefore, on a dividend yield basis, the market is currently significantly overpriced. To add salt in the wound of those low yielding stocks, tax rates on dividends are scheduled to increase significantly in 2011. Maybe that is the reason why all the cash sitting idle on corporate balance sheets isn’t being sent back to investors in the form of dividends? According to the Investment Company Institute, mutual fund cash levels are at a decade low. Cash levels as a percent of assets reached a cyclical high of 12% in 1991. Today, that ratio is less than 4%. With mutual funds already nearly fully invested where will the money come from to take stocks higher? The Fed’s balance sheet is at a record high $2.3 trillion. The unwinding of that balance sheet will send interest rates on their $1.1 trillion In Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) soaring and will thus further damage the real estate market, stifle earnings growth and depress GDP growth. The Fed must also find buyers for all that MBS debt. This will crowd out investments that would have normally been made into stocks. Household debt and the Gross National debt have never been at or above 90% of GDP at the same time. For the first time in U.S. history, that is the case today. Along with the massive deleveraging that still lies ahead for both the public and private sectors, the Treasury must auction off close to $9 trillion in debt each year to cover our ballooning deficits and to satisfy rollovers. This will further crowd out investments that could have been better placed into the stock market. Once you view the real numbers on PE ratios and dividend yields it is hard to make an argument that stocks are cheap. And given the low levels of cash that exist at mutual funds and the crowding out of private investments that is taking place from the government, investors will find it difficult to assume the market can produce a sustainable rally of any real significance. The only disclaimer here is if the Fed embarks on another doubling of its balance sheet in an attempt to crush whatever life is left in the value of the U.S. dollar. Then, in that case the market may rally in nominal terms. But you had better own precious metals and the companies that pull the stuff out of the ground if you want to earn a positive return after inflation. Michael Pento is the Senior Market Strategist for Delta Global Advisors and a contributor to greenfaucet.com

Read the full article →

Video: Stocks Advance as Technology Shares Rise Before Earnings: Video

July 12, 2010

July 12 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Courtney Donohoe reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. Stocks rose, adding to gains from the biggest weekly rally in a year for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as analyst upgrades of technology companies boosted optimism before the start of the earnings season. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Stocks Advance as Technology Shares Rise Before Earnings: Video

July 12, 2010

July 12 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Courtney Donohoe reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. Stocks rose, adding to gains from the biggest weekly rally in a year for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as analyst upgrades of technology companies boosted optimism before the start of the earnings season. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Yuan Gain Limited to 1.9% This Year on Euro Drop, Survey Shows

June 20, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 20 (Bloomberg) — The yuan’s appreciation may be limited to 1.9 percent against the dollar this year as the euro’s slump hurts exporters, a survey of economists showed after China signaled an end to a two-year peg. The currency will probably climb to 6.7 per dollar by Dec. 31, according to the median estimate of 14 analysts interviewed after the People’s Bank of China said yesterday it will allow greater “flexibility.” The central bank ruled out “large- scale appreciation” and said it will prevent “excessive” moves. Gains may be limited because the yuan already strengthened 16.5 percent against the euro this year, eroding earnings for Chinese exporters in the European Union, the nation’s largest market. U.S. Senator Charles Schumer said lawmakers will push ahead with proposals for trade sanctions until they are convinced the advance is fast enough to allow fair competition. “The yuan’s appreciation against the dollar may be limited over the next six months after the Chinese currency gained significantly against the euro,” said Ma Jun , a Hong Kong-based economist for Deutsche Bank AG, who predicts a gain of 1.9 percent. U.S. politicians can only “declare this a partial victory,” he added. The outlook for appreciation in the survey is stronger than that indicated by forwards. The six-month non-deliverable contract jumped 0.5 percent on June 18 to 6.7596 per dollar, reflecting bets the yuan will rise 1 percent from the spot rate of 6.8262. Day One Chinese authorities have prevented the currency from strengthening against the dollar since July 2008 to help exporters cope during the global financial crisis. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro. The yuan may advance 0.2 percent to 6.815 tomorrow and 0.4 percent this week, according to the median estimate of six analysts who gave forecasts. The central bank sets the reference rate for yuan trading at around 9:15 a.m. every day and allows the currency to fluctuate up to 0.5 percent from the fixing. “The PBOC will probably keep the reference rate stable on Monday,” said Lu Zhengwei , an economist at Industrial Bank Co. in Shanghai, who predicts a 0.1 percent gain this year. “It needs to watch the market’s responses to the flexibility statement. Market participants won’t make bold moves either. They are waiting for more signals from the PBOC.” The central bank, which has accumulated $2.4 trillion in currency reserves intervening in currency markets, said it will maintain the trading band and curb inflows of short-term speculative capital. Depreciation Possible Authorities will “ensure the exchange rate’s fluctuation is controllable and prevent the possibility of market forces causing excessive adjustment in the rate,” the central bank said in a statement today. “We can’t exclude the possibility of yuan depreciation,” said Shen Jianguang , Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd.’s chief economist for Greater China, who said a 2.5 percent drop is possible this year if the dollar-euro rate is unchanged. Even so, he added, China needs to show flexibility in its currency before the Group of 20 summit in Toronto on June 26-27. Textiles makers stand to lose the most from appreciation and some would “face bankruptcy” with profit margins as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei , vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said in March. Europe’s debt crisis has added to pressure on their earnings. Swift Umbrella Co., based in the southern Chinese province of Fujian, was forced by European buyers to cut prices 6 percent this year, Xu Youchuan, sales manager, said in a June 2 interview. Balance of Payments China’s narrowing balance-of-payments gap indicates that there’s no basis for “large-scale appreciation” in the yuan, the central bank said yesterday. The current-account surplus, for trade in goods and services, narrowed 32 percent to $297.1 billion in 2009, government data show. Exports have been rebounding, exceeding imports by $19.5 billion in May, from a $1.68 billion surplus in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March. Overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, customs bureau data show. Benefits From Gains The World Bank said last week that a stronger currency would help China cool inflation , which accelerated to a 19-month high of 3.1 percent in May, higher than the government’s full- year target of 3 percent. Yuan gains would also give more room for Asian currencies to strengthen after the euro’s record depreciation prompted exporters from Taiwan to South Korea to call for currency controls to protect their earnings. Companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing- based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , said in March that they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer purchasing power. “A 3 percent gain against the dollar won’t have any major impact on exports this year,” said Chen Chao, ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Management Co.’s chief economist. “Whether the yuan will rise or fall against the dollar will depend on the dollar’s movement against other currencies.” — Judy Chen , Belinda Cao, Bob Chen, Frances Yoon, Yanping Li. Editors: Sandy Hendry , Paul Panckhurst To contact the reporters on this story: Judy Chen in Shanghai at Xchen45@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Yuan Gain May Be Limited to 1.9% by Year-End as Euro Slump Cools Exports

June 20, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 20 (Bloomberg) — The yuan’s appreciation may be limited to 1.9 percent against the dollar this year as the euro’s slump hurts exporters, a survey of economists showed after China signaled an end to a two-year peg. The currency will probably climb to 6.7 per dollar by Dec. 31, according to the median estimate of 14 analysts interviewed after the People’s Bank of China said yesterday it will allow greater “flexibility.” The central bank ruled out “large- scale appreciation” and said it will prevent “excessive” moves. Gains may be limited because the yuan already strengthened 16.5 percent against the euro this year, eroding earnings for Chinese exporters in the European Union, the nation’s largest market. U.S. Senator Charles Schumer said lawmakers will push ahead with proposals for trade sanctions until they are convinced the advance is fast enough to allow fair competition. “The yuan’s appreciation against the dollar may be limited over the next six months after the Chinese currency gained significantly against the euro,” said Ma Jun , a Hong Kong-based economist for Deutsche Bank AG, who predicts a gain of 1.9 percent. U.S. politicians can only “declare this a partial victory,” he added. The outlook for appreciation in the survey is stronger than that indicated by forwards. The six-month non-deliverable contract jumped 0.5 percent on June 18 to 6.7596 per dollar, reflecting bets the yuan will rise 1 percent from the spot rate of 6.8262. Day One Chinese authorities have prevented the currency from strengthening against the dollar since July 2008 to help exporters cope during the global financial crisis. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro. The yuan may advance 0.2 percent to 6.815 tomorrow and 0.4 percent this week, according to the median estimate of six analysts who gave forecasts. The central bank sets the reference rate for yuan trading at around 9:15 a.m. every day and allows the currency to fluctuate up to 0.5 percent from the fixing. “The PBOC will probably keep the reference rate stable on Monday,” said Lu Zhengwei , an economist at Industrial Bank Co. in Shanghai, who predicts a 0.1 percent gain this year. “It needs to watch the market’s responses to the flexibility statement. Market participants won’t make bold moves either. They are waiting for more signals from the PBOC.” The central bank, which has accumulated $2.4 trillion in currency reserves intervening in currency markets, said it will maintain the trading band and curb inflows of short-term speculative capital. Depreciation Possible Authorities will “ensure the exchange rate’s fluctuation is controllable and prevent the possibility of market forces causing excessive adjustment in the rate,” the central bank said in a statement today. “We can’t exclude the possibility of yuan depreciation,” said Shen Jianguang , Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd.’s chief economist for Greater China, who said a 2.5 percent drop is possible this year if the dollar-euro rate is unchanged. Even so, he added, China needs to show flexibility in its currency before the Group of 20 summit in Toronto on June 26-27. Textiles makers stand to lose the most from appreciation and some would “face bankruptcy” with profit margins as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei , vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said in March. Europe’s debt crisis has added to pressure on their earnings. Swift Umbrella Co., based in the southern Chinese province of Fujian, was forced by European buyers to cut prices 6 percent this year, Xu Youchuan, sales manager, said in a June 2 interview. Balance of Payments China’s narrowing balance-of-payments gap indicates that there’s no basis for “large-scale appreciation” in the yuan, the central bank said yesterday. The current-account surplus, for trade in goods and services, narrowed 32 percent to $297.1 billion in 2009, government data show. Exports have been rebounding, exceeding imports by $19.5 billion in May, from a $1.68 billion surplus in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March. Overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, customs bureau data show. Benefits From Gains The World Bank said last week that a stronger currency would help China cool inflation , which accelerated to a 19-month high of 3.1 percent in May, higher than the government’s full- year target of 3 percent. Yuan gains would also give more room for Asian currencies to strengthen after the euro’s record depreciation prompted exporters from Taiwan to South Korea to call for currency controls to protect their earnings. Companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing- based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , said in March that they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer purchasing power. “A 3 percent gain against the dollar won’t have any major impact on exports this year,” said Chen Chao, ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Management Co.’s chief economist. “Whether the yuan will rise or fall against the dollar will depend on the dollar’s movement against other currencies.” — Judy Chen , Belinda Cao, Bob Chen, Frances Yoon, Yanping Li. Editors: Sandy Hendry , Paul Panckhurst To contact the reporters on this story: Judy Chen in Shanghai at Xchen45@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Most Asian Stocks Rise as Japan’s Prime Minister Steps Down Mitsui Slumps

June 1, 2010

By Masaki Kondo June 2 (Bloomberg) — Most Asian stocks rose, led by gains in Japan after the country’s prime minister resigned. Commodity companies fell amid concern the BP Plc oil disaster will prompt stricter regulations on oil companies. Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s largest carmaker, advanced 0.9 percent in Tokyo as Yukio Hatoyama ’s resignation prompted a drop in the yen that boosted the earnings outlook for exporters. Mitsui & Co. , which owns a stake in oil and gas fields in the Gulf of Mexico, sank 6.6 percent. Four stocks advanced for every three that fell on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index , which dropped 0.1 percent to 112.11 as of 11:07 a.m. in Tokyo. The gauge slumped 9.8 percent last month, the most since October 2008 on mounting concern budget deficits in Europe and Chinese measures to control property prices will hurt the global economy. The measure had slumped as much as 0.7 percent before Hatoyama announced he was stepping down. “Overseas investors viewed Hatoyama’s administration as a problem because of a lack of political leadership and problems linking politics and money,” said Yumi Nishimura , an equity- market analyst at Daiwa Securities SMBC Co. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average gained 0.4 percent. It had earlier fallen 1.1 percent and started rallying after NHK Television first reported Hatoyama had told leaders of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan he will resign. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 0.6 percent. South Korea is closed for a holiday. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 0.5 percent today. The index fell 1.7 percent in New York yesterday after Agence France-Presse said Lebanon’s military fired at Israeli planes. Energy companies slumped as Attorney General Eric Holder said the U.S. Justice Department is investigating whether any criminal or civil laws were violated in the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. “Regulations on drilling for crude oil may tighten after the oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico,” said Hiroichi Nishi , an equities manager in Tokyo at Nikko Cordial Securities Inc. “That may spur concerns that the earnings environment for resources-related companies, including major trading firms, will worsen.” The slump in the MSCI Asia Pacific Index last month has dragged down the average price of stocks in the MSCI gauge to 14.2 times estimated earnings , near the lowest level since January 2009. To contact the reporters for this story: Masaki Kondo in Tokyo at mkondo3@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Tiger Airways (SIN:J7X) Strong Turnaround in FY10 Earnings

May 16, 2010

Tiger Airways (SIN:J7X) Strong Turnaround in FY10 Earnings

Read the full article →

Australian Market Report of April 30, 2010: US Earnings Reports Sparkle

April 30, 2010

Australian Market Report of April 30, 2010: US Earnings Reports Sparkle

Read the full article →

FOMC Rate Decision and GDP Dominate This Upcoming Week, While More Earnings to Come

April 25, 2010

FOMC Rate Decision and GDP Dominate This Upcoming Week, While More Earnings to Come

Read the full article →

Last Day of the Week, More Earnings and Economic Data

April 23, 2010

Last Day of the Week, More Earnings and Economic Data

Read the full article →

Hutchison Whampoa Profit Jumps 12% to $1.8 Billion; Europe 3G Loss Narrows

March 29, 2010

By Mark Lee March 30 (Bloomberg) — Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. , billionaire Li Ka-shing ’s biggest company, reported full-year profit that rose 12 percent as losses from its mobile-phone operations in Europe narrowed. Net income increased to HK$14.2 billion ($1.8 billion), or HK$3.32 a share, from a restated HK$12.7 billion, or HK$2.97, a year earlier, Hutchison said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange today. That compares with the HK$14.6 billion median estimate of five analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News. Hutchison cut marketing spending and network costs at its wireless businesses in markets including the U.K. and Italy to weather a recession, the worst in Europe since World War II, which hampered Li’s plan to turn around the unprofitable operations. The Hong Kong parent may post higher earnings from its ports and property division this year as the global economy recovers. “The cost of acquiring customers has come down and they are operating their businesses more efficiently,” Gary Pinge , who rates Hutchison shares “buy” at Macquarie Group Ltd. in Hong Kong, said before the announcement. The mobile-phone operations will post “ongoing improvement,” while the ports and energy divisions are expected to rebound, Pinge said. Hutchison shares rose 0.4 percent to HK$58.50 at the midday break in Hong Kong trading before the earnings announcement. The stock has gained 9.6 percent this year, making it the eighth- best performer on the benchmark Hang Seng Index, after Li stepped up purchases of the shares to boost his holding. To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Lee in Hong Kong at wlee37@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Oracle Corp Earnings

March 26, 2010

Oracle Corp Earnings

Read the full article →

Staples Inc Earnings

March 2, 2010

Staples Inc Earnings

Read the full article →

Jordan E. Goodman: 5 Ways to Wipe Out Your Credit Card Balances

February 19, 2010

Now, you really want to pay off your balances once and for all, don’t you? Here’s all you need to know about that. In truth, paying off your balances is simple; there’s nothing complicated about it. But it’s not easy, because it does require sacrifice and scraping together the cash that will get it done. Here are five techniques you can easily put into practice to pay off your credit card debt. 1. Set your goal. Make paying off your credit cards your top financial priority. Use the Federal Trade Commission’s calculator to see just how credit card interest drains your household budget. The average balance-carrying customer now owes $5,729 on his or her cards, according to the findings of a TransUnion survey. Even at the comparatively low (for credit cards) interest rate of 14 percent, that’s taking $67 a month in interest payments alone out of your budget. 2. Squeeze your budget. Turn a cold eye toward your expenses and find some extra money to send to your credit cards every month. Do whatever it takes: cancel cable, eliminate dinners out, stop buying shoes, skip a summer vacation. Seriously. Once you burn this debt for good, you’ll have even more extra cash for the niceties of life. But until you do, make this your priority. 3. Throw extra lump sums at the problem. Tax refund? Check. Christmas present from Mom? Check. You can really jump-start your debt-paydown plan if you take drastic action. Hold a yard sale, moonlight as a babysitter or lawn mower, or do something at a higher earnings rate, if you have that option. Send all of your earnings to your credit cards. 4. Pay off the highest-rate card first. That is, pay minimums on all of your cards, but send all of your extra payments to the card with the highest interest rate. Some credit card experts disagree with this advice, but they are wrong. They suggest that if you instead send extra money to the lowest-balance card, you’ll burn that balance faster and it will make you feel better about the whole enterprise. You’ll see why this advice is wrong once you look at the numbers. Here’s an example from the excellent DebtSmart web site . Your Costly Card has an $8,000 balance at 19.8 percent interest and a minimum monthly payment of $160 a month. Your Bitsy Card has an interest rate of 5.9 percent, a balance of $6,000, and a $120 a month minimum. The two minimum payments equal $280, but you’ve figured you can pay an extra $120 beyond that every month. If you pay the extra $120 to Bitsy Card, you’ll get it paid off in 27 months. At that point, you’ll still have a balance of $7,068 on Costly Card. By the time you pay that off, at $400 a month, it will take you another 21 months, and you’ll have paid a total of $5,120 in interest. Now go the other way. Pay only the monthly minimum of $120 on Bitsy Card, and pay $280 a month to Costly Card, the high-priced card. That balance will be burned in 39 months. You’ll be left with a $2,124 balance on the cheaper card, and it will take you less than six months to pay that off. Your interest total will be $3,740. At the end of the day, you’ll have paid both cards off five months earlier, and you’ll have paid $1,380 less in interest. 5. Use your HELOC. If you’re struggling under the weight of a high-priced credit card debt and you have a home equity line of credit on your house, you can consider using that line to pay off your credit card. The danger, of course, is that you’ll run into trouble, lose your job, and not be able to make your payments. Then you could lose your house, instead of just your credit rating! So, don’t take this step lightly. But HELOC rates are really low now; some are hovering just over 2 to 3 percent, and that interest is usually tax deductible. If you can easily afford the payments and have a secure source of income (and a backup source for a rainy day), you can take the credit card issuers off of your creditor list altogether by simply paying off your card with your home equity line. Then follow the same drastic action techniques to kill that debt as soon as possible. With the new legislation going into full effect on February 22, there will be rate protections, billing and payment protections, easier payments, account management, and protection for young borrowers. In the meantime, work on implementing these practices and develop good credit card behavior. The above is an adapted excerpt from the book Master Your Debt: Slash Your Monthly Payments and Become Debt-Free by Jordan E. Goodman with Bill Westrom. The above excerpt is a digitally scanned reproduction of text from print. Although this excerpt has been proofread, occasional errors may appear due to the scanning process. Please refer to the finished book for accuracy.

Read the full article →

XTO Energy Inc Earnings

February 17, 2010

XTO Energy Inc Earnings

Read the full article →

U.S. Equity Indexes Rise in Early Trading as better than expected Housing Data and Earnings Boost Confidence

February 17, 2010

U.S. Equity Indexes Rise in Early Trading as better than expected Housing Data and Earnings Boost Confidence

Read the full article →

Week Full of data on Inflation, Housing, Manufacturing, FOMC Minutes, and Earnings!

February 14, 2010

Week Full of data on Inflation, Housing, Manufacturing, FOMC Minutes, and Earnings!

Read the full article →

Alico Reports First Quarter Earnings

February 9, 2010

LA BELLE, Fla., Feb. 9, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Alico, Inc. (Nasdaq:ALCO), a land management company, announced a net loss for the three months ended December 31, 2009 of $1.4 million or $0.19 per share compared with a loss of $0.2 million or $0.02 per share, for the three months ended December 31, 2008. Earnings from interest on mortgages, real estate sales and agriculture operations were below prior year results and combined to cause the earnings decline.

Read the full article →

UBS Says Withdrawals by Clients Increased Even as Bank Returned to Profit

February 9, 2010

By Elena Logutenkova Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) — UBS AG , the European bank with the biggest losses from the credit crisis, reported its first profit in more than a year, helped by a recovery at the investment bank and a lower charge tied to the company’s debt. Fourth-quarter net income was 1.21 billion Swiss francs ($1.13 billion), compared with a loss of 9.56 billion francs a year earlier, the Zurich-based bank said in a statement today. Earnings beat the 416 million-franc estimate of 14 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, helped by a 480 million-franc tax credit. UBS may report its first annual profit since 2006 this year after spinning off $38.7 billion in toxic assets into a central bank fund, cutting 18,500 jobs and appointing 11 new managers to the executive board. Chief Executive Officer Oswald Gruebel , who has led UBS for almost a year, is relying on a recovery at the investment bank to help increase pretax earnings to 15 billion francs in three to five years. “By now Gruebel has got things under control,” Joerg De Vries-Hippen , chief investment officer for European equities at Allianz Global Investors in Frankfurt, said before the earnings release. “There is light at the end of the tunnel.” A return to profitability may help UBS stop withdrawals by wealthy clients, who removed a net 228.1 billion francs over the 21 months through December, Gruebel has said. Redemptions increased to 45.2 billion francs in the fourth quarter from 26.6 billion francs in the previous three months. Analysts had forecast 17.5 billion francs in outflows. The bank predicted that withdrawals will continue in the “immediate future.” Restoring Reputation “We expect that our return to profitability will increase clients’ confidence in UBS and restore our reputation,” Gruebel said in the statement. The wealth management and Swiss bank unit’s pretax profit more than doubled to 1.11 billion francs in the quarter as a charge to settle the U.S. cross-border case wasn’t repeated. Wealth management Americas had a profit of 178 million francs, compared with a loss of 444 million francs a year ago. The investment bank posted pretax profit of 297 million francs, its first since the second quarter of 2007, as charges on UBS’s own debt fell to 24 million francs from 1.62 billion francs a year ago. Analysts had forecast charges of about 750 million francs. Earnings in asset management rose 20 percent to 284 million francs. A quarterly profit “is an important staging post in rebuilding client confidence, and management delivering on its restructuring plan,” Matt Spick , a London-based analyst at Deutsche Bank AG, said in a note before the earnings release. “If UBS succeeds in rebuilding its investment bank, there could be considerable upside.” U.S. Tax Case UBS shares have fallen 12 percent so far this year in Zurich trading, matching the decline of the 52-company Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index . Domestic rival Credit Suisse Group AG fell 15 percent. The Swiss administrative court last month blocked the government from passing data to U.S. authorities on certain accounts, endangering an accord reached last year to settle a lawsuit against UBS related to alleged tax evasion by American clients. Swiss Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said on Jan. 27 that the government will work with the U.S. to save the deal. Also at risk is the deferred prosecution agreement that UBS signed in February 2009 to avoid criminal charges, she said. A criminal prosecution in the U.S. could lead to the bank’s insolvency and endanger the Swiss economy, the government said. Investment Bank “We are confident that the Swiss and US governments will undertake cooperative discussions, as required by the settlement, to find alternative mechanisms for fulfilling the parties’ obligations, and we are fully supportive of these efforts,” Gruebel, 66, and UBS Chairman Kaspar Villiger , 69, said in a letter to shareholders. UBS aims to attract about 5 percent of total invested assets as net new funds annually at the main wealth management unit in the medium term, and reach a pretax profit of 4.6 billion francs, the bank said in November. The investment bank targets pretax earnings of 6 billion francs annually, as the debt trading unit, which was responsible for the majority of more than $57 billion in writedowns and losses from the credit crisis, recovers. UBS last month appointed Rajeev Misra and Dimitri Psyllidis , who previously worked for Deutsche Bank AG and Merrill Lynch & Co., respectively, to co-run the debt-trading unit. The fixed-income division had its first positive revenue in the third quarter of 2009 after eight quarters of losses. UBS, which unlike Credit Suisse missed out on a credit rally in the first half of the year, brought in 200 new hires to revamp the business. To contact the reporter on this story: Elena Logutenkova in Zurich at elogutenkova@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Investors Wait More Fundamentals and Earnings from the World’s Largest Economy!

February 7, 2010

Investors Wait More Fundamentals and Earnings from the World’s Largest Economy!

Read the full article →

Autonomy earnings inclined on higher sales

February 3, 2010

Autonomy earnings inclined

Read the full article →

Pfizer Inc Earnings

February 3, 2010

Pfizer Inc Earnings

Read the full article →

U.S. Equity Indexes Mixed on Earnings, Strong Dollar, and Economic Fundamentals

February 3, 2010

U.S. Equity Indexes Mixed on Earnings, Strong Dollar, and Economic Fundamentals

Read the full article →

Income, Spending, Jobs, and More Earnings Dominate American Markets this Week!

January 31, 2010

Income, Spending, Jobs, and More Earnings Dominate American Markets this Week!

Read the full article →

Stock Markets Drop over the Week as Earnings Disappoint Investors, While GDP Shows U.S. Economy Expanded Beyond Expectations!

January 30, 2010

Stock Markets Drop over the Week as Earnings Disappoint Investors, While GDP Shows U.S. Economy Expanded Beyond Expectations!

Read the full article →

Amazon.com Inc Earnings

January 29, 2010

Amazon.com Inc Earnings

Read the full article →

Microsoft Corp Earnings

January 29, 2010

Microsoft Corp Earnings

Read the full article →