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(MENAFN) Western Union Co. said that due to higher sales, net income in the fourth quarter almost doubled to USD452.3 million, from USD242.6 million in 2010′s same period, reported AP. The money …

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Western Union’s Q4 profit jumps to USD452.3m

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(MENAFN) MasterCard Inc said that during the fourth quarter, the company recorded a charge of USD495 million to cover lawsuit losses, reported Gulf News. The company added that the lawsuit was …

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MasterCard records USD495m charge in Q4

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S Korea’s Hynix posts USD150m operating loss in Q4

February 2, 2012

(MENAFN) South Korea’s Hynix Semiconductor said that since prices of memory chips dropped due to weak demand, in the fourth quarter, the firm posted an operating loss of USD150 million, reported …

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Sweden’s TeliaSonera Q4 results beat forecasts

February 2, 2012

(MENAFN) TeliaSonera said that in the fourth quarter, earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) and excluding one-offs reached USD1.4 billion, exceeding expectations, …

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NZ records trade surplus of USD573.12m in Q4

January 29, 2012

(MENAFN) New Zealand’s statistics agency said that in the fourth quarter of 2011, the country’s trade balance recorded a surplus of USD573.12 million, reported Xinhua News. The agency added that …

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Stanley Black & Decker reports 20% increase in 4Q profit

January 26, 2012

(MENAFN) Stanley Black & Decker Inc. said that net income in the fourth quarter jumped 20 percent to USD165.3 million, compared with USD137.8 million in 2010′s same period, reported AP. The New …

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US Lennar Q4 net income down 5%

January 11, 2012

(MENAFN) US Lennar Corp. said that driven by growing expenses, net income in the fourth quarter fell 5 percent to USD30.3 million, compared with USD32 million in 2010′s same period, reported …

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Texon Petroleum Limited (ASX:TXN) Secured Rig For Third And Fourth Eagle Ford Wells

April 18, 2011

Texon Petroleum Limited (ASX:TXN) Secured Rig For Third And Fourth Eagle Ford Wells

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U.S. Banks Relying On Rainy Day Funds, Not Revenue To Turn Profits

April 9, 2011

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina (Joe Rauch) – Investors looking for loan growth and surging revenues at the biggest U.S. banks, including Citigroup Inc (C.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) are likely to be disappointed by first-quarter earnings. Banks have been generating most of their profits in recent quarters from dipping into money they previously set aside to cover bad loans. Those reserve reductions make sense if credit losses are stabilizing, which seems to be the case. But banks cannot reduce their loan loss reserves forever and at this point profit growth must come from making more money from loans and generating more fees, analysts said. Boosting interest income from loans is tough when the interest rates at which banks lend are so low and loan demand is still tepid. Fee income, meanwhile, is being threatened by future regulatory changes. “The revenue line will be key, that’s what most investors will be focusing on,” said Jason Ware, senior equities analyst at Albion Financial Group. The Salt Lake City-based wealth manager oversees $650 million in client assets. “The question everyone has is ‘Where does the top line go from here?’” he said. Some banks will be particularly hard hit by weak trading in the quarter, as the stock market sagged on Middle Eastern political upheaval, a Japanese earthquake and tsunami sent the yen to record highs and markets were broadly unpredictable. But what many analysts are focusing on now is loan growth and data show the results may not be great. Bank loans outstanding declined 0.9 percent in January and 6.8 percent in February, according to a report from the Federal Reserve. Commercial and industrial loans were on the rise, which many analysts see as a positive sign, but meanwhile a broad array of consumer loans — mortgages, credit cards — are posting declines, so total bank credit outstanding are shrinking. The first quarter, analysts said, is typically the weakest of the year for banks. But the analysts with the best track records foresee a quarter that was tougher than usual for many banks, according to Thomson Reuters Starmine Smart Estimates. These “smart analysts” believe other analysts are far too optimistic about some banks, and only a little too pessimistic about the others. The analysts that have historically been the most accurate believe that results for Citigroup, Morgan Stanley (MS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) will fall short of analysts’ average estimates, according to Starmine Smart Estimates. Starmine’s analyst estimates, for example, indicates Morgan Stanley may miss estimates by as much as 22 percent. The Starmine “smart analysts” are projecting that Bank of America Corp (BAC.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo & Co (WFC.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) will beat broader estimates by a fairly small margin. BofA is projected with the largest earnings beat at 7.7 percent above the average estimate, Starmine estimates. NEW NORMAL For even the largest U.S. banks, interest income from loans is a key driver of earnings growth, but the total number of outstanding loans continues to stagnate, even as banks appear to have solved many of the credit issues that have dogged them for the last three years. The fees that banks get from processing debit cards will likely be limited by provisions of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, which will pressure fee income for banks in the future. Marty Mosby, bank analyst with Guggenheim Securities, said he is expecting banks will show a 10 percent decline in total charge-offs of bad loans, with some showing charge-offs shrinking by as much as 50 percent. While that will be a boost to earnings as banks continue to release reserves protecting against loan losses, Mosby said he does not expect loan growth for the next few quarters. “This will be a different model than what we’re used to seeing, based more on profitability, consolidation and efficiency, rather than outright organic growth,” Mosby said. In the fourth quarter of 2010, loans at U.S. banks totaled $7.38 trillion, the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2009 and off from the peak of $8 trillion in the second quarter of 2008, FDIC data show. Long term, investors may need to adjust their expectations for the industry’s earning ability. Mosby said banks that were once able to produce a 20 percent return on shareholder equity may not be able to top 15 percent. Bank’s return on equity could dip to as low or 10 or 12 percent, he added. Halle Benett, a banker in charge of financial institutions merger advisory at UBS for the Americas, said: “I do think you’ve got to come to a decision as to what is generally accepted profitability for banking institutions and I’m not sure the cycle we came out of was the long-term norm.” (Reporting by Joe Rauch; Additional reporting by Clare Baldwin and Lauren LaCapra in New York; Editing by Gary Hill) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Fossil Inks 535,000-SF Office Deal in Dallas Suburb

April 6, 2011

Fossil Inc. signed an agreement with owner The Swig Co. to lease the entire 535,000-square-foot office building at 901 S. Central Expressway in Richardson, TX. The accessories and clothing maker will consolidate three local branches into the building. Fossil expects to occupy the space in the fourth quarter. Former known as the Blue Cross Blue Shield Campus, the five-story, Class B office property at 901 S. Central was constructed in 1980 and…

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Corporate Profits At All-Time High As Recovery Stumbles

March 25, 2011

NEW YORK — Despite high unemployment and a largely languishing real estate market, U.S. businesses are more profitable than ever, according to federal figures released on Friday. U.S. corporate profits hit an all-time high at the end of 2010, with financial firms showing some of the biggest gains, data from the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis show. Corporations reported an annualized $1.68 trillion in profit in the fourth quarter. The previous record, without being adjusted for inflation, was $1.65 trillion in the third quarter of 2006. Many of the nation’s preeminent companies have posted massive increases in profits this year. General Electric posted worldwide profits of $14.2 billion, while profits at JPMorgan Chase were up 47 percent to $4.8 billion. Corporate profits steadily increased last year as companies continued holding onto record amounts of cash and other liquid assets while cutting costs, laying off workers and wringing more productivity — defined as the amount of output that comes from an hour of work — from remaining staff, even as the recession eased. To put that in perspective, said Lynn Reaser, the chief economist at Point Loma Nazarene University in San Diego, it’s important to note that companies were able to bring production back up to pre-recession levels without hiring any more workers. “We have now recovered all of the output lost in the recession, but we are still down by 7.5 million workers,” she said. In addition to layoffs, some companies continued to cut wages and benefits last year. Sub-Zero, the freezer and refrigerator manufacturer, told workers last year that factories in Wisconsin would have to be shut down, with 500 employees loosing their jobs, unless staff took a 20 percent pay cut, The New York Times reported . Workers were expected to put in more hours without overtime pay, while staff facing fewer hours of work due to furloughs were expected to do as much as they would have in a full workday, according to NPR . But, economists said, companies may have squeezed as much as they can out of workers, with a decline in profits for non-financial companies in the fourth quarter of last year suggesting that to improve production, companies will have to start hiring seriously again. On the whole, Reaser said, corporations have significantly improved their balance sheets since the financial crisis. “It’s helped pave the way for a significant gain for corporate capital spending, dividend payouts and corporate buybacks , as well as the significant rise in stock prices ,” she said. But while the financial sector continued to recover from its 2008 meltdown — with profits jumping some $51 billion in the fourth quarter, a gain of 51 percent over the previous quarter — non-financial firms actually saw profits fall by roughly $10 billion, according to the BEA figures. Part of the reason, said Reaser, was that although high productivity drove down labor costs, persistent unemployment and pinched consumers left companies unable to charge the higher prices needed to boost profits. More companies will start pushing more aggressively to improve profit margins this year, she said. In order for those efforts to pay off, she said, many companies will have to start hiring — and keep hiring. Until the end of last year, companies were able to boost productivity by squeezing their remaining workers, who were eager to prove they were worth their paychecks. “But,” said Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics, “you can’t keep getting more out of workers quarter after quarter after quarter.” To ramp up production this year, Ashworth said, companies have already started hiring modestly. Federal figures show the economy added total of 192,000 jobs in February, the most in nearly a year. The unemployment rate fell to 8.9 percent last month, the lowest since April 2009. Economic growth figures released on Friday also suggested firms were slowly stepping up production. The Commerce Department revised upwards its projections for gross domestic product growth in the fourth quarter of 2010, to 3.1 percent from 2.8 percent. The new projection, BMO Capital Markets senior economist Sal Guatieri said, is “consistent with an economy growing fast enough to gradually reduce the unemployment rate.” But, he said, most of the increase was in business inventories — companies producing and stockpiling more — rather than consumer confidence . Despite positive signs, economists warned that economic growth could be hit by the twin shocks of high gas prices and the impact of events in Japan, which has hampered auto and electronic supply chains. “There are mild headwinds that will slow growth a little bit,” said Nariman Behravesh, an economist at IHS Global Insight, an economic and financial analysis firm. “They’re not going to derail the recovery, and we’re guessing they’ll be temporary.” U.S. consumers appear to be growing nervous, thanks to events in Japan, fears over nuclear power, and unrest in the Middle East and north Africa. That anxiety could take an economic toll, with consumer sentiment falling this month to its lowest level since November 2009, according to the Reuters/University of Michigan index. “The sharp drop in consumer confidence and Japan-related supply chain bottlenecks will likely translate into real GDP growth of only around 2.4 percent in the first quarter, with a bounce back to the 3.5 percent to 4 percent range in the second quarter,” Behravesh said, revising his quarterly GDP growth estimate down from 4.2 percent.

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Economy Grew Faster Than Previously Thought In Fourth Quarter

March 25, 2011

WASHINGTON: The economy grew more quickly than previously estimated in the fourth quarter as businesses maintained fairly solid spending and restocked shelves to meet rising demand, while corporate profits increased 3.3 percent, a government report showed on Friday. Gross domestic product growth was revised up to an annualized rate of 3.1 percent, the Commerce Department said in its final estimate, close to its initial estimate of 3.2 percent published two months ago and up from its tally of 2.8 percent made in February. Economists had expected GDP growth, which measures total goods and services output within U.S. borders, to be revised up to a 3.0 percent pace. The economy expanded at a 2.6 percent rate in the third quarter. For the whole of 2010, the economy grew 2.9 percent, while corporate profits grew 20.4 percent, the most since 2004. Data so far suggest the economy maintained this growth pace in the first quarter, but there are concerns that rising oil prices could crimp consumer spending and slow the economic recovery. The pick-up in growth has been acknowledged by the Federal Reserve, which injected massive amounts of money into the economy to stimulate demand. The U.S. central bank is expected to conclude its $600 billion government bond buying program at the end of June. The government raised fourth-quarter growth estimates to reflect stronger business spending and inventory accumulation than previously forecast. Business investment rose at a 7.7 percent rate instead of 5.3 percent, lifted by spending on equipment and software, as well as on structures. Spending grew at a 10.0 percent pace in the third quarter. Spending on software and equipment increased at a 7.7 percent rate instead of 5.5 percent. Investment in structures rose at a solid 7.6 percent, the first increase since the second quarter of 2008. Business inventories increased $16.2 billion instead of the $7.1 billion estimated last month, subtracting a smaller 3.42 percentage points from GDP growth rather than the previously reported 3.70 percentage points drag. Excluding inventories, the economy expanded at an unrevised 6.7 percent pace, the fastest increase in domestic and foreign demand since 1998. Domestic purchases grew at a 3.2 percent rate instead of 3.1 percent. Consumer spending — which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity — grew at a 4.0 percent rate in the final three months of 2010 instead of 4.1 percent. It was still the fastest since the last three months of 2006 and was an acceleration from the third quarter’s 2.4 percent rate. The growth in exports was not as strong as previously estimated, while imports were revised a touch down. Trade added 3.27 percentage points to GDP growth instead of 3.35 percentage points. Government spending contracted at a 1.7 percent rate rather than 1.5 percent, due to weak state and local government outlays. The GDP report confirmed a pick-up in inflation pressures on surging food and gasoline prices. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index rose at a revised 1.7 percent rate in the fourth quarter instead of 1.8 percent. That compared to the third quarter’s 0.8 percent increase. But a “core” price index closely watched by the Fed advanced at a revised 0.4 percent rate instead of 0.5 percent. The increase was the smallest rise on record. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani, Editing by Andrea Ricci) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Are Farmland Values Growing Overly Ripe?

March 17, 2011

With booming farm income and robust demand for farmland, property values for agricultural land soared in the fourth quarter of 2010, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Survey of Agricultural Credit Conditions. Agricultural commodity prices surged in late 2010, boosting farm income, especially for crop and cattle producers. The burgeoning farm profits accelerated cropland and ranchland value gains in the Federal Reserve’s seven…

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European Stocks Drop for a Fourth Day

March 14, 2011

European Stocks Drop for a Fourth Day

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Household Wealth Jumps $2.1 Trillion In Last Quarter

March 10, 2011

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Household wealth rose by $2.1 trillion in the fourth quarter and their debt contracted at the slowest pace since 2008 as consumers stepped up spending and boosted the fragile economic recovery. Gains made in investments such as mutual funds boosted overall household wealth to $56.8 trillion even as the value of real estate fell, data released by the Federal Reserve showed on Thursday. Businesses were holding $1.9 trillion in liquid assets in the last quarter of 2010, fueling hopes that companies would use their stockpiles of cash to step up investments. The government’s debt expanded 14.6 percent on an annual rate in the fourth quarter, down from 16 percent in the previous quarter. Meanwhile, state and local government debt expanded 7.9 percent on an annual basis after expanding 5.4 percent in the previous quarter. Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Australian Gross Domestic Product expands in the fourth quarter of 2010, as investment accelerates

March 2, 2011

Australian Gross Domestic Product expands in the fourth quarter of 2010, as investment accelerates

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Video: Scott Brown Calls State Job Cuts a `Drag’ on GDP Growth

February 25, 2011

Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) — Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James & Associates Inc., discusses U.S. fourth-quarter gross domestic product and the outlook for the economy. The U.S. economy grew at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, slower than previously calculated and less than forecast as state and local governments made deeper cuts in spending. Brown speaks with Lisa Murphy on Bloomberg Television’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Thailand expands more than expected in the fourth quarter of 2010

February 21, 2011

Thailand

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Thailand expands more than expected in the fourth quarter of 2010

February 21, 2011

Thailand

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Andrew Sum: Ignore the Teen Employment Problem at Your Peril

February 18, 2011

In reviewing the findings of the recently released national report on employment and unemployment developments in the U.S. for January 2011, one might have encountered a sense of double vision in examining the findings for the nation’s teenagers (16-19 years old). In January 2011, only 25.7 percent of the nation’s teens (16-19 years old) were employed, continuing the steep decline in teen job opportunities over the past few years and decade. During that same month, the unemployment rate for the nation’s teens (seasonally adjusted) also was 25.7%. Thus, perfect equality existed between the teen employment rate (E/P) and the unemployment rate of teens in that same month. An identical result prevailed in the previous calendar year (2010) when the teen annual average E/P ratio and their unemployment rate were again exactly equal at 25.9%. This was the first time since the end of World War Two when these two key teen labor market variables came into equality. The 25.9% teen employment rate in 2010 marked the fourth consecutive annual drop in their employment rate. The modest growth in overall payroll employment levels during the past year did nothing for improving teen employment. Aggregate teen employment continued to fall for the fourth consecutive year and helped drive up their official unemployment rate to just under 26%, the highest it has been in the past 62 years for which CPS unemployment rates are available, another record high. Limited employment prospects for teens have pushed more than a million of them out of the labor force over the past few years (a 1.4 million decline since 2007) helping keep their unemployment rate artificially low. The magnitude of the decline in teen employment over the past decade (2000-2010) is mind boggling. In 2000, slightly over 45% of the nation’s teens were employed. The teen employment rate declined very sharply during the recession of 2001 and the largely jobless recovery of 2002-03, falling by between 8 and 9 percentage points. Teens benefitted very little from the national job growth that took place from 2003-2006, with their E/P ratio staying largely unchanged over this period. Over the next four years, their employment rate would fall steadily and steeply from 36.9% to 25.9%, a decline of 11 percentage points, far exceeding that of any other age group (See Chart 1). Every major demographic and socioeconomic group of teens has experienced declining employment rates over the past decade. Yet, in 2010 and all preceding years, both the employment rates and unemployment rates of teens differed often widely across gender, race-ethnic, educational attainment, and family income groups. Teenage males have performed worse than females in the labor market, and both Blacks and Hispanics trail considerably behind White, non-Hispanics. Low income minorities fare the worst by far in obtaining any type of employment. The deep deterioration in teen employment over the past decade will have severe adverse consequences for them and the rest of the nation in the future. Teen employment is highly path dependent. The more teens work this year, the more likely they are to work next year. Cumulative work experience in the teen years influences the employability, wages, and training experiences of these youth in their early to mid-20s. National research also has shown that higher teen employment for women and men has been associated with lower teen pregnancy rates, a lower tendency for men to drop out of high school, and reduced delinquency behavior. Higher employment also raises the annual incomes of teens and young adults, thereby increasing federal and state tax revenue and reducing a number of cash and in-kind transfers. Improved teen employment is thus a win, win, win, win proposition for the youth themselves, for their communities, the nation as a whole, and for national and state governments. We ignore this problem at our peril.

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Video: China Surpasses Japan as World’s Second-Largest Economy

February 14, 2011

Feb. 14 (Bloomberg) — Japan’s gross domestic product fell less than estimated in the fourth quarter in a pullback that may prove temporary as overseas demand revives production after the nation fell behind China as the world’s second-largest economy. Bloomberg’s Stephen Engle reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Japan’s GDP records a first contraction during the fourth quarter of 2010

February 14, 2011

Japan’s GDP records a first contraction during the fourth quarter of 2010

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Inflation will continue its rally in UK and the euro zone set to expand 0.4% in the fourth quarter

February 14, 2011

Inflation will continue its rally in UK and the euro zone set to expand 0.4% in the fourth quarter

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Negative Equity Soars, 27 Percent Of Mortgage Borrowers Owe More Than Their Home Is Worth

February 9, 2011

The number of borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth took a huge leap in the fourth quarter of 2010. A full 27 percent of borrowers are now “underwater” on their mortgages, up from 23 percent in the previous quarter, according to a new report from Zillow. Foreclosure moratoriums and falling home prices are to blame.

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Send Word Now Hires Two New Sales Executives in the UK, Adding Wealth of Experience to European Region

February 8, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – February 8, 2011) – Send Word Now, the leading provider of on-demand alerting , response, and incident management services , announced today the hire of Ian Harkins and Paul Maguire as Regional Sales Managers for the United Kingdom. Harkins and Maguire joined the Send Word Now team in the fourth quarter of 2010 in order to assist with the company’s continued growth in the United Kingdom and across Europe.

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For Governors, Medicaid Looks Ripe For Slashing

January 29, 2011

Hamstrung by federal prohibitions against lowering Medicaid eligibility, governors from both parties are exercising their remaining options in proposing bone-deep cuts to the program during the fourth consecutive year of brutal economic conditions.

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Video: Herrmann Says U.S. Economy Poised for Growth in 2011

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — John Herrmann, senior fixed-income strategist at State Street Global Markets, discusses the report on U.S. fourth-quarter gross domestic product and the outlook for the economy. The U.S. economy accelerated in the fourth quarter of 2010, driven by the biggest gain in consumer spending in more than four years and rising exports. Herrmann speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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The US economy grew by 3.2% in the fourth quarter yet less than expected

January 28, 2011

The US economy grew by 3.2% in the fourth quarter yet less than expected

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Chevron report a rise in net income in the fourth quarter

January 28, 2011

Chevron report a rise in net income in the fourth quarter

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JetBlue Expects Fare, Fee Hikes To Continue

January 27, 2011

NEW YORK — JetBlue is tacking on surcharges on flights to the Caribbean to cover its rising fuel bill, and said airlines should continue to pass these costs on through higher fares. The New York airline said in a conference call after the release of its fourth-quarter earnings that it’s glad to see that airlines are raising fares to cover the price of fuel, their largest expense. JetBlue expects to pay 17 percent more for fuel in the first three months of the year than it did in the fourth-quarter. Fuel jumped 16 percent in the October-to-December period from the year before. The airline raised ticket prices by about 4 percent in the fourth-quarter and recently added a $35 fuel surcharge for flights in or out of Puerto Rico and $45 for Caribbean destinations. JetBlue hopes to get 20 percent more in fees this year. Passengers on average paid $20 apiece in extra fees in the fourth-quarter, mostly for more spacious seats. For all of last year, travelers paid $85 million to sit in seats with “Even More Legroom.” The airline was tripped up by higher costs, mostly for fuel, in the fourth-quarter. That drove net income down 18 percent. A massive winter storm in December walloped its home base of New York and slammed operations in Boston, where it is the biggest domestic airline by passengers. , JetBlue estimated that the storm cost $30 million in lost revenue. The airline canceled around 375 flights on Wednesday and Thursday after another big storm rolled into the Northeast. The New York airline earned $9 million, or 3 cents per share, in the October-to-December period. That compares with a year-ago profit of $11 million, or 4 cents per share. Revenue rose 13 percent to $940 million. Costs rose 15 percent. The results fell short of Wall Street’s expectations. Analysts polled FactSet Research expected a profit of 6 cents per share on revenue of $948.3 million. Traffic improved by about 10 percent from a year ago. Most other major airlines posted a profit in the last three months of the year – which includes the important holiday travel period – as demand improved and they were able to raise ticket prices. Only American Airlines and United-Continental lost money in the last three months of the year. For all of 2010, the airline posted a profit of $97 million, or 31 cents per share, compared with $61 million, or 21 cents per share, in 2009. JetBlue plans to expand the number of available seats it offers, or capacity, by about seven to nine percent this year. That will mostly be through continued expansion in Boston and the Caribbean, where JetBlue has been aggressively adding service while bigger airlines have pulled back. JetBlue increased flights in Boston by 30 percent in 2010 over 2009, and expects to reach 100 daily flights there by this summer. It predicts that about one-quarter of its flights will be in and out of the Caribbean this year. The company has 600 daily flights. It says its efforts to lure more business travelers, especially in Boston, are paying off. The airline made changes last year to make its flights more attractive to corporate customers, who tend to pay more. That included adding an early boarding option for those who paid more for extra legroom seats, adding more convenient flight times and offering refundable fares. In midday trading JetBlue shares rose 2 cents to $6.50.

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Recovery in U.S. Warehouse Leasing Gaining Speed

January 27, 2011

Warehouse leasing accelerated sharply in fourth-quarter 2010, helping to drive down vacancy rates amid record-low deliveries of new industrial commercial properties last year, according to CoStar’s Year-End 2010 Industrial Review and Outlook. “We saw good, stronger demand in the fourth quarter, given the historic low levels of warehouse supply,” said CoStar Senior Director of Research and Analytics Jay Spivey. “That will eventually translate into…

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Europe Ahead: UK growth expected to have slowed in the fourth quarter

January 25, 2011

Europe Ahead: UK growth expected to have slowed in the fourth quarter

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British Economy Contracts during Fourth Quarter

January 25, 2011

British Economy Contracts during Fourth Quarter

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The South Korean economy expanded during the fourth quarter of 2010

January 25, 2011

The South Korean economy expanded during the fourth quarter of 2010

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Australian producer price index dropped in the fourth quarter

January 24, 2011

Australian producer price index dropped in the fourth quarter

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ASML posts better-than-estimated net income in the fourth quarter

January 19, 2011

ASML posts better-than-estimated net income in the fourth quarter

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Video: China Raises Bank Reserve Ratio as Foreign Holdings Jump

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — China told banks to set aside more deposits as reserves for the fourth time in two months, stepping up efforts to rein in liquidity after foreign-exchange holdings rose by a record and lending exceeded targets. Reserve ratios will increase 50 basis points starting Jan. 20, the People’s Bank of China said on its website today. Bloomberg’s Stephen Engle reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Rubenstein/Trinity JV Buys NASCAR Plaza in Charlotte

January 13, 2011

Rubenstein Partners, a Philadelphia-headquartered private real estate investment management and advisory firm, formed joint ventures with local investment and development companies to invest $70 million in properties in four states on behalf of Rubenstein Properties Fund LP, an office fund that has sat quietly for nearly four years. The fund will follow up with an additional $30 million in the assets. The four transactions closed in the fourth quarter…

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Rubenstein Closes $70 Million in Investments in Q4 2010

January 13, 2011

Rubenstein Partners, a Philadelphia-headquartered private real estate investment management and advisory firm, formed joint ventures with local investment and development companies to invest $70 million in properties in four states on behalf of Rubenstein Properties Fund LP, an office fund that has sat quietly for nearly four years. The fund will follow up with an additional $30 million in the assets. The four transactions closed in the fourth quarter…

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CRE Sales Deal Volume Returning to ‘Normal’ Levels

January 6, 2011

If the third and fourth quarters of last year are any indication, then deal volume is returning to the commercial real estate investment sales markets. According to CoStar COMPs, sales volume for commercial property nearly doubled from about $22 billion of deals in the first quarter of 2010 to almost $36 billion in the fourth quarter – a number that will likely increase as CoStar finalizes its quarterly tally and confirms the flurry of deals signed…

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Video: Colin McGranahan Says Consumer Spending Is Improving

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Colin McGranahan, retail analyst for Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., talks about Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.’s third-quarter profit and the outlook for consumer spending. Bed Bath & Beyond reported earnings of 74 cents a share yesterday and raised its profit forecast for the fourth quarter. McGranahan speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Tom Silva: The Great American Payout

December 7, 2010

America is a nation of optimists. Just two years after declaring this the worst financial crisis since the age of Busby Berkeley and speakeasies, it now appears that we are starting to ante up again by releasing our cash. Maybe spending is part of what makes us American–our founding fathers, who were products of the Enlightenment, taught us to reject the old-world notions of asceticism and praying for a better day in favor of enjoying the spoils of our labor and securing our rewards in this life. And now, here we are. Usually depressions are followed by extended periods of hoarding cash and sinking money into only safe investments but recent events seem to suggest we’re moving in another direction. Take the banking industry which declared aggregate profits in the third quarter totaling $14.5 billion, more than seven times greater than last year during the same period, according to the FDIC’s Quarterly Banking Profile (QBP) for the third quarter of 2010. Part of the reason for these buoyant numbers is that banks released their rainy day provisions into earnings causing FDIC chief Sheila Bair to warn bankers that they may be reducing their loan loss reserves too early. Provisions for loan losses dropped to their lowest level in three years–reserves against future slid to 63.9% of noncurrent loans from 65% in the second quarter–even as “troubled loans remain near historic high levels,” Bair said. This is the first time that loan-loss reserves have fallen since late 2006. To be sure, most of Bair’s comments are aimed primarily at mid-sized and smaller banks that have yet to show consistent credit quality improvement unlike the bigger banks. And, no doubt, we need liquidity in the economy and the banks need to provide it but it behooves the industry to be careful to cover the bets at a time when the number of troubled banks is at 860, the most since 1993. In the real estate industry, some of the largest companies, including Simon Property Group Inc., Kimco Realty Corp. and Nationwide Health Properties Inc., raised their quarterly dividends in November and more companies are expected to follow suit in the months ahead. The higher payouts reflect the higher rents and better occupancy levels, which are boosting the income pool for dividends. This a serious about face from the past 36 months, when REITs, along with other public companies, were slashing or suspending dividends to preserve cash. In 2010, 37 REITs have raised dividends; seven have cut them. To compare, 61 companies either cut or cancelled dividends in 2009. REITs aren’t alone in raising dividends. Many large-cap and cash-flushed companies are expected to do the same. A recent report by Markit, a financial information services firm, expects a 50% jump in dividend increases for S&P 500 companies in the fourth quarter from last year. Currently, there is an estimated $2.0 trillion in net cash sitting in non-financial corporate treasuries. The payout enthusiasm has affected even some of the holdouts: Cisco Systems announced plans to pay a stock dividend for the first time in its more than quarter of a century in business. Apple is sticking to its guns by sitting on its nearly $46 billion. One reason for paying dividends, outside of magnanimity, could be the tax rates. Under current federal individual income tax law, both capital gains and corporate dividends are taxed at a reduced 15% rate. However, those reduced rates are scheduled to expire at the end of 2010, raising the hit on dividends to increase to as much as 39.6%. And finally, there’s us, the consumer. Our national savings rate was 5.7 percent in October — still strong when you consider that it was at 0% in 2004. An article in the Christian Science Monitor in 2004 summed it up this way: “Americans have stopped saving for a rainy day. Instead, they are living paycheck to paycheck, depending on credit cards to get them through emergencies, and hoping that the rising value of their homes will give them a retirement nest egg.” However, that 5.7% looks meager when you consider that Europeans hover around a 14% savings rate in the Eurozone. The 5.7% also is a contrast with some of the other recessionary periods, for example the the early 1980s when American savings levels were in the 9% to 10% range. It’s worth noting that this comes at a time when, the government reports, consumer spending rose 2.6% in the third quarter, the fastest pace since the fourth quarter of 2006. Clearly, we’re feeling the same optimism as our corporate and financial counterparts. “One today is worth two tomorrows,” Benjamin Franklin once said. What could be more American?

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Japan lost support from exports at the beginning of the fourth quarter

November 25, 2010

Japan lost support from exports at the beginning of the fourth quarter

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Crude Oil Tests Key Support for a Fourth Day, Gold Rises on Korean Conflict Bucking Dollar Surge

November 24, 2010

Crude Oil Tests Key Support for a Fourth Day, Gold Rises on Korean Conflict Bucking Dollar Surge

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US Leading Index Up As Jobless Claims Edge Up

November 21, 2010

An index of leading indicators for the US economy rose in October for the fourth month in a row thanks to optimism that the Federal Reserve would move to boost the sluggish recovery according to Bloomberg News

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Crude Oil Wipes Out November Rally Despite Plunge in Inventories, Gold Falls for a Fourth Day but Rebounds Overnight

November 18, 2010

Crude Oil Wipes Out November Rally Despite Plunge in Inventories, Gold Falls for a Fourth Day but Rebounds Overnight

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Disney CEO Bob Iger Talks About The Entertainment Giant’s Digital Plan

October 4, 2010

i always enjoy talking digital with Iger–who is pictured above in an interview I did with him in 2006 at the fourth D: All Things Digital conference–since he has been one of the old media moguls who seems unafraid of the challenges of new media… We want to make Disney sites more of a community and entertainment center than a marketing hub,” said Iger. “Where is gets complicated is the levels of exclusivity and the other places we want to distribute our content.”

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BoE members continue their split for the fourth month amid growth and inflation prospects

September 22, 2010

BoE members continue their split for the fourth month amid growth and inflation prospects

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Dodd-Frank Does Little To Help Investors Analyze Big Bank Results: Bloomberg

September 13, 2010

The Dodd-Frank Act, designed to prevent future financial crises, does little to improve investors’ ability to analyze results at the five biggest U.S. firms that trade securities, which together lost $38.6 billion as markets froze in the fourth quarter of 2008. Since taxpayers may have to bail out banks again, firms should be forced to disclose more, said Tanya Azarchs, former head of North American bank research at Standard & Poor’s.

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