super-bowl

Go Daddy CEO Defends Elephant-Shooting Video

by Ryan McCarthy on April 1, 2011

Huffington Post…

Go Daddy founder and CEO Bob Parsons is not one to back down from a little controversy. The outspoken entrepreneur helped make his company a household name — and the largest Internet domain registrar in the world — with edgy Super Bowl commercials that have become perennial water-cooler fodder. Now, he finds himself in the crosshairs of the equally outspoken PETA and other animal-rights advocates over a graphic video he posted online, which depicts him shooting and killing an elephant in Zimbabwe. The video has already been viewed more than 300,000 times. Parsons, a member of the AOL Small Business Board of Directors, says he was working with tribal authorities to prevent “problem elephant” from decimating crops, legally, and that the slain elephant provided food for impoverished villagers. PETA is leading the charge against Parsons, branding him the “Scummiest CEO of the Year,” canceling its Go Daddy account and encouraging others to do the same. “Instead of coming up with flimsy excuses for killing these highly intelligent and social animals, Parsons should use his wealth to fund humane solutions to human/elephant conflicts,” PETA said on its website.

Read more:
Go Daddy CEO Defends Elephant-Shooting Video

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

Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Charles Rosen, founding partner and chief executive officer of advertising firm Amalgamated, talks about the role and value of television commercials created for the Super Bowl broadcast. Rosen speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Excerpt from:
Video: Rosen Says Super Bowl Ads Have `Tremendous Impact’

Video: Horrow Says Cold Weather Could Hurt Super Bowl Spending

February 4, 2011

Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Rich Horrow, founder of Horrow Sports Ventures Inc. and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, discusses the outlook for the Super Bowl at the Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, and the potential impact of the cold weather in the region on fans’ spending. Horrow talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Coca-Cola’s Perez Says Super Bowl Ads Set Tone for Year

February 3, 2011

Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Bea Perez, chief marketing officer for North America at Coca-Cola Co., discusses the advantages of advertising during the Super Bowl and the role of the commercials in the company’s broader marketing plan. Perez speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Jets’ Title Hopes May Rest With Inconsistent Kicker

January 21, 2011

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — Nick Folk of the New York Jets botched more field goals this season than any kicker in the National Football League playoffs. Now he heads to Pittsburgh’s Heinz Field, one of the most difficult NFL stadiums for kickers, and could determine whether the Jets return to the Super Bowl for the first time in 42 years. Bloomberg’s Michele Steele reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Ben Kessler: AFC Championship Cost Breakdown

January 20, 2011

The NFL Season is down to four teams. This coming week, two more teams will end their season just a bit early and two teams will move on to play for the coveted Lombardi Trophy in Super Bowl XLV. A ticket to the AFC Championship — New York Jets vs. Pittsburgh Steelers — is definitely not cheap, going for $604 on average. If you’re trying to get to Heinz Field on a “budget” it would be best if you were already in Pittsburgh so you wouldn’t have to pay for airfare or a hotel. If you are living in Pittsburgh, you can sit in the “cheap seats” for $246/ticket. However, if you’re living in the Tri-State area, it’s going to cost you a pretty penny to get to the game. The cheapest flight from New York to Pittsburgh is a nonstop Delta flight, which will cost you $367/ticket. A 3-star hotel in Pittsburgh starts at $59 a night, so if you are staying for three nights, a hotel will cost you $177. Add that all up and Jets fans will have to pay at least $544 more than Steelers fans to get to the AFC Championship Game. Summary Tickets to the AFC Championship*: • 500 Level – $252/ticket • 100 Level – $353/ticket • Lower End Zone – $353/ticket • 200 Level – $371/ticket • 50-Yard Line Lower Level – $640/ticket • 50-Yard Line Front Row – $1,117/ticket *Best Price for each section Airfare: • New York (LGA) to Pittsburgh on Delta – $367/ticket Hotel: • Cheapest 3-star hotel – $76/night • Cheapest 4-star hotel – $113/night Total: 500 Level – $252/ticket, New York (LGA) to Pittsburgh on Delta – $367/ticket, Cheapest 3-star hotel -$76/night ($228 for three nights) = $847+ Now if money is not an issue… Tickets to the NFC Championship: 50-Yard Line, Front Row – $1,117/ticket Airfare: New York (JFK) to Pittsburgh First Class on Delta – $841/ticket Hotel: Omni Hotel – Premier Suite – $379/night Total: $3,095+ For more insight on what both the Steelers and the Jets need to do to achieve success and advance to Super Bowl XLV, check out the guest commentary below from two devoted fans, and bloggers. Steelers Keys to Victory Over the Jets Guest commentary by Bam Morris Blitzburgh Blog . You can find Bam on Twitter at @blitzburghblog1 Expose the dark side of Sanchez: We all know it is there, even the Jets fans. He’s been solid during most of his playoff games, but there’s no way the Jets would want to see him down by 14 points having to air it out against the Steelers defense. The Steelers need to stop the run and make Sanchez be the difference maker. Solid special teams: The Steelers have a bad history of blowing winnable games on special teams, mostly with poor kick coverage. This area is one of the Jets strengths and a big kick return TD might be all New York needs to walk out of Heinz Field with a ticket to Dallas. Let Roethlisberger do what he does best: The Jets caused chaos all over the field against Tom Brady and he blinked. Ben Roethlisberger is a different beast. He thrives on making great plays out of busted ones and he needs to punch the Jets in the mouth when they come after him. Troy Polamalu: No other safety in the league gets inside a quarterback’s head like Polamalu. He didn’t play during the teams last meeting and his presence alone will make Sanchez think twice on almost every pass. Cut down the penalties: Pittsburgh was one of the most penalized teams in the league this year and can ill afford to be hit with a ton of flags, especially the costly personal foul calls that have become commonplace. This will be a physical contest, no doubt, but cooler heads need to prevail for Pittsburgh to make the Jets earn every last yard. Jets Keys to Victory Over the Steelers Guest commentary by Daniel Krieg of Rex Sanchez . Dominate the Steelers O-Line: The Jets must take advantage of the Steelers beat up offensive line. If they can put the same pressure on Ben that they put on Brady, the defense will dominate. Don’t Respect the Steelers: The Jets cannot give the Steelers too much respect. They play better when they’re filled with anger and hate. I hope that fire continues burning. Do NOT trust Nick Folk: I say this every week because it’s true. It’s a good thing the Jets found the end zone last week because had they needed Folk he would’ve choked. Play it smart on special teams: The Jets punt returners terrify me when they let the ball bounce on kicks. I can see a nonsense fumble like that costing them the game. Also, Weatherford cannot keep booting the ball for touchbacks. Field position will be huge in this game.

Read the full article →

Inder Sidhu: Profiles in Doing Both: Skechers: A Lesson in Optimization and Reinvention

September 16, 2010

You don’t need to be the editor of Vogue to know what the hottest trend in women’s footwear is. All you need to do is glance down at the sidewalk and look at what women are wearing. Amid the sea of Jimmy Choo pumps and Taryn Rose sandals, you’re bound to see plenty of Skechers’ Shape-Ups. These are the round-bottomed, “toning” shoes that young women and working moms have jumped all over. Just two years ago, the category was a tiny sliver of the shoe industry. Today, it is the fastest-growing market segment. Sales of toning footwear are expected to top $1.5 billion this year alone. For Skechers, the birth of the toning shoe market represented another opportunity for a reinvention. At the time, the company was dependent on sales of street-wise, fashion-forward footwear. To combat growing competition from start-up imitators and established rivals such as Vans, Skechers worked to optimize its business through ongoing geographic expansions, supply chain enhancements and clever marketing programs. Behind the scenes, however, Skechers was laying the groundwork for a dramatic transformation. In May 2009, company executives unveiled the company’s new line of Shape-Ups–Skechers’ first, major foray into fitness footwear. Soon thereafter, the company enlisted Super Bowl MVP and NFL Hall of Famer Joe Montana to help promote its new toning shoes. When Super Joe said he believed in the products, sales zoomed like one of his trademark, touchdown passes. By July of this year, toning products helped lift Skechers’ quarterly sales above $500 million for the first time in company history. Around the world, men and women alike were responded enthusiastically to the promise that they could “get in shape without setting foot in a gym.” The intriguing possibilities drove the company’s stock up more than 90 percent. Just when things were running smoothly, however, Skechers hit a major hurdle. In July, the American Council on Exercise released a report that questioned the benefits of toning shoes. “Don’t buy these shoes because of the claims that you’re going to tone your butt more or burn more calories,” concluded researcher Dr. John Porcari . Shortly after that blunt assessment became public, shares of Skechers and other makers of toning shoes began to lose traction. On Sept. 9 alone, shares of Skechers dropped 12 percent after an investment house downgraded its rating on the company’s stock . To make matters worse, a customer filed a lawsuit against the company, claiming false advertising, among other things. With retailers slashing prices and shoe giant Nike dismissing the value of toning products, one would think Skechers would be in a freefall. But it’s not. More than one investment house believes Skechers’ stock has legs , and some medical professionals assert that toning shoes offer benefits . For these and other reasons, many company watchers believe Skechers will continue its winning ways. “Skechers has a history of adeptly capitalizing off different shoe fads with its own offerings,” says Motley Fool writer Alyce Lomax. How? By continuously fine-tuning and transforming its business. On the optimization front, Skechers is making improvements to its e-commerce platform and reducing inventories ahead of new product introductions slated for the holidays. It’s also moving ahead with plans to build a state-of-the-art, 1.8 million sq.-ft. distribution facility in Rancho Belago, Calif. As for reinvention, Skechers recently entered the travel accessories and branded luggage business. It is also exploring backpacks, handbags and leather products for the first time. And with a major push into medical footwear and electrical-hazard shoes on the horizon, Skechers is transforming from a mere fashion shoe company into a lifestyle brand and vertical market specialist. Today, it has more opportunities ahead of it than anytime in its 18-year history. While the short-term holds some uncertainty, the company’s long-term prospects look solid. Doing both tuning and transforming has toned up the three-time ” Company of the Year ” award winner and positioned it for even greater success. Inder Sidhu is the Senior Vice President of Strategy & Planning for Worldwide Operations at Cisco , and the author of Doing Both: How Cisco Captures Today’s Profits and Drives Tomorrow’s Growth . Follow Inder on Twitter at @indersidhu .

Read the full article →

Video: Staubach Says Problems Remain in Commercial Real Estate: Video

September 13, 2010

Sept. 13 (Bloomberg) — Former Dallas Cowboys quarterback, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and chairman of the Americas at Jones Lang LaSalle Inc., talks about the commercial real estate market and funding for new football stadiums. Staubach, who led the Dallas Cowboys to Super Bowl titles in 1972 and 1978, speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Bill Singer: Wall Street Blackjack Player Busts, Busted, and Barred

May 25, 2010

They do quite a bit of surveillance at most casinos. Frankly, those paid to watch the games of chance do a better job than those paid to watch our stock markets. Take this recent case. Blackjack Players Go Bust And Get Busted On September 20, 2008, five blackjack players and the dealer at a blackjack table at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Connecticut were under in-house surveillance that allegedly caught them cheating. The six suspects were arrested and initially charged with committing a sixth-degree larceny on September 20, 2008. However, sometimes things are not what they seem. All charges against four of the players were dropped. As with most games of chance, you place your bet, you take your chances. Alas, Lady Luck did not smile upon two of the six blackjack suspects. In October 2008, Rory Shaffer, the 28-year-old blackjack dealer, and 21-year-old Samuel M. Pierce, one of the five arrested players, were charged in Connecticut’s Norwich Superior Court with first degree larceny, cheating while gambling, and conspiracy to commit first degree larceny. Allegedly, Pierce and Shaffer engaged in a scheme to steal $16,000 from a casino whereby Pierce was allowed to keep chips that he bet on losing hands. Notwithstanding the charges, Shaffer and Pierce are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law. Wall Street’s High Standards and Principles In 2007, Pierce apparently started a Wall Street career when he became an Associated Person, which is typically an unregistered Wall Street employee who is generally excluded from dealing with the investing public other than in a clerical or administrative capacity. From July 24, 2008, through January 19, 2009, Pierce was an Associated Person with FINRA member firm Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is one of the many cops that are supposed to patrol Wall Street. Neither a federal nor state governmental agency, FINRA is what is referred to as a self-regulatory organization (SRO). The concept of an SRO is that a working partnership between the regulator and the regulated should prove invaluable and a potent means to combat Wall Street fraud. In theory, an SRO is an intriguing idea – after all, who knows more about the shenanigans in a given industry than the folks in that industry? Ah, but there is always that old hang-up: in theory things should work; in reality , well, not always. See this for some context: FINRA’s Dubious Madoff Report http://www.brokeandbroker.com/index.php?a=blog&id=250; and FINRA Strikes Out http://www.forbes.com/2009/08/21/singer-regulation-commentary-intelligent-investing-finra.html Having missed out on timely nailing some of the great fraudsters in recent Wall Street history, FINRA now seems to be trying to make up for lost time, and, perhaps, trying to manufacture some feel-good publicity. When Pierce allegedly got nabbed at the Mohegan Sun Casino, FINRA had this rule (from its predecessor the National Association of Securities Dealers or “NASD”) that stated: NASD Conduct Rule 2110: Standards of Commercial Honor and Principles of Trade : A member, in the conduct of his business, shall observe high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade. Too often, prosecutors or regulators haul out some rubbery, pliable, stretchy bit of prohibitions and restrictions that they claim covers a whole host of sins, real or imagined. We lawyers have a term for that type of regulation; we call it an Elastic Clause . It’s not a term of endearment. Rule 2110 is just such an example. I mean, seriously — what the hell are “high standards of commercial honor” and “just and equitable principles of trade” when it comes to something as tawdry as Wall Street? The House of Cards Collapses Not prepared to tolerate a dastardly, hardcore card-shark in its midst, FINRA pursued Pierce for violating Rule 2110. Pursuant to a FINRA Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent (“AWC”) (AWC #2008015405101, March 9, 2010) Pierce offered to settle the regulatory case against him, without admitting or denying the findings. Notably, only the alleged blackjack scheme is referenced by FINRA; there is not a single reference to any alleged criminal charge, plea, or final disposition as providing the basis for jurisdiction. Frankly, that’s what caught my eye about this case. FINRA was going after this kid not based upon any criminal conviction (there is none) but simply because he allegedly rigged a blackjack game. I’m not suggesting that Pierce should be permitted to remain in the industry or that he is (or isn’t) a reputable character. The facts are what they are and you are welcome to draw your own inferences and conclusions. Moreover, in FINRA’s defense, this is a matter that Pierce agreed to settle with a bar. Consequently, FINRA agreed to the imposition of a Bar upon Pierce from association with any member in any capacity. Pierce is not presently associated with any FINRA firm and has no other disciplinary history beyond the matter at issue. Accelerated Rehabilitation Pierce’s attorney, David T. Grudberg, of Jacobs, Grudberg, Belt, Dow & Katz, P.C. of New Haven, Ct. advised me that Pierce was presently participating in Connecticut’s pretrial program for accelerated rehabilitation (“AR”). AR gives certain first-time offenders probation for up to two years, during which time the criminal prosecution is suspended. If the defendant satisfactorily completes the probationary period he may then apply to the court for dismissal of the charges against him. For a detailed analysis of AR , visit this link http://www.jacobslaw.com/CM/CriminalDefensePractice/PretrialDiversionPrograms.asp As matters presently stand, Pierce has not admitted to any criminal conduct and the State has not proven any criminal conduct. Accordingly, Pierce continues to be entitled to the presumption of innocence. Further, all charges against Pierce will likely be dismissed if he complies with the terms of the AR. As a matter of law, in two years, his arrest and the charges against him may well be rendered non-events. Bill Singer’s Comment : In taking its bows for Pierce, FINRA might ask us to imagine all the damage that this unregistered 21-year-old alleged card cheat could have done to the unsuspecting investing public. Unfortunately for FINRA’s what-if scenario, Pierce wasn’t registered and probably wasn’t dealing directly with investors. Oh well, minor detail. Compare this case with FINRA’s rather tepid responses to the misdeeds of Bernie Madoff and Sir Allen Stanford. FINRA certainly nipped those major frauds in the bud – okay, maybe not in the bud, maybe whatever a bud becomes after a decade or so and far too many defrauded investors have lost millions of dollars. Is FINRA presently preparing to bar all those fine, upstanding Wall Street execs who bid against the very products that they sold to the public — you know, keeping in mind all that high fallutin’ stuff about commercial honor and equitable principles of trade? What about all those former SEC employees who were terminated for viewing pornography during the workday? If any of those folks apply for work on Wall Street, will FINRA move to bar them? If former Governor Spitzer, or former Senator Edwards, or former Representative Fosella, or sitting Governor Sanford, or sitting Senator Ensign, or sitting Senator Vitter apply for jobs on Wall Street, have their past extramarital actions run afoul of FINRA’s high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade? And just what is FINRA’s ethical interpretation about sitting Attorney General Blumenthal’s misstatement about his Vietnam service? Essentially, Pierce is barred for having allegedly cheated while placing a legal bet on a legal card game at a legal casino. How about all those Wall Streeters who place illegal bets in their offices in violation of state and federal anti-gambling laws? What am I talking about? How about all those industry folks who illegally gamble on the office NCAA March Madness or NFL Super Bowl pools? Does that fall under FINRA’s arch concern about honor and and equity? As you may have inferred, some of this is all too sanctimonious for me. The last thing that Wall Street now needs are more hypocritical double-standards. Of course, there is that other interesting question: How much FINRA staff time was diverted and how many regulatory dollars were spent going after young card-shark Pierce — and what about the more serious securities fraudsters who continue to savage the investing public while such a dubious regulatory effort proceeds? I don’t know about you, but I’m sleeping much better at night knowing that Wall Street is being swept clean of allegedly crooked casino gamblers. If only we could get those who police the nation’s casinos to teach those who police Wall Street’s how better to surveil and regulate their own turf.

Read the full article →

Options Traders’ Ranks Swell as Amateur Investors Embrace `Iron Condors’

May 25, 2010

By Margaret Collins and Jeff Kearns May 25 (Bloomberg) — David Siniapkin, a postal worker in York, Pennsylvania, uses some of his retirement money to trade options. After three years and being down as much as $10,000, he’s broken even. Siniapkin, 46, said he tries to profit from strategies such as the “iron condor,” which requires placing four different bets on the same security, risking $38 to make as much as $204 on one trade. It takes its name from the payout diagram resembling a bird with outstretched wings. Investors use options to improve returns, hedge risks or speculate on market performance. Volume in the U.S. has tripled since 2004 to a record 3.61 billion contracts in 2009, while trading by individual investors in the same period has increased fivefold at Fidelity Investments, the world’s largest mutual-fund firm. Sophisticated online software and the growth in training offered by industry groups and brokerages, such as Charles Schwab Corp. and TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. , are enabling individuals to execute advanced techniques on home computers that had been the province of professionals. “Trading options is one of the all-time suckers’ bets,” said Whitney Tilson , founder of hedge fund T2 Partners LLC, based in New York. “Most experienced professionals lose money doing it. It’s virtually certain that inexperienced, individual retail investors will lose money doing this.” Trading Tools About half of options investors earn less than $100,000 and 70 percent trade to increase income and for short-term gains, according to an April survey by the Options Industry Council, an industry education group based in Chicago. Retail traders can access professional-level analytics and trading tools that “weren’t even available to institutional investors five years ago,” said Andy Nybo , head of derivatives research at Tabb Group LLC in New York. The numbers of trades by individuals rather than institutional investors aren’t available, said Jim Binder , a spokesman for Chicago-based Options Clearing Corp., which settles all trading of exchange-listed contracts. Siniapkin was one of about 100 non-professionals who attended an all-day training class last month provided by online options brokerage Thinkorswim Group Inc. , which Omaha, Nebraska- based TD Ameritrade acquired last year for $749 million. Participants traveled as many as three hours to a windowless Radisson hotel ballroom near Philadelphia and scribbled notes as Bob Groves, a former Standard & Poor’s 100 Index options trader on the floor of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, waved a laser pointer at a projection screen to explain advanced trades. Knowing Risks “I’ll do the iron condors, I’ll do calendars, I like double diagonals,” said Siniapkin, who said he has had “mixed success” with these strategies, known as multi-leg transactions, which involve buying or selling multiple contracts on the same underlying security. Training lets retail investors understand the risks involved, said Debra Peters, vice president of the Options Institute, the CBOE’s education division, which had a record 41,004 registrations for its free online courses last year. E*Trade Financial Corp. , based in New York, saw a 600 percent increase in attendance at training events last year, and TD Ameritrade’s education arm, Investools, has attracted more than 40,000 clients to its classes since June, about a 50 percent increase from a year earlier, the companies said. Cost of the courses ranges from free to thousands of dollars. Thinkorswim’s session in April was free and participants were later pitched additional training and online tools, which run from $299 to more than $2,000. Options Contracts “I’m not a fan of people who say you shouldn’t be doing this,” said Thinkorswim’s founder Tom Sosnoff of investors using complex strategies. “Imagine you walked into the casino and people said to you, ‘You look stupid so you can only play the slots.’” Options are contracts that grant their buyers the right, without the obligation, to buy or sell a security, a commodity or an index’s cash value at a set price by a specific date. Call options give the right to call a security away from another owner if the security reaches its strike price on or before the contract’s expiration date. Put options give the right to sell. Like gambling on the Super Bowl and having to beat the point spread, options traders may lose if they predict the correct direction of a stock move and not the magnitude. For example, an investor who buys a put to sell a biotechnology stock before a Food and Drug Administration decision may get the direction of the stock’s move right while losing money if the security doesn’t fall or rise far enough. Not More Risky “Options trading is always going to be more complicated than equities trading but it doesn’t have to be more risky,” said Randy Frederick , director of trading and derivatives at Schwab , the largest independent brokerage by client assets. “They can potentially reduce the amount of losses in a bearish market.” Simpler strategies include buying put spreads to protect stocks from declines and selling call options to profit from the sale while betting that the stock won’t rise past a given level. “My first couple of trades I did very, very well and I got a little big headed and very, very greedy, and I ended up blowing out an account,” said John Mahoney, 49, an engineer who trades options weekly. “I lost about $20,000 initially.” Mahoney said he made $4,000 one week in April by playing multiple contracts and is working his way back into the market by trading smaller amounts and attending classes. IRA Assets Regulators permit trading options using retirement accounts, said Herb Perone , spokesman for the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Certain trading may violate Internal Revenue Service rules, which is why firms including Schwab, Fidelity, TD Ameritrade, E*Trade, Interactive Brokers Group Inc. and OptionsXpress Holdings Inc. prevent investors from executing strategies that may cause an IRA to go into debt, according to the companies. About 46 million U.S. households owned IRAs last year, according to the Investment Company Institute , a Washington- based mutual fund trade group. Accounts held for 20 years or more had a median of $75,000 in assets, according to ICI. Michael Madden, a 48-year-old sales manager from Whitehall, Pennsylvania, said he transferred some of his IRA money to Thinkorswim to trade options. He said he lost about 40 percent when he started three years ago and has since recovered those losses, purchasing about $5,000 to $10,000 in contracts a week. Testing Trades Fidelity has started allowing spread trades in IRAs, an options strategy requiring two transactions usually executed at the same time, said Gregg Murphy, who oversees equities and options trading for the Boston-based company’s retail customers. Schwab, based in San Francisco, is testing spread trading for retirement accounts with a few hundred customers and hopes to expand it later this year, said Frederick. Options shouldn’t be an integral part of investors’ long- term planning, of which retirement money is the “nucleus,” said Jonathan Krasney , president of Krasney Financial LLC, a Mendham, New Jersey, fee-based wealth management firm. “My concern is that investors can quickly dig themselves into a deep hole if they venture into the options market,” Krasney said. Most trading involves contracts that expire within months, so investors can’t hold them indefinitely to recoup losses or wait for gains, as they can with stocks, Krasney said. Approving Investors Brokers must approve investors to trade options, said Gary Goldsholle , vice president in Finra’s general counsel office. Customers must provide companies with details about their financial status and trading experience, and sign a document saying they received a copy of the Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options from the Options Clearing Corp. Karen Fitchett, 64, said the learning curve has been steep. The New York real estate investor said she has lost tens of thousands of dollars trading options since starting in 2007, which is why she still attends classes like the one provided by Thinkorswim. “It’s become like an intellectual affair,” she said. “I just became seduced.” To contact the reporters on this story: Margaret Collins in New York at mcollins45@bloomberg.net Jeff Kearns in New York at jkearns3@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

John Standerfer: How Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny colluded to crash the stock market

May 12, 2010

Another week brings another round of political theatre on capital hill. This week’s topic was the stock market “crash” of last week and had all the trappings of a game of “Clue”. Who crashed the market? Was it the high frequency trading firms with their cadres of supercomputers? Maybe it was secretive dark pools with their “hidden” quotes? Or it could have been an individual trader who in between browsing the latest Ferraris online accidentally substituted “millions” with “billions”. And if none of those turn out to be true, there is always Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny as they have yet to be called for Congressional testimony. Congress desperately wants one these scenarios to be true for it would then provide them with a new bogeyman on the scale of a Goldman Sachs or British Petroleum. Consider the relative sound bite value of “High Frequency Traders are not only a parasitic tax on our financial markets but pose a grave and immediate threat to the very stability of our public markets” versus “The market declined because there were more sellers than buyers”. Yet the latter is exactly what appears to have occurred and is the very definition of a market. Contrary to Congressional belief and desires, markets were not designed to only increase in value. They are only supposed to rise when there are more buyers than sellers. This was not the case last Thursday and led to large but by no means unprecedented declines. In fact, even at the lowest point during the decline last Thursday, the S&P 500 was down less than 5% for the year – hardly a repeat of 2008. Most publicity was focused on the trades for select large cap stocks and ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds, many of which hold diversified baskets of stocks) that occurred at or near $.01. A value that was clearly erroneous on the large cap stocks and that did not at all reflect underlying net asset values of the ETFs in question. These individual scenarios appear to have been the result of a high number of sell at market orders for these symbols being routed to destinations that did not usually trade many shares of these symbols. Because they were not the usual destination for trading in these symbols, when the sell orders arrived there were simply not any corresponding buy orders to trade against. Think of a ticket scalper trying to sell tickets the day of the Super Bowl in Miami while standing outside of Yankee stadium. Do these tickets still have value? Absolutely, but all the potential buyers are in Miami, not in New York. Once routing resumed to the primary destinations, the values of the stocks and ETFs in question quickly rebounded as the sell orders were able to be matched with the corresponding buy orders. These specific trades and symbols impacted by the above did not account for all of the overall index declines. Those were simply a result of a large amount of selling occurring at the same time. There were more sellers than buyers. Why? It does not matter. There are always numerous news items that can be pointed to – trouble in Greece, concerns about the Euro, rumors of liquidity issues in European banks, etc. All that matters is that more people wanted to sell than buy and that drove the prices down. The irony in all of this is that less than 96 hours after the “crash” we had almost the exact same move but in the opposite direction as the Dow opened Monday morning nearly 400 points. Why? Same as before – more buyers than sellers. I’m still waiting for the Congressional investigation as to how the market could move almost 400 points at the open and who is to blame for it. Maybe the Tooth Fairy?

Read the full article →

Harry Shearer: New Orleans: The Joy and the Dread

May 1, 2010

NEW ORLEANS — Mid-Saturday morning, storm clouds are motorcycling across the sky. We’re seeing, and feeling, the winds we’ve been hearing about for two days, the winds whipping the BP oil slick closer and closer to the shore of the coastal wetlands. And, after two or three months in which it seemed this city was virtually levitating (the Saints’ victory in the Super Bowl, the forthcoming end of the Ray Nagin era), that sinking feeling is back, just at the time the city is reaching the climax of JazzFest. So, the talk among the locals is the dread that the regional economy and ecology is about to take another disastrous hit at the hands of outsiders, while the visitors are enjoying the music, the food, and the crafts that flow from the culture formed by that ecology. And there are reports of locals lining up for what many expect may be their last taste of raw Louisiana oysters for a long, long time. Frozen Chinese seafood, anyone? And, as more details of the BP spill incident emerge, one spies a familiar pattern: BP wasted days minimizing the amount of oil flowing from the well, freezing the feds until NOAA came out with the bad news. And BP executives reportedly minimized the danger of a spill. Sound familiar? It should. Information I’ve collected for my forthcoming documentary film on the 2005 flooding of New Orleans, The Big Uneasy , show that the US Army Corps of Engineers, as far back as 1974, minimized chances that any storm larger than the “Standard Project Hurricane,” which served as their design spec, could endanger the area, and as recently as 2005 it minimized chances that its still-uncompleted Hurricane Protection System could breach. Thomas Ricks’ excellent book on the Iraq war, Fiasco , is rife with evidence that Pentagon planners routinely embraced best-case scenarios, refusing to engage in worst-case planning. In other words, despite all the divisions we’re supposed to believe are important — left/right, public/private — major projects in modern America seem to be rife with wishful thinking and short-term economics. Because it’s cheaper to believe in best cases. Until the worst case happens.

Read the full article →

Carolyn Anderson: Business and Life Lessons From Betty White

April 8, 2010

As a successful businesswoman and doctor who treats aging patients, I’m inspired by Betty White. At 88 years old, she is more popular than ever. In the past year, she has appeared in a major film, The Proposal , starred in a popular Super Bowl ad for Snickers and has been featured on numerous popular talk shows. Thanks to a Facebook Fan page with over 500,000 members, on May 8th, she’ll be the oldest person to ever host “Saturday Night Live”. I think Betty’s success can teach us all a few things about business and life. You’re Never Too Old to Embrace New Things Betty White is the perfect example that your career and your life are not over when you hit 65. 65 has always been an arbitrary number for retirement, derived from the average life expectancy back in the 1930s. Don’t ever think it’s too late to start a new career, take up a new activity or travel. Staying active and involved keeps you physically and mentally young. There are mountains of evidence to support the notion that staying engaged and interested will help you live not only longer but healthier. Build Your Brand While Betty has appeared in numerous TV shows and movies she has always been able to keep her own personal brand. Fans know her as a sweet lady, but with a hilarious sense of humor and great comedic timing. Make sure you are consistent in your personal and professional life. Nothing is more valuable than establishing integrity and authenticity. Be who you really are and shine in the world as your authentic and wonderful self. Recognize Your Limitations Even though she has been asked several times, Betty turned down a chance to appear on “Dancing With The Stars.” Even though she doesn’t look her age, Betty realized the demanding physical routines would be too hard on her. While it was a great opportunity, it wasn’t the right fit for her. You don’t have to accept every opportunity. Some may not be worth your time and some may be beyond your capabilities. Don’t waste time doing things that aren’t your strong point. Do some soul searching and be honest with yourself about where your passions lie. Learn to say no to the things that you don’t really want to do, so you have time for the things that make your heart sing. Branch Out Although Betty White is best known for her roles in “The Golden Girls” and the “Mary Tyler Moore Show,” she has also appeared on games shows, movies and commercials. Don’t confine yourself to one area of business. You never know what you will discover if you try new things. Although this can be anxiety provoking, it is worth it to step out of your comfort zone. Honestly ask yourself, “When was the last time I did something for the first time,” and make sure it hasn’t been too long. Take Risks Betty White had previously been offered a hosting position on “SNL” three times. This time she accepted even though she is “scared to death.” She told Ellen DeGeneres that you have to take it and do the best you can do with it. Have you been holding yourself back because of an irrational fear? Don’t let fears hold you back from your true potential. As Eleanor Roosevelt so famously stated, “You gain strength, courage and confidence with every experience in which you stop to look fear in the face, you must do that which you think you cannot do.” Remember, we never regret the things we tried that didn’t work out. We only regret the things we didn’t try, the chances we didn’t take and the things we did not do. At the end of your life, your level of happiness will be measured by the difference between what you were capable of becoming and what you did in fact become. Take a chance and close the gap. Take the Small Parts Betty was offered a guest role in the pilot of the new show “Hot in Cleveland.” After being so well received, she was written into the series as a regular cast member. While you might not ever be offered a guest role on TV you may be offered a temporary position, volunteer role, internship or junior position. Don’t turn something down that is below you. If it’s for an organization you believe in, you should accept the position. Do your job right and it could expand. Network Betty White’s future appearance on “SNL” is because of over 500,000 fans that supported her. Betty White wasn’t even aware of the site until media outlets began reporting the group’s viral growth. Do you have supporters who can help you find opportunities? By networking and keeping in touch with influential people you’ll be at the top of their mind when they hear of job openings and other opportunities. You don’t need half a million fans but having the right connections can help you land opportunities you may not have even known of. Many people are uncomfortable networking. Try the positive networking approach: think of what you can do for the people you are meeting and sharing with. Don’t think about what they can do for you. Just connect and the benefits will astound you. Stick to Your Beliefs Betty White is well known as an animal activist. This sometimes came in conflict with her career and she once turned down a role in a movie where she felt an animal would be mistreated. While she missed out on a role, she stuck to her principles. Don’t compromise your own values. It is possible to succeed in life and your career while maintaining your integrity. Nothing is more valuable than your good name. Know your values, keep them close to your heart and never stray from what you believe in. Find Something You Love If you’re doing what you love it will never feel like work — and if you haven’t found your passion yet, it’s not too late. Betty White doesn’t need to continue working but she does it because she enjoys her job. The happiest and most successful people do what they have a passion for. If you don’t absolutely love, love, love what you do — greatness will always be just out of reach. When you bring your heart and soul to a job, or to your life in general, you can’t lose. If you don’t, you will always lose out to someone who does.

Read the full article →

Video: Saints’ Brees Says Defending Title to Be Tough Challenge: Video

April 2, 2010

April 2 (Bloomberg) — New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu and Michele Steele about the outlook for defending the team’s Super Bowl title next season. The Saints beat the Indianapolis Colts 31-17 in February’s championship matchup for the franchises’s first National Football League title. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

U.S. Stocks Fall on Treasury Auction, Disagreement Over Greece

March 25, 2010

By Elizabeth Stanton March 25 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell for a second day as a disappointing Treasury auction and discord among European leaders about how to rescue Greece erased a rally in the final half hour of the session. The 10-year note’s yield climbed to the highest level since June, and the dollar rallied. Schlumberger Ltd. and ConocoPhillips paced declines in 38 of 40 energy companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index as a stronger dollar wiped out early gains in oil. Monsanto Co. and DuPont Co. helped lead producers of raw materials lower. Citigroup Inc. advanced 2.9 percent as the government was said to plan an orderly sale of its stake in the bank, while Qualcomm Inc. and Best Buy Co. rallied at least 3.6 percent on profit forecasts that topped analysts’ estimates. “One of the big things affecting the psychology of the market is concern about global government debt levels,” said Michael Shinnick , a South Bend, Indiana-based money manager at Wasatch Advisors Inc., which manages $7 billion. “To the extent there are signs that the debt problem is not going to be a later problem but a near-term problem, the market gets concerned.” The S&P 500 slipped 0.2 percent to 1,165.73 at 4 p.m. in New York after rallying as much as 1.1 percent and surpassing its highest close in 18 months. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 5.06 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 10,841.21, wiping out most of a 119-point rally. More five stocks retreated for every three that rose on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market. Yields Spike The yield on 10-year Treasuries, which determines borrowing costs for homeowners, companies and other governments around the world, climbed 0.03 percentage point to 3.88 percent at 5 p.m. in New York after jumping 0.17 point yesterday. The yield touched the highest since June when it reached 4 percent. The Dollar Index , which measures the U.S. currency against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona and Swiss franc, rose 0.5 percent to 82.207, the highest level since May. The euro weakened as much as 0.4 percent to $1.3268 as European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet told French television that the region needs to take responsibility for its members and that possible International Monetary Fund aid for Greece is “very, very bad.” French President Nicolas Sarkozy bowed to German Chancellor Angela Merkel ’s demand for an IMF role in a potential rescue package for Greece. The record-tying $32 billion sale of seven-year notes today attracted a yield of 3.374 percent, compared with the average forecast of 3.372 percent in a Bloomberg News survey of 8 of the Federal Reserve’s 18 primary dealers. The current seven-year note yield rose 3 basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 3.33 percent. Auction Disappointment “The bond auction disappointed investors,” said James Paulsen , who helps oversee about $375 billion as chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis. “The question is how high bond yields will have to go and how much of a hurdle will that be for the stock market. Trichet’s comments also did not help a market that has gone up too far, too fast.” Bill Gross , manager of the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., told Bloomberg Radio the almost three-decade bond market rally may be drawing to a close. Excess borrowing in nations including the U.S., U.K. and Japan will eventually lead to inflation as governments sell record amounts of debt to finance surging deficits, Gross said. Pimco, which announced in December that it would offer stock funds for the first time, is advising that investors buy the debt of countries such as Germany and Canada that have low deficits and higher-yielding corporate securities. Bond Market ‘Slammed’ “The U.S. Treasury market has gotten slammed over the past two days,” Peter Boockvar , equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York, wrote in an e-mail. “This is the last thing a fragile economy needs because yields aren’t spiking because all of a sudden the U.S. economy is great again.” Schlumberger, the oilfield services provider, slid 2.3 percent to $60.76. ConocoPhillips, the oil producer and refiner, lost 1.9 percent to $51.53. Crude oil for May delivery declined 8 cents to settle at $80.53 a barrel in New York after rallying as much as 1.1 percent. The contract extended losses in electronic trading after the close of the New York Mercantile Exchange, sliding as much as 0.6 percent. Genzyme Corp. fell 7.6 percent to $51.13 for the biggest drop in the S&P 500. The world’s largest maker of enzyme- replacement therapies was cut to “underweight” from “neutral” at JPMorgan Chase & Co. Red Hat Inc. fell 5.9 percent to $28.90. The software maker said 2011 earnings excluding some items will be 71 cents to 74 cents a share. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg estimated 76 cents. Ambac Tumbles Ambac Financial Group Inc. slumped 17 percent, the most since Nov. 10, to 66 cents. The bond insurer will hand control of subprime mortgage-related contracts to a regulator amid concern its collapse would trigger losses for holders of municipal debt. Earlier gains in U.S. stocks also came as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke , presenting to the House Financial Services Committee testimony that was released Feb. 10 during a snowstorm that delayed his appearance until today, said the U.S. economy still needs low interest rates and that the central bank will raise them “at the appropriate time.” The S&P 500 has risen 72 percent from a 12-year low in March 2009 as the economy returned to growth and a record-long slump in earnings ended. The aggregate profit for companies in the S&P 500 increased in the fourth quarter from a year earlier for the first time since the second quarter of 2007. ‘Back in Sync’ Qualcomm climbed 5 percent to $42.19 for the second-biggest gain in the S&P 500. The company said it will earn 56 cents to 58 cents a share excluding some items in the quarter ending this month on sales of at least $2.55 billion. Qualcomm previously forecast profit of 49 cents to 53 cents on sales of at least $2.4 billion. “This puts Qualcomm back in sync with the rest of the major technology companies that are reporting strong results,” said Howard Ward , chief investment officer for growth equities at Gabelli & Co. in Rye, New York, which oversees $26 billion including Qualcomm shares. “It’s becoming more difficult to refute the notion that we’re going to be looking at 3 or 3.5 percent GDP growth in the first quarter.” Technology companies in the S&P 500 beat analyst estimates for earnings-per-share by 17 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Bloomberg data. For the index as a whole, profits exceeded the average estimates by 5.4 percent. Adobe Systems Inc., the world’s biggest maker of graphic-design programs, yesterday rose 3.7 percent after its sales forecast topped analyst estimates. Retailers Rally Amazon.com Inc. led retailers in the S&P 500 to the biggest gain among 24 industries. Shawn Milne , an analyst at Janney Capital Markets, said industry data suggest sales growth improved in February. Amazon rose 5.2 percent to $134.73, the highest price since Dec. 30. Priceline.com Inc., the online travel agency, rose 4.6 percent to $255.03. EBay Inc., the most-visited online auction site, gained 2.3 percent to $27.56. Its sales growth also improved in February, Milne’s report said, and Credit Suisse Group AG upgraded the shares to “outperform” from “neutral.” Best Buy, Citigroup Best Buy increased 3.6 percent to $42.66. The company earned $1.82 a share in the fiscal fourth quarter, 1.7 percent more than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 17 analysts. Reduced prices for flat-panel TVs before the National Football League’s Super Bowl championship game on Feb. 7 boosted U.S. sales. Citigroup climbed 2.9 percent to $4.27, leading financial stocks in the S&P 500 to a 0.4 percent gain. The share-sale plan being contemplated by the government is similar to those used by executives to protect themselves against accusations of insider trading, the people with knowledge of the matter said. The government’s sale of its stake will allow Citigroup to “act more freely and competitively,” said Timothy Ghriskey , chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management in Bedford Hills, New York, which manages $2 billion, including shares of Citigroup. “We like it as a recovery situation.” To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Stocks in U.S. Fall on Disappointing Treasury Sale, Greece; Dollar Gains

March 25, 2010

By Elizabeth Stanton March 25 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell for a second day as a disappointing Treasury auction and discord among European leaders about how to rescue Greece erased a rally in the final half hour of the session. The 10-year note’s yield climbed to the highest level since June, and the dollar rallied. Schlumberger Ltd. and ConocoPhillips paced declines in 38 of 40 energy companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index as a stronger dollar wiped out early gains in oil. Monsanto Co. and DuPont Co. helped lead producers of raw materials lower. Citigroup Inc. advanced 2.9 percent as the government was said to plan an orderly sale of its stake in the bank, while Qualcomm Inc. and Best Buy Co. rallied at least 3.6 percent on profit forecasts that topped analysts’ estimates. “One of the big things affecting the psychology of the market is concern about global government debt levels,” said Michael Shinnick , a South Bend, Indiana-based money manager at Wasatch Advisors Inc., which manages $7 billion. “To the extent there are signs that the debt problem is not going to be a later problem but a near-term problem, the market gets concerned.” The S&P 500 slipped 0.2 percent to 1,165.73 at 4 p.m. in New York after rallying as much as 1.1 percent and surpassing its highest close in 18 months. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 5.06 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 10,841.21, wiping out most of a 119-point rally. More five stocks retreated for every three that rose on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market. Yields Spike The yield on 10-year Treasuries, which determines borrowing costs for homeowners, companies and other governments around the world, climbed 0.03 percentage point to 3.88 percent at 5 p.m. in New York after jumping 0.17 point yesterday. The yield touched the highest since June when it reached 4 percent. The Dollar Index , which measures the U.S. currency against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona and Swiss franc, rose 0.5 percent to 82.207, the highest level since May. The euro weakened as much as 0.4 percent to $1.3268 as European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet told French television that the region needs to take responsibility for its members and that possible International Monetary Fund aid for Greece is “very, very bad.” French President Nicolas Sarkozy bowed to German Chancellor Angela Merkel ’s demand for an IMF role in a potential rescue package for Greece. The record-tying $32 billion sale of seven-year notes today attracted a yield of 3.374 percent, compared with the average forecast of 3.372 percent in a Bloomberg News survey of 8 of the Federal Reserve’s 18 primary dealers. The current seven-year note yield rose 3 basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 3.33 percent. Auction Disappointment “The bond auction disappointed investors,” said James Paulsen , who helps oversee about $375 billion as chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis. “The question is how high bond yields will have to go and how much of a hurdle will that be for the stock market. Trichet’s comments also did not help a market that has gone up too far, too fast.” Bill Gross , manager of the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., told Bloomberg Radio the almost three-decade bond market rally may be drawing to a close. Excess borrowing in nations including the U.S., U.K. and Japan will eventually lead to inflation as governments sell record amounts of debt to finance surging deficits, Gross said. Pimco, which announced in December that it would offer stock funds for the first time, is advising that investors buy the debt of countries such as Germany and Canada that have low deficits and higher-yielding corporate securities. Bond Market ‘Slammed’ “The U.S. Treasury market has gotten slammed over the past two days,” Peter Boockvar , equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York, wrote in an e-mail. “This is the last thing a fragile economy needs because yields aren’t spiking because all of a sudden the U.S. economy is great again.” Schlumberger, the oilfield services provider, slid 2.3 percent to $60.76. ConocoPhillips, the oil producer and refiner, lost 1.9 percent to $51.53. Crude oil for May delivery declined 8 cents to settle at $80.53 a barrel in New York after rallying as much as 1.1 percent. The contract extended losses in electronic trading after the close of the New York Mercantile Exchange, sliding as much as 0.6 percent. Genzyme Corp. fell 7.6 percent to $51.13 for the biggest drop in the S&P 500. The world’s largest maker of enzyme- replacement therapies was cut to “underweight” from “neutral” at JPMorgan Chase & Co. Red Hat Inc. fell 5.9 percent to $28.90. The software maker said 2011 earnings excluding some items will be 71 cents to 74 cents a share. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg estimated 76 cents. Ambac Tumbles Ambac Financial Group Inc. slumped 17 percent, the most since Nov. 10, to 66 cents. The bond insurer will hand control of subprime mortgage-related contracts to a regulator amid concern its collapse would trigger losses for holders of municipal debt. Earlier gains in U.S. stocks also came as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke , presenting to the House Financial Services Committee testimony that was released Feb. 10 during a snowstorm that delayed his appearance until today, said the U.S. economy still needs low interest rates and that the central bank will raise them “at the appropriate time.” The S&P 500 has risen 72 percent from a 12-year low in March 2009 as the economy returned to growth and a record-long slump in earnings ended. The aggregate profit for companies in the S&P 500 increased in the fourth quarter from a year earlier for the first time since the second quarter of 2007. ‘Back in Sync’ Qualcomm climbed 5 percent to $42.19 for the second-biggest gain in the S&P 500. The company said it will earn 56 cents to 58 cents a share excluding some items in the quarter ending this month on sales of at least $2.55 billion. Qualcomm previously forecast profit of 49 cents to 53 cents on sales of at least $2.4 billion. “This puts Qualcomm back in sync with the rest of the major technology companies that are reporting strong results,” said Howard Ward , chief investment officer for growth equities at Gabelli & Co. in Rye, New York, which oversees $26 billion including Qualcomm shares. “It’s becoming more difficult to refute the notion that we’re going to be looking at 3 or 3.5 percent GDP growth in the first quarter.” Technology companies in the S&P 500 beat analyst estimates for earnings-per-share by 17 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Bloomberg data. For the index as a whole, profits exceeded the average estimates by 5.4 percent. Adobe Systems Inc., the world’s biggest maker of graphic-design programs, yesterday rose 3.7 percent after its sales forecast topped analyst estimates. Retailers Rally Amazon.com Inc. led retailers in the S&P 500 to the biggest gain among 24 industries. Shawn Milne , an analyst at Janney Capital Markets, said industry data suggest sales growth improved in February. Amazon rose 5.2 percent to $134.73, the highest price since Dec. 30. Priceline.com Inc., the online travel agency, rose 4.6 percent to $255.03. EBay Inc., the most-visited online auction site, gained 2.3 percent to $27.56. Its sales growth also improved in February, Milne’s report said, and Credit Suisse Group AG upgraded the shares to “outperform” from “neutral.” Best Buy, Citigroup Best Buy increased 3.6 percent to $42.66. The company earned $1.82 a share in the fiscal fourth quarter, 1.7 percent more than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 17 analysts. Reduced prices for flat-panel TVs before the National Football League’s Super Bowl championship game on Feb. 7 boosted U.S. sales. Citigroup climbed 2.9 percent to $4.27, leading financial stocks in the S&P 500 to a 0.4 percent gain. The share-sale plan being contemplated by the government is similar to those used by executives to protect themselves against accusations of insider trading, the people with knowledge of the matter said. The government’s sale of its stake will allow Citigroup to “act more freely and competitively,” said Timothy Ghriskey , chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management in Bedford Hills, New York, which manages $2 billion, including shares of Citigroup. “We like it as a recovery situation.” To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Obama to Tell CEOs U.S. Must Get Past Ideology to Revive Economic Growth

February 24, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston and Julianna Goldman Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama will tell a group of U.S. corporate executives today that “crippling” ideological divisions threaten economic growth and the nation must be committed to building widely shared prosperity. Before a gathering in Washington of almost 90 corporate executives who are members of the Business Roundtable, Obama will continue an effort to combat perceptions that his administration is anti-business as he pushes for government measures to encourage hiring and overhaul financial regulations. “A thriving, competitive America is within our reach,” Obama will say, according to excerpts released by the White House. “It’s not about being anti-business or pro-government; it’s about being pro-growth and pro-jobs.” Obama will be making his remarks at about 1 p.m. Washington time after a private dinner last night at the White House with 17 chief executive officers, including Verizon Communications Inc. ’s Ivan Seidenberg and State Farm Insurance Co.’s Ed Rust , the chairman and vice chairman of the business group’s executive committee; General Electric Co.’s Jeffrey Immelt ; JPMorgan Chase & Co. ’s Jamie Dimon ; and American Express Co. ’s Kenneth Chenault . In his speech today, Obama will say that in tackling issues such as education, health care and taxes, he can’t choose policies based on whether they are good for either business or labor. They must be based on whether they help the U.S. be competitive and grow. Sharing Prosperity “Despite growing global competition, this country can continue to lead,” Obama will say. “Whatever differences we have in this country, all of us have a stake in meeting the same goal: an America in which a growing prosperity is shared widely by its people.” Obama’s outreach today, and at last night’s dinner, is the latest in the president’s efforts to highlight the “fundamentally business-friendly” agenda he said his administration has pursued as officials worked to help pull the economy out of the worst recession since the Great Depression. “The irony is, is that on the left we are perceived as being in the pockets of big business; and then on the business side, we are perceived as being anti-business,” Obama said in a Feb. 9 interview in the Oval Office with Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Among the other CEOs at last night’s dinner in the State Dining Room were: David Cote of Honeywell International Inc. ; Antonio Perez of Eastman Kodak Co. ; Xerox Corp. ’s Ursula Burns ; Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo Inc. ; Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ’s Michael Duke ; Steve Odland of Office Depot Inc. ; William Green of Accenture PLC ; Michael Morris of American Electric Power Co .; Randall Stephenson of AT&T Inc .; Boeing Co .’s James McNerney ; Harold McGraw of McGraw-Hill Cos.; and Clarence Otis of Darden Restaurants Inc. Most of the corporate leaders at the dinner are members of the Business Roundtable’s executive committee . Education, Innovation In his talk to the Business Roundtable, Obama plans to repeat a theme he’s used repeatedly in talking about the economy: that the nation needs to invest more in education and fostering innovation and energy development. He also will make a pitch for his proposals to overhaul financial regulations and the health-care system and steps to rein in a deficit that the administration forecasts will hit $1.6 trillion this year. One of the immediate concerns Obama plans to address is reviving economic growth and job creation. Jobs Bill The U.S. Senate has been debating this week a $15 billion jobs bill that offers companies a one-year holiday from paying a 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax for each worker they hire who has been jobless for at least 60 days. Obama also plans to discuss his call to double U.S. exports over the next five years. The U.S. trade deficit in 2009 was $380.7 billion, down 45 percent from 2008, according to figures from the U.S. Commerce Department. The Business Roundtable has applauded that part of the president’s agenda. Throughout Obama’s term, his administration has invited business leaders to private lunches, dinners and other meetings in Washington to reach out to the business community. Cote, Perez and Seidenberg were among attendees at the President’s Feb. 7 Super Bowl Party at the White House. Earlier that week, Obama, senior adviser Valerie Jarrett and Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel had lunch with CEOs including Microsoft Corp. ’s Steve Ballmer , Cisco Systems Inc. ’s John Chambers and FedEx Corp. ’s Frederick Smith . With unemployment at 9.7 percent, administration officials have repeatedly stressed the need for private-sector cooperation to boost jobs. Obama has predicted that he would sign legislation this year to cut corporate taxes by about $70 billion. Industry Opposition Obama has clashed with industries such as insurance companies over his health-care plan, energy companies over climate change, and banks over an overhaul of U.S. financial regulations. He said each of the proposals would benefit American businesses as a whole. In the Bloomberg BusinessWeek interview, Obama attributed perceptions among business leaders and investors that he is anti-business, in part, to “a spillover effect” from criticism he has leveled at large banks . “You would be hard-pressed to identify a piece of legislation that we have proposed out there that, net, is not good for businesses,” he said in the interview. To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net ; Julianna Goldman in Washington at jgoldman6@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Seidenberg, Dimon, Nooyi Among CEOs Invited to Obama Dinner at White House

February 23, 2010

By Julianna Goldman and Nicholas Johnston Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) — Verizon Communications Inc. ’s Ivan Seidenberg , JPMorgan Chase & Co. ’s Jamie Dimon and American Express Co. ’s Kenneth Chenault are among more than a dozen chief executive officers invited to dinner tonight with President Barack Obama at the White House. The executives are in Washington for a meeting of the Business Roundtable , an association of executives from many of the biggest U.S. companies. Obama will speak to the group tomorrow as his administration works to combat perceptions that he is anti-business. The meetings today and tomorrow are the latest in Obama’s efforts to highlight the “fundamentally business-friendly” agenda he said his administration has pursued as officials worked to help pull the economy out of the worst recession since the Great Depression. “The irony is, is that on the left we are perceived as being in the pockets of big business; and then on the business side, we are perceived as being anti-business,” Obama said in a Feb. 9 interview in the Oval Office with Bloomberg BusinessWeek. The CEOs invited to dine with Obama at 6:45 p.m. in the State Dining Room also include David Cote of Honeywell International Inc. , Antonio Perez of Eastman Kodak Co. , Xerox Corp. ’s Ursula Burns , Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ’s Michael Duke , according to a partial list provided by an administration official. Many of the corporate leaders are members of the Business Roundtable’s executive committee . Deficit Commission Honeywell’s Cote is under consideration for appointment by Obama to a new federal deficit commission the president created, another administration official said last week. He and Seidenberg are among four executives Obama and other administration officials have said the president admires. Throughout Obama’s term, his administration has invited business leaders to private lunches, dinners and other meetings in Washington to reach out to the business community. Cote, Perez and Seidenberg also were among attendees at the President’s Feb. 7 Super Bowl Party at the White House. Earlier that week, Obama, senior adviser Valerie Jarrett and Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel had lunch with CEOs including Microsoft Corp. ’s Steve Ballmer , Cisco Systems Inc. ’s John Chambers and FedEx Corp. ’s Frederick Smith . Smith was another executive who Obama said he admires during the Bloomberg BusinessWeek interview earlier this month. Business Cooperation In Obama’s address to the business group tomorrow, administration officials have said they expect him to draw attention to the influence of business executives on his economic policies. With unemployment near 10 percent and Obama’s top domestic priority to boost jobs, administration officials have repeatedly stressed the need for private-sector cooperation. “Businesses are the true engines of growth; businesses are the engines of job creation in this country,” Obama said Feb. 17 to mark one year since he signed an $862 billion stimulus plan. “But during a recession, when businesses pull back and people stop spending, what government can do is provide a temporary boost that puts money in people’s pockets.” Still, his administration has come under fire from business groups, critical of record federal deficits, who have fought Obama’s efforts to overhaul U.S. financial regulations and the U.S. health-care system. In a speech today in Washington, Intel Corp. CEO Paul Otellini said he was concerned the government wasn’t doing enough to make U.S. businesses globally competitive. “We need to address the fact that government policies can create disincentives to investing in America and the trends here are worrisome,” he said. Investor Views Perceptions that Obama is unfriendly to business are widespread in the investment community. In a Bloomberg poll in January, 77 percent of U.S. investors surveyed said they see the president as anti-business. In the Bloomberg BusinessWeek interview, Obama attributed such sentiments, in part, to “a spillover effect” from criticism he has leveled at large banks . He also cited instances when he has clashed with specific industries such as insurance companies over his health-care plan, energy companies over climate change, and banks over an overhaul of U.S. financial regulations. He said each of the proposals would benefit American businesses as a whole. Obama predicted that he would sign legislation this year to cut corporate taxes by about $70 billion. “You would be hard-pressed to identify a piece of legislation that we have proposed out there that, net, is not good for businesses,” he said in the interview. To contact the reporters on this story: Julianna Goldman in Washington at jgoldman6@bloomberg.net ; Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Seidenberg, Dimon Among CEO’s to Dine With Obama at White House Tonight

February 23, 2010

By Julianna Goldman and Nicholas Johnston Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) — Verizon Communications Inc. ’s Ivan Seidenberg and JPMorgan Chase & Co. ’s Jamie Dimon are among more than a dozen chief executive officers invited to dinner tonight with President Barack Obama at the White House. The executives are in town for a meeting of the Business Roundtable , an association of executives from many of the biggest U.S. companies. Obama will speak to the group tomorrow as his administration works to combat perceptions that he is anti-business. “As in any good relationship, you’re not going to agree on everything,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said yesterday about the president’s relationship with the business community. The CEOs invited to dine with Obama at 6:45 p.m. in the State Dining Room also include David Cote of Honeywell International Inc. , Antonio Perez of Eastman Kodak Co. , Xerox Corp. ’s Ursula Burns , Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ’s Michael Duke , according to a partial list provided by an administration official. Many of the corporate leaders are members of the Business Roundtable’s executive committee . Honeywell’s Cote is under consideration for appointment by Obama to a new federal deficit commission the president created, another administration official said last week. He and Seidenberg are among four executives Obama and other administration officials have said the president admires. Business Outreach Tonight’s dinner is the latest in a series of private meals and public events to which the administration has invited business leaders since the middle of last year as part of an outreach to the business community as officials worked to help pull the economy out of the worst recession since the Great Depression. Cote, Perez and Seidenberg also were among attendees at the President’s Feb. 7 Super Bowl Party at the White House. Earlier that week, Obama, senior adviser Valerie Jarrett and Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel had lunch with CEOs including Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer, Cisco Systems’ John Chambers and Federal Express’s Frederick Smith . Smith was another executive who Obama said he admires during a Feb. 9 interview with Bloomberg BusinessWeek In Obama’s address to the business group tomorrow, administration officials have said they expect him to highlight the influence of business executives on his economic policies. Perceptions that Obama is unfriendly to business are widespread in the investment community. In a Bloomberg poll in January, 77 percent of U.S. investors surveyed said they see the president as anti-business. ‘Spillover’ In the Bloomberg BusinessWeek interview, Obama attributed such sentiments, in part, to “a spillover effect” from criticism he has leveled at large banks. He also cited instances when he has clashed with specific industries such as insurance companies over his health-care plan, energy companies over climate change, and banks over an overhaul of U.S. financial regulations. He said each of the proposals would benefit American businesses as a whole. Obama predicted that he would sign legislation this year to cut corporate taxes by about $70 billion. “You would be hard-pressed to identify a piece of legislation that we have proposed out there that, net, is not good for businesses,” he said in the interview. To contact the reporters on this story: Julianna Goldman in Washington at jgoldman6@bloomberg.net ; Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Steve Parker: Auto racing – NASCAR’s Disaster at Daytona

February 20, 2010

What Bill Clinton said about Yasser Arafat – “He never misses an opportunity to miss an opportunity” -also applies to NASCAR. Whether it’s the fact that NASCAR Sprint Cup (and next year the Nationwide Series) is now nothing more than a spec series where cheating has become the secret to success, whether it’s not choosing NASCAR’s first successful African American racer, Wendell Scott, to be in their “first class” of legends at the new NASCAR Museum in Charlotte or whether it’s providing a track surface which will not fall apart for the most important race of the year which kicked off the new decade for the sport, NASCAR has a definite penchant for too often being on the wrong side of any opportunity to make itself look good to a national audience. Last Sunday’s Daytona 500 took over six hours to complete, a race which normally runs three to four hours. Why? Because the track started coming apart and the race had to be stopped – red-flagged – for over two hours while track workers tried to make repairs. Oh, sure, there was a great finish to the race with the universally-liked Jamie McMurray winning his first Daytona 500 (he has the pole for this Sunday’s race at California Speedway) but how many people stuck around their TVs to watch Daytona’s end? While I enjoyed my extended nap at home, as I’m sure millions of other viewers did, there are sports car events which run six hours and are called “endurance races”. That certainly describes this year’s Daytona 500. Drivers including Tony Stewart and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. have talked about the boredom of the middle part of any long race, so NASCAR should imagine what those laps are like to we home viewers. Pure tedium at 190mph, and whoever thought such a thing possible? During one red flag period, at least one driver, Kyle Busch, fell asleep in his parked race car waiting for the green flag to come out again. When a red flag is thrown (which stops the race) the clocks stop running, so in fact NASCAR was able to claim the actual race ran just over three hours. Hooey. Here’s what really rankles me: In the month before the Daytona 500, there were thousands of laps run on the track, maybe tens of thousands. The racing season opened with the 24 Hours at Daytona sports car race, much of it, not unusually, in the rain this year. Then NASCAR took over the track for their couple of weeks of events. There were two qualifying races by Sprint Cup cars for the 500. And the hundreds of laps of practice leading to those. There were thousands of laps of practice, qualifying and actual racing for the ARCA Series, the Nationwide Series and the Camping World Truck Series. There were countless practice laps for the Sprint Cup cars as well as qualifying. And NASCAR wants me to believe that with all those laps, there was absolutely no problem with the track? No problem until NASCAR’s Super Bowl? Ridiculous. My guess? They knew there were potential problems, but NASCAR hoped they could skate by one more year on a track which was last repaved in 1978. NASCAR would rather ask viewers to watch an over six hour race than have it appear there might be something wrong with their legendary race track. Well, they gambled…and lost, big-time. And probably lost a lot of first-time viewers tuning into the race to see what NASCAR is all about. Have to hand it to the FOX announcers – they filled all that time as best they could, and with absolutely nothing negative said about NASCAR (you don’t bite the hand…). The only driver who complained publicly was Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Demonstrating his family’s virtual ownership of the track and the sport, he said, “If they’d a repaved it when I told ‘em too, it’d be perfect by now.” Only Junior has the juice to make a comment like that with no one from NASCAR saying anything to him about it. This Sunday, it’s a 500-miler at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, CA, about 70 miles and several universes, cultures, languages and lifestyles east of downtown Los Angeles. It’s a two-mile track built by Roger Penske, a twin of his track in Brooklyn, MI. The weather report calls for rain Friday night (and it was raining as I wrote this late Friday in Los Angeles), and heavy rain Sunday. But maybe NASCAR (and especially we fans) are catching a break – that rain is not supposed to start until late afternoon, but predictions for these Pacific winter storms are reliably unreliable. NASCAR has been criticized for years for starting their season during the rainiest part of the year in many areas of the country, almost guaranteeing a few rained out events. But they’ll take their chances in California and across the country until the generally dry summer, because there is money to be made and NASCAR and its track owners haven’t exactly been raking it in the past year or so. Let’s see how NASCAR handles this one. And the next.

Read the full article →

Loews CEO Tisch Says U.S. Rang Hotel `Death Knell,’ Hurt AIG With Pay Curb

February 9, 2010

By Jamie McGee Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) — Jim Tisch , the leader of Loews Corp. , said the U.S. did a “good job of killing” the hotel business by lambasting corporate travel and hurt American International Group Inc. ’s ability to return bailout funds by curbing pay. “The criticism that took place of group travel was really a death knell for the industry,” Tisch said yesterday in an interview at an office of the New York-based holding company, which owns hotels. “It’s easy for the politician to get the sound bite. What they are doing with those sound bites is putting maids and bellmen out of work.” Loews’s hotel unit posted a $34 million loss in 2009, compared with a $40 million profit in 2008. Tisch, the chairman and chief executive officer of Loews, said group travel comprises about half the firm’s hotel business, and operations suffered as lawmakers disparaged corporate trips amid the $700 billion rescue of financial firms. In 2008, bailed-out AIG canceled about 160 events costing a total of $80 million. Loews’s fourth-quarter average room rates fell 14 percent from the year-earlier period to $217. Occupancy decreased to 61.6 percent from 65.8 percent, Loews Chief Financial Officer Peter Keegan said yesterday in a conference call. President Barack Obama last year said companies receiving aid should curtail travel and pay. “You are not going to be able to give out these big bonuses until you’ve paid taxpayers back,” Obama said at a town hall meeting in February 2009. “You can’t get corporate jets. You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas or go down to the Super Bowl on the taxpayers’ dime.” ‘A Phenomenal Job’ Loews also owns natural gas exploration operations and the majority of commercial insurer CNA Financial Corp. , which competes against AIG selling commercial insurance. Loews reported its third straight quarterly profit yesterday on improved results from gas exploration and Chicago-based CNA. Loews has hired AIG staff, primarily to manage investments, who “do a phenomenal job for us,” Tisch said. New York-based AIG has a harder time retaining the “best and the brightest” managers after lawmakers criticized the company’s retention bonus awards and the Obama administration limited compensation for top executives, he said. “Last time I looked we don’t have indentured servitude in the United States,” he said. “The situation is such that the good people have every incentive to leave to maximize their income.” AIG CEO Robert Benmosche has said the insurer is attracting leaders committed to helping the company repay its $182.3 billion bailout. Managers have “voted with their feet” in joining AIG, Benmosche said in a statement yesterday announcing the hiring of Peter Hancock , a former CFO of a predecessor to JPMorgan Chase & Co., to oversee finance and risk. Loews’s fourth-quarter net income of $403 million, or 94 cents a share, compares with a loss of $958 million, or $2.20, in the same period a year earlier. To contact the reporter on this story: Jamie McGee in New York at jmcgee8@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Video: Derek Rucker Says Google, Audi Had Best Super Bowl Ads: Video

February 8, 2010

Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) — Derek Rucker, a professor at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Business, talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu and Adam Johnson about the best and worst television advertising during yesterday’s Super Bowl. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Roger I. Abrams: Beer and Sports

February 8, 2010

Beer is the mother’s milk of sports, the engine that drives the enterprise. That was apparent during the Super Bowl broadcast, watched by over 100 million consumers. That is not surprising because alcohol has always been part of the game. Anheuser-Busch sponsored what seemed to be dozens of commercials (It wasn’t that many; it only seemed that way.) All of its ads targeted the lowest common denominator of viewers and did so with appropriate glee. During the nineteenth century, beer was more than a social lubricant. Drunk primarily by immigrants who did not have access to clean water in our growing urban slums, beer became a symbol of social division. Members of proper society associated their fear of immigrants with the overuse of alcohol. The National League banned the sale of the brew at baseball games, much to the dismay of brewers who owned clubs like the Cincinnati Redstockings, baseball’s first professional team. The League was concerned that selling alcohol would attract the wrong type of crowd. Workingmen were not welcome, and neither were clubs that ignored the “no beer” edict. When Cincinnati refused to sign the “no beer” pledge, it was dropped from the League in 1881. In order to sell their beer, brewer-owners formed their own rival league. The American Association was scorned by the magnates of the National League as the “Beer and Whiskey League.” The Association fielded six teams that sought out the working class audience by offering both the sale of alcohol and play on Sunday – all at half the price charged by the National League. Four of the six club owners also owned breweries. Chris Von der Ahe, a German immigrant with a bulbous nose and a notable mustache who knew nothing about baseball, owned the St. Louis franchise and introduced sausages at his ballpark to complement his beer, forever linking hot dogs, beer and baseball. When the American Association folded in 1891, Von der Ahe’s St. Louis club was allowed into the National League. He added a dance hall to Sportsmen’s Park, amusement park rides, a racetrack and an all-female cornet band. Bill Veeck would have been proud. Alcohol was not all fun-and-games, however. Players overindulged before, during and after games. The scourge of alcoholism consumed the game. Owners tried shadowing their players off the field by hiring Pinkerton detectives. Some offered bonuses to those players who quit. Beer and other spirits, however, took their toll. Curt Welch, a centerfielder for the St. Louis Browns in the mid-1880s, hid a pint of whiskey in the outfield grass, and he would take nips between batters. Pete Browning, the “Gladiator,” was normally drunk on and off the field. Nonetheless, he batted .341 for his career. Browning explained: “I can’t hit the ball until I hit the bottle.” There is a story about an intoxicated Browning taking a 15-foot lead off second base in 1887 and then falling asleep. The second baseman walked up and put him out. The twentieth century had its share of alcoholics and their tragic stories of shortened careers and, sometimes, early deaths. Mickey Mantle was the most prominent example, who, on his deathbed urged youngsters not to follow his lead. It is difficult, however, to resist the pull of those dazzlings ads. Americans have had a love affair with beer since colonial days, but only in the twentieth century did we learn how to mass produce and mass-market our favorite diversion. Sports became a platform for advertising, a part of the great entrepreneurial enterprise that is America. With so many choices available to consumers, brewers needed to inculcate brand loyalty. Shortly after the repeal of Prohibition in the 1930s, print media and magazine ads promoted the product. In its early days, televisions were too expensive to purchase for the home and sets were located in neighborhood taverns. It was a natural setting for beer advertisements. The Super Bowl is a great communal festival celebrated across the country in parties and events. You no longer need to go to a bar to watch the game and enjoy it with friends and alcohol. You can do that at home. The advertisements have become part of the entertainment. As the Budweiser Clydesdale commercial reminded us: “Nothing comes between friends . . . especially fences.” Nothing comes between sports and beer, and there are no fences. Oh, by the way, the Saints won.

Read the full article →

Obama Calls Republican Leaders to Feb. 25 Meeting on Health-Care Overhaul

February 8, 2010

By Kate Andersen Brower Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama invited Republican and Democratic lawmakers from the House and Senate to a Feb. 25 meeting to discuss ways to get an overhaul of the U.S. health-care system through Congress. Obama said he wants lawmakers “to put their ideas on the table.” The president spoke during a live televised interview with “CBS Evening News” anchor Katie Couric during the network’s Super Bowl pregame show yesterday. At the planned half-day meeting, Obama said he wants a “large meeting with Republicans and Democrats to go through, systematically, all the best ideas that are out there and move it forward.” Obama wants live television coverage of the meeting, said a White House official who asked not to be named. Asked about starting over on the health-care debate, Obama said he wants to look at “very specific” ideas that Republicans present. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, responding to Obama’s idea, said legislation should start from scratch if Obama wants a measure that can get support from both parties. “If we are to reach a bipartisan consensus, the White House can start by shelving the current health-spending bill,” McConnell said in an e-mailed statement. “There are a number of issues with bipartisan support that we can start with when the 2,700-page bill is put on the shelf.” Bill Stalled The House and Senate each passed versions of the overhaul, but the push to produce a final bill has stalled. During a speech at the Democratic National Committee ’s winter meeting in Washington yesterday Obama told about 450 Democratic Party leaders that he won’t “walk away” from his effort to overhaul the U.S. health-care system. House Republican Leader John Boehner echoed the top Senate Republican, saying that the “best way to start on real bipartisan reform would be to scrap those bills.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Democrats “remain hopeful that the Republican leadership will work in a bipartisan fashion on the great challenges the American people face.” The House and Senate will keep working until Feb. 25 to reconcile differences in their respective health-care bills, Pelosi said in a statement. “We have promoted the pursuit of a bipartisan approach to health reform from day one,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said in a statement. “Senate Democrats will not relent on our commitment to protecting consumers from insurance company abuses, reducing health care costs, saving Medicare and cutting the deficit.” ‘Right Thing’ Obama told Couric that while jobs have always been a top priority for his administration, the push for health-care legislation “continues to be the right thing to do.” Since Republican Scott Brown won a Jan. 19 special election for the Senate seat held for almost 50 years by Democrat Edward Kennedy , Obama — in his State of the Union speech and elsewhere — has called on Republicans to seek bipartisan solutions to the country’s problems. Obama said the U.S. economy is moving toward recovery. “We are seeing the corner turn on the economy growing again,” Obama told Couric, saying that economic growth is “not happening as fast as we’d like.” Obama said he has proposed plans to help community banks and small businesses. The U.S. Labor Department reported Friday that the unemployment rate dropped to 9.7 percent in January, the lowest level since August. Revised figures show the U.S. has lost 8.4 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007. ‘Concrete Improvement’ “My hope is that for folks who are unemployed, they’re going to start seeing concrete improvement in their own lives in the next few months,” he said. The president said there has been “a lot of posturing” about the federal budget deficit , saying Democrats and Republicans need to “come together in a sensible way” to reduce debt. The “most important thing we can do” to hold down spending is to “get a health reform package passed.” Obama said the administration hasn’t decided whether to continue plans to hold the trial for alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in New York City. “If you’ve got a city that’s saying no, and a police department that’s saying no, and a mayor that’s saying no, that makes it difficult,” Obama said. Miranda Rights The Obama administration has come under fire from Republican lawmakers for trying terror suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab in civilian U.S. courts, where the 23-year-old Nigerian man was provided access to a lawyer, instead of trying him in the military-justice system. Obama said on CBS that Abdulmutallab was read his Miranda rights only after he provided Federal Bureau of Investigation agents with “actionable intelligence.” Obama said the practice of reading terrorism suspects their Miranda rights should be reviewed. John Brennan , Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, said in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he told Republican congressional leaders on Christmas night about the interrogation of Abdulmutallab, and called subsequent criticism “a bit of an outcry after the fact.” Brennan said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and House Republican Leader John Boehner were among senior members of Congress he briefed after Abdulmutallab was arrested on suspicion of trying to detonate explosives as Northwest Airlines Flight 253 approached Detroit carrying 279 passengers and 11 crew members. “None of those individuals raised any concerns with me at that point,” Brennan said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program. To contact the reporter on this story: Kate Andersen Brower in Washington at kandersen7@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Saints Close Colts’ Lead to 10-6 at Super Bowl Halftime With Field Goal

February 7, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) — The Indianapolis Colts lead the New Orleans Saints 10-6 at halftime of the Super Bowl. The Colts scored on their first two drives and limited the Saints, who had the highest scoring offense in the National Football League, to two field goals at Sun Life Stadium in Miami. The Colts stopped the Saints on fourth down from their 1- yard line with less than two minutes left in the half. The Colts (16-2) are seeking their second Super Bowl title in four years, while the Saints (15-3) are in the NFL’s championship game for the first time in their 43-year history. Matt Stover kicked a 38-yard field goal on the Colts’ first possession. Peyton Manning then capped a 96-yard drive with a 19-yard touchdown pass to Pierre Garcon with 42 seconds left in the first quarter at Sun Life Stadium in Miami. The Colts’ second scoring drive matched the longest in Super Bowl history. The Saints, forced to punt on their first two drives, pulled within 10-3 on Garrett Hartley’s 46-yard field goal with 9:40 left in the second quarter. New Orleans drove to the Colts’ 1-yard line before Mike Bell slipped on third down and Pierre Thomas was tackled short of the goal line on fourth down. The Saints got the ball back after a Colts punt and Hartley added a 44-yard field goal on the final play of the half. The Saints ran 25 offensive plays in the second quarter to six for the Colts. New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees has completed 16-of-22 passes for 164 yards, while Manning is 10-of-16 for 97 yards for the Colts. The Saints hold a 179-169 edge in total yards. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Republican Leaders Briefed Christmas Day on Terror Suspect, Brennan Says

February 7, 2010

By Alan Bjerga Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) — John Brennan , President Barack Obama ’s counterterrorism adviser, said he told Republican congressional leaders on Christmas night about the interrogation of terror suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab , and called subsequent criticism “a bit of an outcry after the fact.” Brennan said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and House Republican Leader John Boehner were among senior members of Congress he briefed after Abdulmutallab was arrested on suspicion of trying to detonate explosives as Northwest Airlines Flight 253 approached Detroit carrying 279 passengers and 11 crew members. “None of those individuals raised any concerns with me at that point,” Brennan said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program. “I’m just very concerned on behalf of the counterterrorism professionals throughout our government that politicians continue to make this a political football and are using it for whatever political or partisan purposes,” Brennan said. McConnell is among Republicans who have said Abdulmutallab should be tried in the military-justice system rather than civilian U.S. courts, where the 23-year-old Nigerian man was provided access to a lawyer. Senator Christopher Bond of Missouri and Representative Pete Hoekstra of Michigan also were briefed after the arrest, Brennan said. Hoekstra, the House Intelligence Committee’s senior Republican, called Brennan’s statements “absolutely outrageous.” Brennan “called and gave me a brief update as to what was going on,” Hoekstra said in a telephone interview. “He didn’t get into, ‘Here’s our legal strategy of how we’re going to treat them.’” Miranda Warning The White House adviser said he told lawmakers that Abdulmutallab “was in FBI custody,” and said they were aware that meant that the suspect was given a so-called Miranda warning advising him of the right to a lawyer. Bond said Brennan “never told me of any plans to Mirandize the Christmas day bomber.” If he had, Bond said in an e-mail statement, “I would have told him the administration was making a mistake.” Abdulmutallab pleaded not guilty on Jan. 8 to six charges including attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction, attempted murder and trying to wreck an aircraft. Brennan said Republicans and Democrats both have tried to use terrorism for political advantage. ‘Second-Guessing’ U.S. counterterrorism officers “deserve the support of our Congress” instead of “second-guessing what they’re doing,” Brennan said. Brennan rebutted a charge that the Obama administration may have leaked classified information last week that Abdulmutallab was cooperating with FBI agents, saying reporters were given some details only after the information had already been reported by some news organizations. Brennan also said today’s Super Bowl game in Miami is well- protected from possible terrorism. “People are very comfortable with the security measures that have been put in place for the Super Bowl,” Brennan said on NBC. The National Football League’s championship game may draw 100 million viewers according to CBS, the television network airing the event. To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Bjerga in Washington at abjerga@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

New Orleans Elects Mitch Landrieu as Mayor to Continue Katrina Rebuilding

February 7, 2010

By Darrell Preston Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) — New Orleans, slammed by the worst natural disaster in U.S. history, elected Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu to be the next mayor as the city continues rebuilding from Hurricane Katrina. Landrieu won with 66 percent of the vote in the race to succeed Ray Nagin , according to results from the Louisiana secretary of state’s elections division . Nagin couldn’t run again because of term limits. To win outright and avoid a runoff, a candidate needed more than 50 percent of the vote. Landrieu, 49, said he’d work to get more capital and start- up investors for small businesses, offer tax credits and incentives to draw digital media firms and encourage biotechnology and health care growth, according to his campaign Web site. The election came amid Mardi Gras parades and preparations for the first Super Bowl appearance by the city’s professional football team, the New Orleans Saints. Rebuilding from Katrina has stalled as the severest recession since World War II drove up unemployment the most since the storm that struck in 2005. The new mayor will face the need to boost tax revenue after the city’s emergency reserves fell to $5 million, or 1 percent of annual spending, Fitch Ratings analyst Steve Murray said in an interview. The city’s target for such reserves is 8 percent, said Murray, who’s based in Austin, Texas. To contact the reporter on this story: Darrell Preston in Dallas at dpreston@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Obama Tells Democrats He Won’t `Walk Away’ From Health-Care Overhaul Plan

February 6, 2010

By Julianna Goldman Feb. 6 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama vowed he won’t abandon his effort to overhaul the U.S. health-care system, as Democratic Party leaders try to figure out how to revive stalled legislation. “Just in case there’s any confusion out there, let me be clear, I am not going to walk away from health-insurance reform, I am not going to walk away from the American people,” Obama said today to about 450 people at the Democratic National Committee’s winter meeting in Washington. “Sometimes we may be moving forward against the prevailing winds, sometimes it may be against a blizzard.” Obama went forward with the address to party members even as the capital was buried by a major winter storm that dropped as much as 20-inches on the city. The president’s 15-car motorcade had to navigate snow-bound Washington streets to get to the Capital Hilton hotel, just blocks from the White House. An ambulance slid into one of the vehicles before leaving the White House grounds. On the way back the same vehicle was damaged when a tree branch fell under the weight of the snow. It’s “snowmaggedon in Washington D.C.,” the president said to the crowd. It may be appropriate that the DNC’s winter meeting would be held during the historic Washington snowfall, said Charlie Cook , publisher of the Cook Political Report. “A bad start to what’s almost certain to be a bad year,” Cook said. “They have to contemplate the increasing chance that they lose their House majority and most of their margin in the Senate.” Rallying Support Since his Jan. 27 State of the Union address, Obama on several occasions over the past few weeks, has addressed Democratic audiences to rally support around his proposals to boost jobs, tackle financial regulation and continue to fight for health care reform. Speaking the same week that Massachusetts Republican Senator Scott Brown was sworn in, ending the Democrats 60-vote supermajority that lets them overcome stalling tactics, Obama told today’s crowd, “when we are still digging ourselves out of an extraordinary recession, people are going to be frustrated and they’re going to be looking to the party in power to try and fix it.” The U.S. Labor Department yesterday reported that the unemployment rate dropped to 9.7 percent in January, the lowest level since August, and that employment fell by 20,000 jobs. In January 2009, the month Obama took office, the economy shed 779,000 jobs, the largest amount of the recession. ‘Tough’ Task “We knew this stuff was tough,” Obama said. “But we decided we were going to take the responsibility of changing it.” Obama this week also addressed two party fundraisers Feb. 4 which raised $2 million to $3 million for the DNC. He hasn’t limited himself to Democrats. Speaking about the need for bipartisanship, Obama took his message to the House Republican retreat in Baltimore on Jan. 29 where he took questions from party Congressmen for over 90 minutes. The president will also try to use sports to bridge the partisan divide. Among the democratic lawmakers, Cabinet members and military service members who will join Obama to watch tomorrow’s Super Bowl at the White House, there will be a lone Republican: Representative Joseph Cao . The Louisiana Congressman was the only member of his party who voted in November to support Obama’s health care legislation. To contact the reporters on this story: Julianna Goldman in Washington at jgoldman6@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Washington, Baltimore Face Record Snow as Manhattan Prepares for 4 Inches

February 5, 2010

By Brian K. Sullivan Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Washington and Baltimore prepared today for what may be a record snowfall from an East Coast storm that prompted blizzard warnings for parts of New Jersey and tornado watches in Florida. As much as 30 inches (76 centimeters) of snow is forecast to fall overnight and into tomorrow in the Baltimore-Washington region, which would shatter records in both cities, according to the National Weather Service in Sterling, Virginia. The forecast drove up the price of natural gas futures, as well as area power prices. “Heavy snow will develop tonight to produce near-blizzard and extremely dangerous winter weather conditions tonight through Saturday morning,” according to a weather service bulletin. In Manhattan, the storm may leave 2 to 4 inches of snow, about half of what was predicted earlier, the agency said at 4:28 p.m. Its winter storm watch was lowered to an advisory. New York is on the northern edge of the storm, so Staten Island, which is under a storm warning, may get more snow than the Bronx, and even a small deviation could change the outlook, the agency said. “New York City is probably one of the toughest to call right now because there is such a sharp edge on the storm, from where there is nothing, to where there is a foot,” Tom Kines , a senior meteorologist at AccuWeather Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania, said earlier today. Washington’s record was set by the 1922 “Knickerbocker Storm” that dropped 28 inches of snow, while Baltimore’s record of 26.8 inches came during the 2003 “Presidents’ Day Storm,” the weather service reported. Travel Disrupted The storm prompted the cancellation of more than 175 airline flights at Washington airports , left more than 17,990 people without power in North and South Carolina and drove up the price of natural gas. Flood warnings were posted from Florida to North Carolina, and blizzard warnings went up in New Jersey, including Atlantic City, as well as Delaware and Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay coast. In Florida, heavy thunderstorms swept across the center of the state, and at least one waterspout was seen near Tampa. Radar picked up a tornado near Bowling Green, about 80 miles southwest of Orlando, the weather service said. Natural gas for March delivery rose 9.9 cents, or 1.8 percent, to settle at $5.515 per million British thermal units at 2:36 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices advanced 7.5 percent this week. Virginia Emergency Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell declared a state of emergency in advance of the storm, while federal government offices in Washington closed early. Philadelphia will declare a snow emergency at 8 p.m., according to the city’s Web Site . The Amtrak national passenger rail system said most service to the south of Washington has been canceled, although the Silver Service between New York and Miami, site of this weekend’s Super Bowl game between the New Orleans Saints and the Indianapolis Colts, will operate. Power prices in the regions affected by the storm soared to four-week highs on the Intercontinental Exchange. In the New England Power Pool, electricity traded today for delivery on Feb. 8 surged $13.12, or 21 percent, to $76.73 a megawatt-hour. Power in the PJM Interconnection, a benchmark for the mid-Atlantic region, jumped $17.19, or 35 percent, to $66.65 a megawatt-hour. The storm is playing havoc with Virginia and Washington budgets. Virginia has already spent the $79 million it had budgeted this year for snow removal and will pay for the current storm from a $25 million reserve fund, according a statement by its Transportation Department . When the reserve fund is depleted, the state will start taking money from maintenance programs. Washington had $6.2 million for plowing and “we’re probably over budget at this point,” Karyn Le Blanc, a city spokeswoman, said by telephone. To contact the reporter on this story: Brian K. Sullivan in Boston at bsullivan10@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Video: Steinberg Says `Smaller Players’ Buying Super Bowl Ads: Video

February 5, 2010

Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Brian Steinberg, television editor at Advertisingage, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton and Julie Hyman about the outlook for television advertisements during the National Football League’s Super Bowl championship between the New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts on Feb. 7. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Dan Dorfman: Bank Heist: It’s Mortgages, Not Money

February 5, 2010

Here’s a tale of an unusual would-be “bank heist,” one that doesn’t require the use of any guns and is nothing like the kind that notorious bank robbers John Dillinger and Willie Sutton managed to pull off. This holdup, the brainchild of a brash hedge fund trader who used to receive seven-figure year-end bonuses, but who will soon be unemployed, is perfectly legal. So no need to call the cops. In effect, our trader’s heist centers on snaring a sharp reduction on one of his three mortgages. It would be equivalent to nearly a 50% discount and close to a $300,000 savings. Like Don Coyote, It seems like he’s pursuing the impossible dream, but he thinks he’s got a shot at pulling it off. What’s more, he’s advocating that other homeowners in financial hot water also push for a discount from lenders on their mortgages. In particular, he’s referring to the owners of the nation’s roughly 45 million single-family homes. Any success, of course, would mean homeowners could save themselves a healthy chunk of money, while at the same time creating more chaos at the banks. Efforts to get loan modifications for troubled borrowers are hardly new–the Obama administration is also pushing hard on this score–but the trader’s suggestion struck me as off the wall since banks would put themselves in a hole if they were to suddenly reduce principal all over the place. They’ll never do it, it’s a futile effort and you must be Super Bowl partying too early, I told the trader. He disagreed, reminding me of the proverb–nothing ventured, nothing gained. He noted that he was trying to get a big discount from the bank that holds the mortgage on a home he owns in Colorado. So far, he said, he has not gotten a no. He further pointed out that with a growing number of people walking away from their homes and with mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures still climbing, the last thing banks want are more rotten loans on the books or to go into the real estate business. Whose to say, he asked, that banks, if they’re pushed to the edge, won’t be responsive to the idea of lowering principal? Here’s the background on his dilemma. In the early part of the 2000s, the trader, who spoke on the promise of anonymity and is crazy about skiing, bought a home in Colorado that ran him $2.1 million. He put down $350,000, and took out a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage for the remainder. He also has a vacation home in Hawaii that cost him $812,000. In recent years, he ran into financial problems. In his personal account, the trader said, he lost a bundle (almost $2.3 million) during the market’s wicked 2008 decline, and fear, he added, kept him from actively participating in the giant rebound that kicked off last March. To make matters worse, his firm is scaling back and he’s one of the casualties He’s been delinquent on his last two payments on his Colorado home, which he put up sale about three months ago at $2 million. He’s now asking $1,750,000, but so far his lower offer has only attracted two bids, both low-ball, one for $1.2 million and the other for $1.050,000. He rejected both. He pitched his bank to lower the mortgage, which currently stands at about $1.5 million. After several days of haggling, the bank, he said, agreed to cut the principal to $1.2 million. The trader said no, insisting on a heftier reduction to $920,000. The bank said it would study the matter and get back to him. The trader’s idea of saving $280,000 sounds pretty good, but it seems like he’s chasing a pipe dream. Why so? Because banks, according to all reports, show little interest in engaging in loan modifications, even from good borrowers. Further, despite legislative efforts to aid homeowners with troubled loans, the sad news is only very few are obtaining relief. Last May, for example, the Senate rejected a measure supported by the President that would have permitted bankruptcy courts to lower the outstanding principal, as well as interest rates, on some home loans. That provided an insight into Wall Street’s influence on government policy. I bounced the trader’s idea of a sizable home loan modification off a loan officer at Wachovia (now owned by Wells Fargo). He ridiculed it, saying it bordered on the absurd. Why stop at housing loans, he asked? Why not ask banks to reduce auto loans and credit card loans, as well. “If you talk to a madman, you’re apt to hear insane comments,” he said. “Is that really helpful to your readers?” Meanwhile, the big question: what next for housing? For some thoughts, I rang up Madeline Schnapp who has been right on the money in calling housing trends. Schnapp, the director of economics at TrimTabs Research, a West Coast liquidity tracker, is convinced the housing horror show is far from over. In support of this view, she cited the following: –Mortgage delinquencies are now rising at the rate of 300,000 a month. The number of delinquencies, which stood at 6.2 million at the end of December, should rise, she figures, to 10-12 million by year-end. –In December alone, 350,000 properties received some form of foreclosure and they continue at a brisk rate this year because of resets on option ARM mortgages and job losses. So far in early 2010, foreclosures are running at a rate of 75,000 to 80,000 monthly. –Defaults on prime rate mortgages, as well as jumbo mortgages (generally around $470,000) are also on the rise because of high unemployment. –About 25% of the nation’s homes are under water (meaning the mortgages are greater than the worth of the house). On average, homeowners owe 25% to 40% more than the value of their house. –Home prices, which peaked in early 2006 and are down about 30% since then, are likely to drop another 10% due to excess inventory and continued foreclosures. The bottom line is obvious: A man’s home is no longer his castle. What do you think? E-mailme at Dandordan@aol.com.

Read the full article →

Jonathan Tasini: A Super Bowl Ad Peyton Manning Should Do

February 5, 2010

There has been a lot of controversy about the pro-life television commercial that Florida quarterback Tim Tebow will appear in during Sunday’s Super Bowl. Here is one Peyton Manning should do. From my colleagues at the National Labor Committee–which has been a consistent voice opposing the enslavement of workers around the globe (and an organization that deserves our support): NFL jerseys have been sewn under illegal sweatshop conditions at the Chi Fung factory in El Salvador for at least the last four years, according to a new report by the National Labor Committee. Often forced to work 12-hour shifts, workers were at the factory 61 to 65 hours a week, including 12 to 15 hours of obligatory overtime, which was unpaid. The workers were paid a below-subsistence wage of just 72 cents an hour, which meets less than a quarter of a family’s basic subsistence needs for food, housing, healthcare and clothing. An assembly line of 28 workers had a mandatory production goal of completing 2,300 NFL jerseys in the regular nine-hour shift, from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The production goal was 255 jerseys per hour, which meant that each of the 28 workers in effect had to sew nine jerseys per hour, or one jersey every 6.6 minutes. The workers were paid just 10 cents for each $80 Peyton Manning NFL jersey they sewed. This means that their wages amounted to just a little more than one-tenth of one percent of the jersey’s retail price.[emphasis added] People can get all over Tebow for speaking out for something they don’t agree with. But, frankly, it’s nice to see any sports figure being willing to say something controversial on a non-sports topic and not be concerned about hurting their endorsement chances. When I think of the massive amount of money Manning will likely reap at the end of this year–in new endorsements and what is likely to be a record new contract–he could finance his own commercial on behalf of these workers.

Read the full article →

Video: Super Bowl Win Doesn’t Guarantee Post-Career Success: Video

February 5, 2010

Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Michele Steele reports on the business efforts of National Football League players after a trip to the Super Bowl. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Wager on Saints to Cover Spread in Super Bowl, Quant Money Manager Says

February 4, 2010

By Elizabeth Stanton Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Super Bowl bettors should wager on the Saints to cover the point spread against the favored Colts because gamblers overpay for teams that rewarded them more richly during the regular season, according to an investment strategist. If the National Football League were the stock market, the Indianapolis Colts would be “overvalued,” according to Steve Sapra , a strategist at Analytic Investors LLC in Los Angeles who applies the same tools he uses as a money manager to analyze football. Teams that outperformed expectations more during the regular season either won the Super Bowl by a smaller-than- expected margin or lost by a wider one in seven of the past 10 years, according to his research. The Pittsburgh Steelers’ narrower-than-expected 27-23 victory over the Arizona Cardinals last year was no exception. The Colts are at least 4.5-point favorites to defeat the New Orleans Saints in the Feb. 7 matchup in Miami, meaning bets on the Saints pay out if they win the game or lose by a smaller margin. The Colts returned 38.7 percent on bets during the regular season, compared with a 12.5 percent in so-called alpha for the Saints. Bettors probably are giving the Colts even more credit, reasoning that the team’s losses in its last two regular-season games weren’t representative of its skill, Sapra said. “Realistically, investors view the Colts as 16-0, which would’ve made their alpha even higher,” he said. “The Colts’ alpha is higher in people’s minds than it is on paper, which would be indicative of an even larger mispricing.” NFL Alpha Sapra, 37, who is head of research for U.S. equity investment strategies at Analytic Investors , began calculating NFL team alphas six years ago. In portfolio management, alpha refers to the excess return of an investment over a benchmark. Analytic Investors manages $9 billion using quantitative techniques, in which securities are selected with computer models. Sapra’s NFL alphas look at how a team performed relative to the closing Las Vegas point spread on each game. This season’s highest-alpha team, the Oakland Raiders, returned 88.5 percent to bettors. The Raiders’ alpha was the highest recorded by an NFL team this decade despite their 5-11 record because four of their wins were major upsets. The lowest-alpha team, the St. Louis Rams, went 1-15 and produced a loss of 84.6 percent. In the past six Super Bowls, the lower-alpha team has either lost the game by fewer points than the closing line predicted, won by more points, or in the case of the New York Giants’ victory over the New England Patriots two years ago, won in an upset. That means bets on the lower-alpha team made money while bets on the higher-alpha team did not. ‘True Alpha’ The Colts went 14-2 in the regular season. They won their first 14 games before losing the last two while partly resting quarterback Peyton Manning and several other starters, having already clinched home-field advantage throughout the postseason. It’s comparable to a company with strong quarterly results delaying recognition of some revenue until the next quarter in order to smooth its earnings, Sapra said. “You could argue that the Colts’ true alpha is probably higher than 38.7, which would imply that the difference between the Saints and the Colts is even greater, which would make the Saints even more undervalued,” he said. Sapra, who has a doctorate in behavioral finance, said he’ll root for the Saints “to at least cover the spread so my prediction is right, but I don’t have an economic interest it.” “Betting markets in general, and the NFL in particular, are very, very efficiently priced, meaning that it’s very difficult to make money betting on Super Bowl teams,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Tebow Ad Helps CBS Increase Super Bowl Sales With Priceline, Toyota Absent

February 2, 2010

By Andy Fixmer and Michael Buteau Feb. 2 (Bloomberg) — Tim Tebow’s Super Bowl commercial for Focus on the Family, along with first-time advertisements from a dozen other marketers, helped CBS increase sales from the game as Priceline.com Inc. and Toyota Motor Co. opted out. New advertisers Electronic Arts Inc. , Qualcomm Inc. and truTV are joining Tebow and long-time Super Bowl marketer Anheuser-Busch InBev NV , the biggest sponsor, to push sales past the $206 million NBC reported last year, Dana McClintock , a spokesman for New York-based CBS Corp. , said in an interview. CBS has completed ad sales for the Feb. 7 match-up between the New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts, with prices for some 30-second spots exceeding $3 million, the most-watched U.S. TV network said yesterday. Building on record audiences for last month’s playoffs, the National Football League championship could attract 100 million viewers, said Jo Ann Ross , head of CBS advertising sales, topping last year’s record 98.7 million. “People don’t record the Super Bowl,” said Phil Marineau, senior product manager at Redwood City, California-based Electronic Arts, which is promoting the “Dante’s Inferno” video game. “They don’t want a Twitter or text message to spoil it, so they watch it live and they watch the commercials.” CBS’s sellout of ads a week ahead of the kickoff in Miami suggests the advertising market is recovering. Earlier Sellout In previous match-ups, networks had ads to sell until the weekend of the game, according to Andy Donchin , director of media investments at Carat , a New York advertising agency whose clients include Papa John’s International Inc. , the pizza chain based in Louisville, Kentucky. It’s rare to wrap up Super Bowl sales six days before the game, Donchin said in an interview. U.S. broadcast network advertising may rise 7.8 percent this year from 2009, Barclays Capital estimated last week, up from a prior projection of a 4.5 percent increase. CBS is running a Web site and a Feb. 3 show to let viewers vote on the best ads from past games. Tebow, the 2007 Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback at the University of Florida, will appear with his mother, Pam, in a commercial for Focus on the Family , a Christian non-profit advocacy group based in Colorado Springs, Colorado. “They will share a personal story centered on the theme of ‘Celebrate Family, Celebrate Life,’” Jim Daly , the group’s president, said in a statement. The ad is expected to recount the story of Pam Tebow’s pregnancy in 1987, the Associated Press reported. While on a mission to the Philippines, she rejected her doctors’ advice to abort her fifth child and gave birth to Tim, AP reported. Critical of Ads The Bob Tebow Evangelistic Association, founded by the athlete’s father in Jacksonville, Florida, couldn’t be reached for comment. Gary Schneeberger, a spokesman for Focus on the Family, didn’t respond to a voice-mail seeking comment. The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation criticized CBS for accepting the Tebow commercial while refusing to air a gay-oriented advertisement. Focus on the Family encourages gay men and women to abandon same-sex lifestyles . CBS, controlled by Chairman Sumner Redstone , has accepted commercials from advocacy groups since the network last aired the Super Bowl in 2007, the network said. “Our standards and practices process continues to adhere to a process that ensures all ads — on all sides of an issue — are appropriate,” CBS said in a statement last week. CBS rose 36 cents to $13.29 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . The shares gained 72 percent last year. The company is scheduled to report earnings on Feb. 18. New Product Forum With at least 13 new advertisers, according to CBS, this year’s game is attracting double the number of new participants as last year and the year before. The network lists 38 marketers whose ad buys for the event are public. Companies introducing products are attracted to the Super Bowl because the championship draws the biggest TV audience of the year, Donchin said. Electronic Arts’ “Dante’s Inferno” arrives in stores on Feb. 9, two days later, Marineau said. Unilever , the world’s second-largest consumer products company and based in London and Rotterdam, is promoting a new line of soap for men and Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc. , based in Plano, Texas, is announcing a cherry-flavored soda. Time Warner Inc. will air a 30-second spot for “Full Contact,” a behind-the-scenes program about the NFL on the New York-based media company’s truTV cable channel, formerly known as Court TV, according to a statement . Qualcomm, the San Diego-based maker of cell-phone chips, is promoting its FLO TV personal television service for handheld devices. Belgian brewer AB InBev’s Budweiser, the biggest advertiser, is taking five minutes of air time, according to Advertising Age, the industry trade publication. Dodge, owned by Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler Group LLC, is the only domestic automaker, while Volkswagen AG’s Audi and namesake German brand, Japan’s Honda Motor Co. , and South Korea’s Hyundai Motor Co. and Kia Motors Corp. have taken spots. “The positive side is the imports have really stepped up to the plate,” CBS’s Ross said in an interview. “In some cases they’re buying two 30-second spots.” To contact the reporters on this story: Andy Fixmer in Los Angeles at afixmer@bloomberg.net ; Michael Buteau in Atlanta at mbuteau@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Peyton Manning Skills Needed to Avert Tax Fumble: Amity Shlaes

February 2, 2010

Commentary by Amity Shlaes Feb. 2 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama is offering up a budget that reflects the biggest debts and deficits in U.S. history. Rather than boggle the mind with the details of this $3.8 trillion monstrosity, plenty of people — especially Wall Streeters — would rather think about whether the New Orleans Saints will get to Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning or what the new stand-alone AOL Inc. will report in earnings this week. This year, though, you probably want to shift your eyes from the sports screen to C-Span coverage of the House Ways and Means Committee. To forestall tax disaster, Obama and House Minority Leader John Boehner have to do more than agree to debate on the air at a GOP retreat. Otherwise taxes will go up enough to spoil a few years of football. Exactly what has changed becomes clear when you look back at attitudes of the past decades. When it came to the budget process, lawmakers always had to follow what James Lucier of Capital Alpha Partners, a Washington-based forecasting firm, calls their “Farmer’s Almanac.” From budget through resolutions through tax revisions to pay for resolutions to presidential signature, it was all quaint and obscure. The whole process itself was front and center, enough of a burden to impede truly dangerous tax increases. What if those lawmakers and the White House couldn’t even get it together to enact a budget? So much the better. That’s what happened in 1995, after Republicans took the majority in the House of Representatives and President Bill Clinton and House Speaker Newt Gingrich couldn’t agree on a deal. From that spring through autumn, when Washington shut down, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose to 5,100 from 4,100. Clinton’s sex life? Good news as well, for markets. Scandals kept Clinton so busy he didn’t have time or inclination to force through more tax increases. Tax Doom But doom this time looms. At least tax doom. If Congress generally does nothing by Christmas, taxes will go up, with the top rate on the income tax reverting to 39.6 percent from 35 percent now. If you include phase-outs of exemptions, the top rate will really be more than 40 percent. The special election in Massachusetts of Scott Brown to the Senate will charge up his Republican colleagues, but probably not enough to enable them to halt the expiration of the Bush-era cuts on the top rates. The increase in the top rates, Lucier says, “you can take to the bank.” It is already inscribed in the almanac. Inaction on the top income tax rates in 2010 in turn will affect dividends, where the rate increase will be more dramatic. The tax rate on dividends now stands at 15 percent, the same as the capital gains rate. But this special treatment likewise expires in December. Double Whammy Without new legislation, the rate will increase some 25 percentage points. That’s because dividends will again be treated, as they were historically, as ordinary income, and taxed at 39.6 percent rate. In other words, a double whammy. Some will reply that dividend taxes have been high before, without apocalypse. But it is the rate of increase that matters, rather than the absolute level. If the Senate follows its traditional pattern it may, with Brown’s help, manage to curtail the tax increase on dividends. But the operative word is “may.” Brown, after all, is inexperienced — no political Peyton Manning, not to mention a Jack Kemp . There is also the heavy task of keeping the long-term capital gains rate down. If Congress does nothing, that too will rise, to 20 percent. Busy With Scandals Middle-income earners may tell themselves it doesn’t affect them. But Congress has to be on the lookout for them too and remember to enact another patch for the alternative minimum tax. What if Ways and Means Chairman Charles Rangel is too busy with his ethics probe to get to that? This time, political scandal is a minus for markets, not a bonus. The combination of the new increases will reduce the relative competitiveness of the U.S. The best possible outcome, from a tax point of view, requires action worthy of Manning. This has to come first on the political front, followed by election of Republicans and tax- averse Democrats in sufficient numbers to support extending the current tax rates. More action then has to come from the new Congress itself: it must extend the current rates in November or December. Leaving Washington alone while it celebrates the occasional special-election victory is far from enough for the pro-growth crowd to do in 2010. This year is the Super Bowl of tax, and it’s time for our leaders to get ready to play. ( Amity Shlaes , senior fellow in economic history at the Council on Foreign Relations, is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: Amity Shlaes at amityshlaes@hotmail.com

Read the full article →

Campaign-Spending Curbs for Corporations Voided in 5-4 Supreme Court Vote

January 21, 2010

By Greg Stohr Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — A divided U.S. Supreme Court struck down decades-old restrictions on corporate campaign spending, reversing two of its precedents and freeing companies to conduct advertising campaigns that explicitly try to sway voters. The 5-4 majority, invoking the Constitution’s free-speech clause, said the government lacks a legitimate basis to restrict independent campaign expenditures by companies. The ruling went well beyond the circumstances in the case before the justices, a dispute over a documentary film attacking then-presidential candidate Hillary Clinton . “When government seeks to use its full power, including the criminal law, to command where a person may get his or her information or what distrusted source he or she may not hear, it uses censorship to control thought,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority. “This is unlawful. The First Amendment confirms the freedom to think for ourselves.” Companies, which had been barred since 1947 from using general-treasury dollars in support of or in opposition to a candidate, now can spend millions of dollars on their own campaign ads, potentially punishing or rewarding lawmakers for their votes on legislation. Labor unions, though they weren’t directly at issue in the case, have been subject to the same restrictions and may also now expand their political spending. Political Action Committees Corporations and unions seeking to support candidates had previously been forced to rely on regulated political action committees. Today’s case dealt with independent corporate expenditures as opposed to the ban on contributions directly to candidates, which dates from 1907 and remains intact. The ruling divided the court along ideological lines, with the newest justice, Sonia Sotomayor , joining the liberal wing in dissent. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia , Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito joined Kennedy in his 57-page opinion. “While American democracy is imperfect, few outside the majority of this court would have thought its flaws included a dearth of corporate money in politics,” Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in a 90-page dissent. He took the unusual step of reading a summary of his opinion from the bench. President Barack Obama said in a statement that the ruling “has given a green light to a new stampede of special interest money in our politics.” He said he would work with congressional leaders to “develop a forceful response to this decision.” Boost for Republicans The decision may boost Republicans as they aim to recapture congressional seats in the November election. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who was in the courtroom as the justices announced their ruling, said the court “struck a blow for the First Amendment.” The ruling marks the boldest step yet for Roberts and fellow George W. Bush appointee Alito, who previously had shied away from explicitly reversing precedents. The majority today overturned a 1990 Supreme Court decision that said corporations can be barred from using general treasury funds to pay for campaign advertisements. The court also reversed part of a 2003 decision upholding the McCain-Feingold overhaul of federal campaign finance regulations. The 2002 law barred corporate and union treasury spending in the weeks leading up to an election if the advertisements mentioned a federal candidate. The court today said that so-called electioneering provision is unconstitutional. McCain-Feingold The 2002 law was named after its Senate sponsors, Republican John McCain of Arizona and Democrat Russ Feingold of Wisconsin. McCain said in a statement that he was disappointed by the ruling. The ruling is a victory for Washington-based Citizens United, the corporation that created “Hillary: The Movie.” The 90-minute film , which creators sought to air on a video-on- demand channel during Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign, features interviews with a number of prominent critics of the New York senator, including Ann Coulter and Newt Gingrich . Citizens United released the movie to theaters and to stores in DVD format. It shelved plans to air the movie on “Elections ‘08,” a cable channel that would have charged the group a fee. Citizens United’s president, David N. Bossie , said the ruling “has made possible the participation in our political process that is the right of every American citizen.” Advocates of campaign finance restrictions said the ruling will unleash a torrent of corporate spending. Bob Edgar , president of Washington-based Common Cause, said the ruling was “the Super Bowl of bad decisions” and marked “a triumphant day for Wall Street.” Two Arguments Today’s decision, which overturned a lower court ruling, came after the court heard an unusual second round of arguments in the case to revisit the 1990 and 2003 precedents. During the first round of arguments, in March, the justices debated resolving the case along narrower grounds, possibly by carving out an exception to the electioneering law for documentary films or videos seen through on-demand services. The law contains an exception for some non-profit corporations. The justices opted not to expand that exemption so that Citizens United would qualify under it. “The court cannot resolve this case on narrower ground without chilling political speech, speech that is central to the meaning and purpose of the First Amendment,” Kennedy wrote. Transformative Ruling The decision “will mark a transformation of campaign finance law, not only on the federal level, but in state and local elections – including judicial elections – as well,” said Rick Hasen , an election-law professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. The Obama administration urged the justices to uphold the lower court ruling, as did McCain and Feingold. U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan , the administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer, argued that restrictions on corporate spending protect investors who disagree with a company’s political positions. Citizens United had support from the Chamber of Commerce and the National Rifle Association. On a secondary issue, the court ruled that Citizens United must comply with provisions in the 2002 law requiring the disclosure of some donors. “The government may regulate corporate political speech through disclaimer and disclosure requirements, but it may not suppress that speech altogether,” Kennedy wrote. Respecting Precedent Both Roberts and Alito vowed during their Senate confirmation hearings to respect precedent. Like other nominees, they left open the possibility of overruling decisions that had proven unworkable or been undermined by later developments. In the Citizens United case, Roberts wrote a separate opinion, joined by Alito, to explain why he voted to overrule two precedents. He said the 1990 decision “threatens to subvert the principled and intelligible development of our First Amendment jurisprudence.” The case is Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission , 08-205. To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

New York Jets Beat Chargers 17-14, Will Play Colts for Place in Super Bowl

January 17, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) — The New York Jets are one win away from the Super Bowl after beating the San Diego Chargers 17-14 to reach the American Football Conference championship game for the first time since the 1998 season. The Jets scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego and held the Chargers to fewer than 20 points for the first time this season while snapping San Diego’s 11-game winning streak. The Jets (11-7), who entered the postseason with the longest odds of any team to win the National Football League championship, will face the Indianapolis Colts on Jan. 24 for the AFC title and a trip to the Super Bowl, the National Football League’s title game, on Feb. 7. New York’s road victory as a 7 1/2-point underdog capped a weekend in which home teams won the first three divisional-round games by an average of 26 points. The Minnesota Vikings beat the Dallas Cowboys 34-3 today at the Minneapolis Metrodome as Brett Favre threw four touchdown passes. The Vikings (13-4) will visit the New Orleans Saints in the National Football Conference championship game on Jan. 24. The Saints (14-3) beat the Arizona Cardinals 45-14 yesterday, while the Colts (15-2) were 20-3 winners over the Baltimore Ravens. The Jets have won back-to-back playoff games for the first time since 1982, while Mark Sanchez became the second rookie quarterback in NFL history to win two postseason games. Joe Flacco of the Baltimore Ravens was the first, one year ago. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Vikings Will Play Saints for a Super Bowl Spot After Beating Cowboys 34-3

January 17, 2010

By Dex McLuskey Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) — Brett Favre threw three of his four touchdown passes to Sidney Rice as the Minnesota Vikings beat the Dallas Cowboys 34-3 to set up a meeting with the New Orleans Saints for a place in the Super Bowl. “It was convincing, to say the least,” Favre said in a televised postgame interview at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. “We’ll have to play that way in order to win next week.” Favre, at 40 the oldest quarterback to start a National Football League playoff game, completed 15 of 24 passes for 234 yards as the Vikings advanced to the National Football Conference championship game for the first time since 2000, where they lost to the New York Giants. Minnesota has played in the Super Bowl four times, losing each time. The New York Jets play the San Diego Chargers today for the right to face the Indianapolis Colts on Jan. 24 for the American Football Conference title and a Super Bowl spot. The Super Bowl, the National Football League’s championship game, is scheduled for Feb. 7 in Miami. Minnesota will play the top-seeded Saints in New Orleans for the NFC title on Jan. 24. Favre found Rice with a 47-yard pass with 4 minutes, 12 seconds remaining in the first quarter to open the scoring in Minneapolis. After Shaun Suisham kicked a 33-yard field goal for the Cowboys, Rice scored again midway through the second quarter on a 16-yard pass from Favre. Lead Widens The Vikings’ lead widened to 14 points four minutes before halftime, when Ryan Longwell made a 23-yard field goal after Dallas quarterback Tony Romo fumbled following a sack by Jared Allen on the Dallas 20-yard line. Romo was sacked another three times by Ray Edwards and lost the ball on two of three fumbles during the half. The Dallas quarterback was downed for the fifth time on the team’s opening drive of the second half and Suisham missed the 49-yard field goal attempt that followed, as the Cowboys sought to recover from a 14-point deficit for the second time in a playoff game. With 1:17 to play in the third quarter, Romo turned the ball over for the third time when he threw an interception to Ben Leber . The Vikings took over on Dallas’s 15-yard line and Longwell made it 20-3 with a field goal from 28 yards. The next Cowboys’ drive also ended with a punt after the Vikings sacked Romo for the sixth time. Minnesota led the NFL in sacks during the regular season. Seven plays later, Favre connected with Rice from 45 yards to make it 27-3 midway through the fourth quarter. Minnesota completed the scoring with 1:55 to play, when Favre found Visanthe Shiancoe for a touchdown from 11 yards. To contact the reporter on this story: Dex McLuskey in Dallas at dmcluskey@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

New York Jets’ Super Bowl Odds Are Cut to 18-1 as Colts Remain Favorites

January 10, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Jan. 11 (Bloomberg) — The New York Jets’ odds of winning the Super Bowl dropped to 18-1 after their playoff victory, while Las Vegas oddsmakers still favor the Indianapolis Colts to win the National Football League title. The Jets were rated a 25-1 chance to win the Super Bowl before beating the Cincinnati Bengals 24-14 two days ago in the first round of the playoffs. New York still has the longest championship odds among the NFL’s eight remaining teams, according to Las Vegas Sports Consultants, which advises Nevada sports books on gambling lines. The Colts have 2-1 odds to win the Super Bowl, followed by the Jets’ next opponents, the San Diego Chargers, at 11-4. “It breaks down to this: If we can win three games, we are world champions,” Jets coach Rex Ryan said last night during a media conference call. “That’s all you need for motivation.” The Jets (10-7) opened as nine-point underdogs against the Chargers, who are 13-3 and riding an 11-game winning streak. They’ll meet in San Diego on Jan. 17, playing the last of this weekend’s four playoff games. The Colts, who have an NFL-best 14-2 record, host the Baltimore Ravens (10-7) on Jan. 16 and are seven-point favorites. The Ravens, who yesterday beat the New England Patriots 33-14, have the second-longest Super Bowl odds at 14-1. NFC’s Top Contender The New Orleans Saints, the top seed in the National Football Conference, have 3-1 odds to win the Super Bowl, meaning a winning $100 wager would return $300 along with the initial stake. The Saints host the defending NFC-champion Arizona Cardinals on Jan. 16. Although New Orleans has lost three straight games after a 13-0 start, the Saints are seven-point favorites against a Cardinals team that gave up six touchdowns in a 51-45 overtime playoff win against Green Bay yesterday. The Cardinals (11-6) are given 10-1 odds of winning the Super Bowl, behind the Minnesota Vikings at 11-2 and the Dallas Cowboys at 6-1, according to Las Vegas Sports Consultants. The Vikings (12-4), led by quarterback Brett Favre , host the Cowboys (12-5) on Jan. 17 and are favored by 2 1/2 points. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Cardinals Defeat Packers in NFL Playoff Record Win, Ravens Beat Patriots

January 10, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Jan. 11 (Bloomberg) — The Arizona Cardinals extended their season with a 51-45 victory over the Green Bay Packers, as a defensive touchdown ended the highest-scoring playoff game in National Football League history. Karlos Dansby returned an Aaron Rodgers fumble 17 yards for a touchdown on the first overtime possession in Glendale, Arizona, capping a game that featured 96 points, 13 touchdowns, 1,024 yards and 62 first downs, all postseason records. “That’s got to be one of the best games ever played in the playoffs,” Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt said during a news conference. “That was really a battle, with a lot of ups and downs. This is what football and the playoffs are all about.” The Baltimore Ravens beat the New England Patriots 33-14 in yesterday’s first playoff game after taking a 24-0 first-quarter lead in Foxboro, Massachusetts. The wins by the Cardinals and Ravens complete the NFL’s second-round playoff matchups. In the National Football Conference, Arizona advances to face the top-seeded New Orleans Saints on Jan. 16 and the Dallas Cowboys visit the Minnesota Vikings the next day. The Cowboys beat the Philadelphia Eagles 34-14 two days ago. In the American Football Conference, the Ravens will visit the top-seeded Indianapolis Colts on Jan. 16 while the New York Jets face the San Diego Chargers the following day. The Jets were 24-14 winners over the Cincinnati Bengals two days ago. Cardinals Win In Glendale, the Cardinals and Packers totaled 96 points, one more than the previous postseason record set in 1995 when the Philadelphia Eagles beat the Detroit Lions 58-37. Kurt Warner , who led the Cardinals to the NFC championship last season, passed for 379 yards and five touchdowns, including two each to Larry Fitzgerald and Early Doucet . Rodgers, making his first playoff appearance for the Packers, finished with 422 passing yards and four touchdowns. All four came in the second half, when Green Bay erased a 31-10 third-quarter deficit. After Spencer Havner caught an 11-yard touchdown pass from Rodgers with 1:52 left to tie the score 45-45, Cardinals kicker Neil Rackers missed a 34-yard field goal attempt with nine seconds remaining. In overtime, Rodgers fumbled on a 3rd-and-6 play when he was hit by Cardinals cornerback Michael Adams . Dansby snatched the ball out of the air and raced for the winning score. “It was kind of like whoever was going to win the toss was going to win the game, but I really felt that our defense was going to make a play,” Whisenhunt said. “I just believed that because we missed the field goal where we had a chance to win, maybe destiny was going to smile on us.” Ravens’ First Quarter At Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Baltimore’s Ray Rice had an 83-yard touchdown run on the first offensive play of the game to spark the Ravens’ early 24-point burst. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady had three first-quarter turnovers that led to 17 points for Baltimore. “We got off to a terrible start and never really could get back in the game,” Brady said during a news conference. “That’s the way it is in the playoffs when you play good teams. We just made too many mistakes.” Rice rushed for 159 yards, while Willis McGahee and Le’Ron McClain added rushing scores for Baltimore, which finished with 234 rushing yards. Brady threw for 154 yards, with two touchdown passes, three interceptions and one fumble as New England suffered its first home playoff loss since Dec. 31, 1978. The AFC East champions, who won Super Bowl titles after the 2001, 2003 and 2004 seasons, went 8-0 at Gillette Stadium during the regular season. “We will always remember this win,” Rice said. “It’s hard to win on the road, especially here. They expect the playoffs every year and I am sure they are expecting Super Bowl. That’s the same mentality the Ravens need to have — the ultimate goal is the Super Bowl. Beating them up here really puts us toward that goal.” To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Redskins Name Two-Time Super Bowl Champion Mike Shanahan as Head Coach

January 6, 2010

By Christopher Elser and Erik Matuszewski Jan. 6 (Bloomberg) — The Washington Redskins named two- time Super Bowl winner Mike Shanahan as head coach, two days after firing Jim Zorn . Shanahan, 57, will be introduced at a press conference this afternoon, the National Football League team said on its Web site. The Redskins dismissed Zorn after finishing 4-12 this season. Shanahan, who spent 14 seasons with the Denver Broncos, will be the seventh coach in Daniel Snyder’s 11 years as Redskins’ owner. Shanahan had a 146-98 record in Denver and won NFL championships after the 1997 and 1998 seasons. He was fired after the 2008 campaign, when the Broncos lost their final three games to finish 8-8 and miss the playoffs for the third straight year. Denver lost eight of its final 10 games this season after a 6-0 start under rookie coach Josh McDaniels to again miss the postseason. Shanahan had a losing record twice during his tenure with the Broncos and went to the playoffs seven times. The Redskins have had three winning seasons since Snyder bought the franchise in 1999. Two of those seasons came during Hall of Fame coach Joe Gibbs’s second stint with the team from 2004-07. Gibbs’s four- year stay was the longest for a Redskins’ coach under Snyder. Norv Turner , Terry Robiskie , Marty Schottenheimer and Steve Spurrier have also coached the club in the past decade. Losing Record Zorn spent two seasons as coach, compiling a 12-20 record. The Redskins were 0-6 against the other three teams in the National Football Conference’s East Division this season, when Zorn’s leadership was questioned. “What we’re looking for in a head coach is somebody who can lead the men we had in this locker room to levels they haven’t played to before,” Bruce Allen , who was hired as the Redskins’ general manager on Dec. 17, said two days ago during a news conference. “We’re going to find the type of person who’s a winner, who’s passionate about the Redskins and passionate about football.” Allen’s father, George, coached the Redskins from 1971 to 1977 with a Super Bowl appearance and was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2002. The Redskins won Super Bowl titles after the 1982, 1987 and 1991 seasons. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net ; Christopher Elser in London at celser@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Mike Shanahan Agrees to Coach Washington Redskins, Denver Post Reports

January 5, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) — Mike Shanahan , who won two Super Bowl titles during 14 seasons with the Denver Broncos, reached an agreement in principle to become the coach of the Washington Redskins, the Denver Post reported . Shanahan will receive a five-year contract worth about $7 million a year, the Post said, and may be presented as the new coach tomorrow. He’ll be the seventh coach during Daniel Snyder’s 11-year tenure. Jim Zorn was fired after Washington finished with a 4-12 record this season. Washington spokesman Zach Bolno declined to comment in an e-mail, saying only that a press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m. local time tomorrow. The 57-year-old Shanahan had a 146-98 record in Denver and won National Football League championships after the 1997 and 1998 seasons. He’ll take over a team that has three winning seasons and two playoff victories in the past decade. Shanahan was fired after the 2008 season, when the Broncos lost their final three games to finish 8-8 and miss the playoffs for the third straight year. His appointment will save the Broncos about $7 million, the Post said. Denver will pay about half Shanahan’s salary this year and next, the report said. Shanahan had a losing record twice during his tenure with the Broncos and went to the playoffs seven times. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Giants on Edge of NFL Playoff Elimination After 41-9 Loss to Panthers

December 27, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) — The New York Giants moved to the edge of elimination from the National Football League postseason with a 41-9 loss to the Carolina Panthers in their final game at Giants Stadium. Two seasons after winning the Super Bowl, the Giants fell to 8-7 with one game remaining, against the Minnesota Vikings in Minneapolis next week. The Vikings are 11-3 going into tomorrow night’s game against Chicago and assured of a playoff spot. The Panthers moved to 7-8 for the season. The Giants started the season 5-0. With the Green Bay Packers leading the Seattle Seahawks late in their game in Wisconsin, the Giants’ only postseason chance lies with the Dallas Cowboys (9-5), who can clinch the final National Football Conference playoff spot by beating the Washington Redskins (4-10) tonight. If the Cowboys lose tonight, the Giants still can claim a postseason spot if they beat the Vikings and the Cowboys lose to the Philadelphia Eagles next week in Dallas. The Eagles have clinched a postseason spot. Today’s game was the final regular-season contest for the Giants at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The Giants and New York Jets are moving to a new stadium next door for the 2010 season. The Jets play a home game against Cincinnati on the final day of the regular season next week. For related news & information: To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Giants on Edge of NFL Playoff Elimination After 41-9 Loss to Panthers

December 27, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) — The New York Giants moved to the edge of elimination from the National Football League postseason with a 41-9 loss to the Carolina Panthers in their final game at Giants Stadium. Two seasons after winning the Super Bowl, the Giants fell to 8-7 with one game remaining, against the Minnesota Vikings in Minneapolis next week. The Vikings are 11-3 going into tomorrow night’s game against Chicago and assured of a playoff spot. The Panthers moved to 7-8 for the season. The Giants started the season 5-0. With the Green Bay Packers leading the Seattle Seahawks late in their game in Wisconsin, the Giants’ only postseason chance lies with the Dallas Cowboys (9-5), who can clinch the final National Football Conference playoff spot by beating the Washington Redskins (4-10) tonight. If the Cowboys lose tonight, the Giants still can claim a postseason spot if they beat the Vikings and the Cowboys lose to the Philadelphia Eagles next week in Dallas. The Eagles have clinched a postseason spot. Today’s game was the final regular-season contest for the Giants at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The Giants and New York Jets are moving to a new stadium next door for the 2010 season. The Jets play a home game against Cincinnati on the final day of the regular season next week. For related news & information: To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Mike Holmgren Agrees to Join 3-11 Cleveland Browns as Team President

December 21, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Dec. 21 (Bloomberg) — Mike Holmgren has agreed to become president of the Cleveland Browns, taking control of a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game since 1994. Holmgren, 61, captured a Super Bowl title during seven years as coach of the Green Bay Packers and led the Seattle Seahawks to their only appearance in the National Football League’s championship game. “We will spend the rest of the week finalizing the details of the agreement and will make a formal announcement next week,” Browns owner Randy Lerner said in an e-mailed statement. Lerner had offered Holmgren the option of holding “any and all” of the roles of president, general manager and coach, ESPN reported, citing Holmgren. The cable sports network also said Holmgren was offered $50 million over 10 years to take over a team that’s 3-11 in its first season under coach Eric Mangini . It wasn’t announced whether Holmgren will retain Mangini, bring in a new coach or assume coaching duties in addition to running the team’s football operations. The Browns have two games remaining this season. The Browns have been to the playoffs only once since the latest edition of the franchise was placed in Cleveland in 1999, posting a losing record in nine of 11 years. While they’ve won two straight games after a 1-11 start this season, the Browns are still tied for the worst record in the American Football Conference. Holmgren ranks 11th among NFL coaches with 161 wins, going 75-37 with the Packers and 86-74 with the Seahawks. He led the Packers to two Super Bowl appearances, winning the title after the 1996 season, and guided Seattle to the championship game following the 2005 campaign, losing to Pittsburgh. Holmgren left the Seahawks after the 2008 season. He declined to return last week after the club offered what it called a senior leadership position. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Eagles’ Reid Signs Three-Year Contract Extension to Stay Coach Until 2013

December 9, 2009

By Aaron Kuriloff Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) — Philadelphia Eagles coach Andy Reid signed a three-year contract extension, four days before a showdown with the New York Giants with a possible postseason spot on the line. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed in a news release from the Eagles, who are 8-4 and tied for first place in the National Football Conference East with the Dallas Cowboys. The extension, which keeps Reid with the National Football League franchise through 2013, comes a season after his team reached the NFC championship game, eliminating the top-seeded Giants in the first round. The previous season, Reid took a leave of absence to deal with family matters following the arrest of his two sons on drug and weapons charges. Reid, 51, is a two-time NFL Coach of the Year, the second- longest tenured coach in the league behind the Tennessee Titans’ Jeff Fisher and the longest-tenured coach in Eagles history. He has led the Eagles to five division titles, five conference championship games and the Super Bowl title game after the 2004 season. Philadelphia reached the postseason in seven of Reid’s first 10 years. The Eagles play the Giants (7-5) on Dec. 13 at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. A loss would drop the Giants two games behind Philadelphia in the race for a playoff spot, while a win would lift New York back a tie with at least Philadelphia, three weeks before the regular season ends. Local Rivalry The rivalry of two clubs separated by about 100 miles has produced some memorable moments over the years. Hall of Fame linebacker Harry Carson , who played for the Giants from 1976 through 1988, calls it a respectful, “friendly rivalry,” saying the players often meet in the offseason or at charity events. “You walk off the field, you pat each other on the rear end,” he said. In January, the Eagles intercepted Giants quarterback Eli Manning twice and held New York without a touchdown on the way to eliminating the Giants from the postseason. New York became the first top-seeded defending Super Bowl champion to lose its first playoff game. New York coach Tom Coughlin called it “a disappointing end to our season.” When the teams met in November, Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb threw three first-half touchdown passes in a 40-17 victory, handing the Giants, who started the season 5-0, their third straight loss. ‘Miracle’ In a November 1978 game, Giants quarterback Joe Pisarcik and running back Larry Csonka fumbled a handoff, leading to a last-second Eagles’ victory that became known as “The Miracle at the Meadowlands.” In November 1960, Eagles Hall of Fame linebacker Chuck Bednarik hit Giants running back Frank Gifford in the chest so hard that Gifford didn’t play in the next 1½ seasons. Reid, who also is the Eagles’ executive vice president of football operations, has a 12-12 record against the Giants, while Coughlin is 8-7 against Philadelphia. To contact the reporter on this story: Aaron Kuriloff in New York at akuriloff@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Favre-Led Vikings’ Game Against Cardinals Moved to Prime Time on Dec. 6

November 24, 2009

By Aaron Kuriloff Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — The Brett Favre -led Minnesota Vikings’ game against the Arizona Cardinals’ Dec. 6 has been moved to prime time on NBC as part of the National Football League’s flexible schedule. That day’s match-up between the Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots will now take place at 1 p.m., while the three- time NFL most-valuable player and his Vikings take the field at 8:20 p.m. New York time, the Dolphins said in a news release. Favre’s only other prime-time appearance this season, the Vikings’ 30-23 win over the Green Bay Packers last month, produced the most-watched show in cable history, drawing 21.8 million viewers to Walt Disney Co.’s ESPN. Almost 30 million tuned in to the second game between the two teams this month, making it the second most-watched Sunday NFL telecast for News Corp.’s Fox Sports. The Cardinals, who lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers in last season’s Super Bowl, lead the National Football Conference West division with a 7-3 record. The 9-1 Vikings are first in the NFC North, after acquiring quarterback Favre in the offseason. “While we would have liked the national exposure by playing the Patriots on Sunday night, we know our fans will enjoy attending the 1:00 game in what should be ideal weather conditions,” Dolphins Chief Executive Officer Mike Dee said in the release. The league’s flexible scheduling creates marquee match-ups for the Sunday night games on General Electric Co .’s NBC during the season’s final seven weeks. To contact the reporter on this story: Aaron Kuriloff in New York at akuriloff@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Buffalo Bills’ Dick Jauron Becomes First NFL Coach to Lose Job This Season

November 18, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Dick Jauron became the first National Football League coach to lose his job this season when he was fired yesterday by the Buffalo Bills. Jauron is the first coach fired by the Bills during a season since 1986, when Hank Bullough was dismissed after a 2-7 start. Marv Levy replaced him and led Buffalo to four straight Super Bowl appearances from 1990 through 1993. “While this was a very difficult decision, I felt that it is one that needed to be made at this time for the best interest of our team,” Bills owner Ralph Wilson said in a statement. Defensive coordinator Perry Fewell will take over as interim coach of a team that’s last in the American Football Conference’s East Division with a 3-6 record and may miss the playoffs for the 10th straight year. The Bills’ postseason drought is tied with Detroit for the longest in the NFL. There were three in-season NFL coaching changes last year. The Oakland Raiders replaced Lane Kiffin with Tom Cable , the St. Louis Rams fired Scott Linehan and the San Francisco 49ers replaced Mike Nolan with Mike Singletary . Jauron, 59, had a 24-33 record since taking over as Bills coach in 2006. The Bills went 7-9 in his first three seasons and lost six of nine games this year while averaging 15.6 points a game, tied for the fourth-fewest in the 32-team league. Buffalo lost to the Tennessee Titans 41-17 three days ago. Fewell, 47, is in his fourth season with the Bills. He’s been a defensive assistant in the NFL for 12 years, having also worked for Chicago, St. Louis and Jacksonville. “It’s my first opportunity to be a head coach, so it’s the opportunity of a lifetime,” Fewell said during a news conference. He wouldn’t disclose whether Wilson told him he may be considered for the full-time job. Jauron had a 60-82 record over parts of 10 seasons as an NFL coach with the Bills, Detroit Lions and Chicago Bears. His lone winning season came with the Bears in 2001. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Buffalo Bills Fire Coach Dick Jauron After 3-6 Season Start, 24-33 Overall

November 17, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) — Dick Jauron was fired as coach of the Buffalo Bills, who are in last place in their division with a 3-6 record and may miss the National Football League playoffs for the 10th straight year. Jauron, 59, had a 24-33 record since taking over as Bills’ coach in 2006. He is the first NFL head coach fired this season. Buffalo trails New England, Miami and the New York Jets in the American Football Conference’s East Division this season and has averaged just 15.6 points a game, tied for the fourth-fewest in the 32-team league. The Bills lost to the Tennessee Titans 41-17 two days ago. “While this was a very difficult decision, I felt that it is one that needed to be made at this time for the best interest of our team,” Bills owner Ralph Wilson said in a statement. The Bills haven’t named a replacement. NFL.com reported that defensive coordinator Perry Fewell is expected to fill in for Jauron on an interim basis. Buffalo hasn’t made the playoffs since 1999, tied with the Detroit Lions for the league’s longest active streak for a non- expansion franchise. Jauron has a 60-82 record over parts of 10 seasons as an NFL coach with the Bills, Detroit Lions and Chicago Bears. His lone winning season came with the Bears in 2001. Jauron is the first coach fired by the Bills during a season since 1986, when Hank Bullough was dismissed after a 2-7 start. Marv Levy replaced him and led Buffalo to four straight Super Bowl appearances from 1990 through 1993. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →