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(MENAFN) Chinese Anta Sports Products Ltd reported a 12 percent increase in profits to USD274.64 million for the year 2011, Reuters reported. The results came in line with market expectations, …

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China’s ANTA Sports reports USD274.6m profit in 2011

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(MENAFN) Unilever posted reported fourth-quarter revenue that missed estimates, predicting tough economic conditions and elevated commodity costs this year, Bloomberg reported. Chief Financial …

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Unilever Q4 sales grow 6.6%, less than estimates

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China’s change: Sweet and sour

January 29, 2012

(MENAFN – Khaleej Times) This year China faces its first leadership change in a decade. Maintaining a dynamic economy is, of course, a key aim of the Chinese Communist Party. But politics are tense, …

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World Bank lowers global economic growth forecast

January 19, 2012

(MENAFN – Kuwait News Agency (KUNA)) In grim economic news, the latest World Bank report released Wednesday slashed its growth forecast for the year to 5.4 percent for developing countries and 1.4 …

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Swatch Logs Record 2011 Sales

January 11, 2012

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Swiss watch maker Swatch Group reported Tuesday an 11 % rise in gross sales for the year 2011 on the strength of Watches & Jewelry and Production segments, despite …

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Atlas Iron Limited (ASX:AGO) Announces A$169 Million Maiden Annual Profit and Dividend of 3 Cents per Share

August 25, 2011

http://www.abnnewswire.net/rss2/menafn/abn_menafn_en.asp Atlas Iron Limited (ASX:AGO) is pleased to report a maiden annual profit after income tax of A$169 million for the year to June 2011. The …

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Qantas Airways annual profit rises to USD263m

August 24, 2011

(MENAFN) Qantas Airways’ Ltd. chief executive, Alan Joyce, said that compared with USD117 million annual net profit in 2010, this year, the figures increased to more than a double reaching USD263 …

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Germany- VW net leaps more than three-fold

July 30, 2011

(MENAFN) Volkswagen, Europe’s biggest car maker, said that net profit tripled in both the second quarter and first half of the year, but VW shares crashed in midday trading nonetheless. A VW …

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Hawaii Bankers Planning for More Commercial Real Estate Lending

June 4, 2011

Lenders in Hawaii are planning to do more commercial real estate lending this year, thanks to expanding local businesses and real estate investor activity[1]. In fact, many Hawaiian lenders like First Hawaiian and Hawaii …

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‘NO MORE DEBT’: Municipal Bond Issuance Down By Half This Year

June 3, 2011

NEW YORK — As cities and states struggle with historic budget shortfalls, governments have put one item squarely in the cross-hairs: their debt. Restricting the debt burden has proven to be a politically feasible way for a local government to address its larger fiscal problems — or at least to give the impression it’s doing so. While local politicians clash over pension reform, tax increases and other divisive issues, debt-reduction has emerged as a relatively popular measure. Issuance of long-term municipal bonds dropped by 51 percent during the first five months of the year, compared to the same period a year ago, the Bond Buyer reported, citing data from Thomson Reuters. Limiting bond sales constricts governments’ ability to pave roads, repair bridges and build hospitals and parks. And while the budget relief won from this austerity isn’t large, even for the governments that pay the most interest to bondholders, it sends a message to taxpayers and investors that a government is at least attempting to get its house in order. “I just don’t think people are in the mood to have governments issuing debt at this time, when they’re making service cuts,” said Howard Cure, director of municipal research at Evercore Wealth Management. “The optics of issuing debt,” he said, do not “play very well.” The first five months of the year saw about $83.7 billion of new municipal debt, less than half of the $170 billion that came to market during the same period last year, the Bond Buyer noted, adding that the volume so far this year is the lowest it’s been since 2000. This restricted supply has helped boost the value of bonds. It’s been a difficult several months for municipal bonds, as predictions of widespread defaults have roiled markets, and investors have steadily pulled money from municipal mutual funds. But limited issuance has helped curb adverse effects, the Wall Street Journal reported last month. Municipal yields have fallen this year as the value of bonds has risen, making it cheaper for governments borrow money. The difference, or spread, between yields on an index of municipal bonds and equivalent Treasury bonds was 0.85 of a percentage point at Thursday’s close, down from a January high of 1.04 percentage points, data from Bloomberg show. The states with the most bond issuance saw dramatic year-over-year drops. Issuance in New York, California and Illinois — the top three states for issuance this year and last — dropped, respectively, 38 percent, 70 percent and 48 percent, the Bond Buyer noted. In Illinois, the state legislature voted down a sale of more than $6 billion in bonds on Sunday, and there’s no new bond issuance planned for the coming fiscal year, said Illinois Treasury spokesman Matt Butterfield. For the state that bears the second-lowest credit rating of all 50 states from Standard & Poor’s, borrowing is costly. “Any bonding that is not done here, it’s because it’s expensive,” Butterfield said. “We’re paying a premium because of the credit rating we’re suffering from.” In Illinois, as elsewhere, debt has been painted as an enemy. “Some policy makers want to continue to spend more dollars than the state brings in. Some are advocating long-term, significant borrowing which will spread the state’s challenges into the future. I respectfully disagree,” Illinois Treasurer Dan Rutherford said in a recent release entitled “NO MORE DEBT.” In California, the strategy is similar. S&P has given California the single lowest rating of all 50 states, prompting investors to demand higher yield from the state and also from its local governments. No bonds have been sold at the state level so far this year, when typically there would have been a spring sale, said Tom Dresslar, a California Treasury spokesman. As a portion of the budget, debt payments are dwarfed by spending on services such as education, corrections and health care. But debt has nevertheless been targeted for reduction. “It’s not the biggest by any means, but it’s been growing,” Dresslar said. “Every dollar that you have to pay in debt service is a dollar that you cannot spend on schools, public safety, health care — the whole gamut of public services.” Yields on the state’s debt have indeed fallen. As of May 27, California’s 10-year paper was yielding 3.60 percent in the secondary market, compared to 4.01 percent that time last year, according to data provided by the state Treasury. Restricting bond issuance, though, limits a government’s ability to spend. California will not be able to start some new infrastructure projects it had planned for this year, Dresslar said. But as long as the state sells bonds this fall, the projects that are already in the works will be funded, and new ones will eventually commence, he added. “Whenever you defer capital improvements you’re going to have a bigger problem later on,” said Cure, of Evercore. “Inevitably [bond] issuance will bounce back because infrastructure is in bad shape in this country, but right now the more immediate issue is balancing the budget.”

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U.S. Economy Adds Startling Low Number Of Jobs In May

June 3, 2011

WASHINGTON (Lucia Mutikani) – Employment rose far less than expected in May to record its weakest reading since September, while the jobless rate rose to 9.1 percent as high energy prices and the effects of Japan’s earthquake bogged down the economy. Nonfarm payrolls increased 54,000 last month, the Labor Department said on Friday, with private employment rising 83,000, the least amount since June. Government payrolls dropped 29,000. Economists polled by Reuters had expected payrolls to rise 150,000 and private hiring to increase 175,000 in May. The government revised employment figures for March and April to show 39,000 fewer jobs created than previously estimated. The job creation slowdown confirmed the economic weakness already flagged by other data from consumer spending to manufacturing. It could stoke fears about the depth and duration of a slowdown that started early in the year. The Labor Department said severe weather last month, including tornadoes and flooding, in the Midwest and the South did not materially affect data collection. It also said that while some workers in those regions may have been temporarily displaced from their jobs, it found “no clear impact of the disasters on the national employment and unemployment data for May.” Economists still believe the lull in activity will be temporary. They cite high gasoline prices, bad weather and disruptions to motor vehicle production because of a shortage of parts from Japan as factors weighing on growth. “It is clear we have temporarily entered a soft patch,” said Christopher Probyn, chief economist at State Street Global Advisors in Boston, before the report. “Nobody knows how soft and how long, but the best case view is that the fundamentals of the recovery remain intact and the economy will re-accelerate in the second half of the year.” The report provides one of the best early reads on the health of the U.S. economy and it regularly sets the tone for global financial markets. Worries about the pace of the U.S. economic recovery weighed on stocks on Thursday. While the recent string of weak data has sparked talk about the need for the Federal Reserve to extend its asset purchasing program when it expires this month, analysts believe policymakers will take a soft payrolls report in stride. Officials at the U.S. central bank regard the current downshift in the economy as temporary. The Fed has been mapping out a strategy on how to start removing some of the massive stimulus it has lent the economy, and officials have made clear the bar for a further easing in monetary policy is high. TEMPORARY FACTORS AT PLAY “We should keep in mind that we have seen a lot of factors weighing on the U.S. economy in April and May, and should take this report with a pinch of salt,” said Harm Bandolz, chief U.S. economist at UniCredit Research in New York. “We may see some positive surprises in the second half of the year once the impact fades.” High gasoline prices hurt consumer spending in the first quarter, restricting economic growth to a 1.8 percent annual pace after expanding at a 3.1 percent rate in the October-December period. The economy has regained only a fraction of the more than 8 million jobs lost during the recession. Economists say payrolls growth above 300,000 a month is needed to make significant progress in shrinking the pool of 13.9 million unemployed Americans. The unemployment rate rose to 9.1 percent last month from 9.0 percent in April as some discouraged workers who had been inspired by the pick-up in hiring in April re-entered the labor market. “There is so much slack in the labor market it’s going to take a long time to get the unemployment rate down to between 6 and 7 percent. That’s going to take years,” said Stephen Bronars, a senior economist at Welch Consulting in Washington. That could be bad news for President Barack Obama, whose chances of re-election next year could hinge on the health of the economy, particularly the labor market. The employment report showed weakness across the board, with the private services sector adding 80,000 jobs last month after increasing payrolls by 213,000 in April. Within the private services sector, leisure and hospitality fell, showing no boost from McDonald’s recruitment of about 50,000 new staff in April, which was after the survey period for that month’s payrolls. Spring is traditionally a strong hiring period for McDonald’s. Retail employment, which recorded its largest increase in 10 years in April, fell 8,500 last month. Manufacturing payrolls growth contracted 5,000 last month, while construction employment rose 2,000. The report showed the average work week steady at 34.4 hours and few signs of wage inflation, with average hourly earnings rising 6 cents. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani, Editing by Andrea Ricci) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Robert Zevin: Playing Chicken With the Debt Ceiling

June 1, 2011

In the days before people could do anything “virtually” on the Internet, restless teenage boys used to play a game called “chicken” in which two contestants would race their cars directly toward each other. The first to swerve in order to avoid crashing was the “chicken” and loser of the game. No doubt there are still places in the world where teenagers vent their surplus testosterone by playing a similar game with real automobiles. However, even if there were no such place, the political leaders of the western world have rushed in fearlessly to perpetuate new versions of the same old game. First the Republicans in the House of Representatives, under pressure from passionate new Tea Party members, insisted on substantial cuts in the still unapproved budget for the present fiscal year, which is more than half over, before they would agree to vote for a resolution to continue meeting the government’s daily obligations. After weeks of rhetorical exchanges about how many tens of billions of dollars to cut out of federal spending for the balance of the year, and negotiating sessions behind closed doors that were designed to leak, the parties announced their agreement to “cut” the federal budget, by implication for the balance of this fiscal year (which ends September 30th) by about $39 billion. This was a surprising outcome, since the last time the Republicans had played this game, with Newt Gingrich driving them to a collision, the result was that the Republicans were simply crushed, like a compact car trying to play chicken with a truck on a one-lane bridge. As it happens the $39 billion in cuts was more than ninety-nine percent political theatrics. A few days after the big deal was announced, the Congressional Budget Office, staffed by both parties, estimated that the actual reductions in spending this year would be only about three hundred million dollars, or less than one percent of the amount claimed. The rest of the $39 billion was all reductions in amounts that had previously been authorized, sometimes in times long past, but never appropriated for spending this year or any other year. Most of it, the Budget Office concluded, would never have been spent in any case. The good news is that there has not been even a small dent in the fiscal stimulus that the United States is getting and still very much needs just to keep the economy sputtering along at nine percent unemployment. The bad news is that there is a bipartisan, indeed an all-inclusive social consensus, to substitute make-believe and play acting for any depiction of real problems and issues, let alone solutions. Now we have the spectacle of the Republican House saying it will not authorize an increase in the federal debt ceiling (which of course was predictable given the budget they passed six weeks ago) unless there are substantial additional “reductions” in spending. Again it would seem to be an uneven game between a truck (we must honor our obligations and maintain the high credit worthiness of our country) versus a motorcycle (we must start cutting our multi-trillion dollar deficits a little bit at a time or force a default on the government debt or an interruption of Social Security payments by stopping that truck). Those of us who think we are still living in the real world are left to hope that there will be no collision with possibly devastating effects on the still wounded national and global economies. At the same time we know full well that if the collision is avoided it will be with yet another theatrical concoction, purporting to show that Obama has again made significant concessions to hasten the day of a balanced budget (with, of course, no new taxes).

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Gemma Godfrey: Russian Investment Opportunities: The Drivers and the Hidden Gems

May 31, 2011

From the world’s best performing index in the first three months of this year, to a laggard this quarter, the Russian index has offered dramatic returns as well as downside risk. What has driven investor sentiment and what are many investors missing? The World Leader Slips to World Laggard Russia’s RTS Index was the world’s best performing index in the first three months of this year but has now fallen by around 11% in value so far this quarter (Source: Bloomberg). Moves in this market are often attributed to sentiment over the oil price due to the significant revenues generated by the country exporting this commodity. Therefore speculation over economic growth (read: oil demand) is highly influential. This year has been no different. Turmoil in the Middle East can be attributed as one of the main drivers of a strong rally in oil in the first quarter and concerns over economic growth has caused a reversal since that time. However, is this too simplistic a view and aren’t there other factors to which an investor in Russia should be paying attention? Beyond Oil It is clear to see why investors place so much emphasis on the oil price as a dictator of Russia’s financial health. Supplying some 11.4% of the world’s oil supply last year, Russia is the ” biggest single source outside the OPEC cartel .” Although official figures calculate its contribution to Russia’s GDP at 9% , it is important to be aware that speculation over tax avoidance suggests the value may be nearer to 25% . Nevertheless, what is often overlooked is the specific oil price factored into their budget. For this year, a price above $75 /barrel will produce a deficit reduction. With Brent currently standing at $115 /barrel, a fall in the Russian Index in reaction to a fall in the oil price to anything above $75/barrel may be missing the point. Boosting Ties with Iraq With Russian oil fields maturing and production growth resting heavily on foreign investment , the country is looking externally for new sources. Iraq offers potential opportunities and TNK-BP , Russia’s 3rd largest oil producer and BP Plc’s 50-50 joint venture, isn’t holding back. The relationship between the two countries dates back many years and in 2008 Russia wrote off most of their $12.9bn debt mainly generated pre-gulf war from the Saddam Hussein government purchases of Soviet weapons . Interestingly, last October the Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev announced his country was ready to strengthen co-operation with Iraq, the same month TNK-BP gained the right to bid for 3 natural gas areas in the region, Mediating the Exit of Qaddafi Within the political arena, Russia has been just as active. In addition to fighting for a stronger developing market influence at the IMF, Russia has offered its services to facilitate the exit of Qaddafi from rule in Libya. This is the first time it has shown support for the NATO-led military campaign after abstaining from UN Security council vote in March which authorised the intervention and accusing NATO of violating the resolution by backing anti-Qaddafi rebels and causing civilian casualties from air raids. Due to the belief that Qaddafi has ” forfeited legitimacy “, they are willing to negotiate his fate with members of his entourage. Evidence of the country’s powerful network, the value of their political clout has been highlighted. Driving the Agriculture Market Back to commodities but from a different angle, the Russian weather is an influencer to watch for investing in the agriculture markets. Fine weather has prompted an upward revision of Russian grain production with the Federal Hydrometerological Center reporting the warmer weather has improved the prospects for crops. This has led to speculation that Russia’s ban on grain exports may be lifted on 1 July . Wheat future prices saw double digit losses. The Chinese Buyer One particular potential buyer of Russia’s resources is China, state media reported last Monday. China Investment Corp (CIC), the country’s $300bn sovereign wealth fund, was set up in 2007 to invest some of the country’s massive foreign exchange reserves. With the world’s largest foreign capital resource, at $3.0tn , they are keen to find better sources of return and commodities to fuel their rapid economic growth. G-8 Bullishness Boosting Appetite for Risk Despite these many factors which may influence Russia’s outlook, financially, economically and politically; its index continues to exhibit a strong correlation to the oil price. This week we’ve seen oil (and Russian equities) respond positively to the declaration by the Group of Eight that the global recovery is strengthening . But to differentiate between short-term over-reaction and more logical fundamental moves, being aware of all the issues will equip you with the insight to navigate this volatile but potentially profitable market.

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No More Bailouts For Ireland, Though

May 30, 2011

DUBLIN (Carmel Crimmins) – Ireland’s government moved on Monday to quash speculation it would be forced to seek a second EU-IMF bailout and said it would make a tentative return to international debt markets in the final quarter of next year. Dublin is trying to distance itself from the woes of euro zone struggler Greece, which is trying to avoid a potentially devastating default and seems certain to require a second bailout to plug a looming funding gap. Finance Minister Michael Noonan categorically ruled out Dublin requiring a top-up to its 85 billion-euro rescue package, seeking to limit the fallout from a cabinet colleague’s warning over the weekend that another bailout may be needed. “There is no question of a bailout package having to be brought in next year,” Noonan told state broadcaster RTE. “We have sufficient money from the IMF and European institutions to carry the country forward in all eventualities and the program runs until the end of 2013.” “A second bailout doesn’t arise because of that.” Noonan said Dublin would test market sentiment for Irish debt in the final quarter of 2012 after a two-year hiatus. “We won’t be fully back in the markets but we hope that the NTMA (debt management agency) will be able to raise some private funds in the market in the last quarter of next year.” Many economists have come round to the view that some sort of further aid and restructuring of its debt is likely to be inevitable to allow Greece to deal with a debt burden of more than 150 percent of its annual national output. Ireland’s debt is expected to peak lower than that but still top 120 percent of GDP in 2013 and Irish bond yields have sky-rocketed as Greece’s debt crisis deepened, reflecting market concerns it may face a similar fate. The Irish central bank said investors needed further reassurance that its EU-IMF program was on track. “Market spreads on Irish government paper have moved in the wrong direction since the program started… markets probably need more time to see persistent adherence of the program,” Governor Patrick Honohan told national broadcaster RTE. “Continued adherence to the path is the way to get back to the markets,” he said. ‘A BIG ASK’ Analysts said even with a clean EU-IMF report card, Dublin faced an uphill challenge. “We currently have 5 year paper trading at 12 percent, 10 year paper trading at 11. Clearly if this is where we are next year Ireland is not going to capital markets. I think yields have to get into single digits and heading south,” said Padhraic Garvey, rate strategist at ING. “It’s a big ask. It’s not impossible, but it’s a big ask.” The average interest rate Ireland is paying on its EU and IMF loans is estimated at 5.8 percent. Of the 85 billion euros bailout, some 17.5 billion euros is from existing state borrowing and cash balances and 35 billion euros is earmarked to shore up the banks. Ireland and its creditors are hoping that only 19 billion euros of that 35 billion will have to be channeled into the banks and the IMF has said that whatever is left over could be used by the state if there is a delay in returning to markets. Dublin is currently forecasting a deficit in 2013 of 12 billion euros. Brian Devine, economist with NCB Stockbrokers, said he still believed Ireland would have to tap the ESM, the EU’s permanent rescue fund, in 2013. “I don’t see how things are going to clear sufficiently for it to be otherwise,” he said. “The government will dip their toes first by issuing treasury bills but that will be to provide some short-term liquidity and gradually work our way back into the market.” Tapping the ESM might require some restructuring of privately held sovereign debt. Reflecting that medium-term risk, Ireland’s two-year and five-year paper are yielding around 12 percent, more than its 10-year bonds on the secondary market. Irish officials have insisted that their economy is on a growth trajectory, unlike Greece, but Honohan said there was no guarantee that Ireland would recover this year. “Nobody can be absolutely sure that there will be growth this year — our forecast is that there will be some growth in GDP this year but the margin of error is sufficiently small that nobody can be sure that it will actually be positive,” he told RTE. “It’s only in 2012 that we can forecast the return to what we would like to see as solid growth.” (Additional reporting by Padraic Halpin and Conor Humphries; editing by Patrick Graham) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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The Summer Gas Squeeze

May 28, 2011

NEW YORK — There’s less money this summer for hotel rooms, surfboards and bathing suits. It’s all going into the gas tank. High prices at the pump are putting a squeeze on the family budget as the traditional summer driving season begins. For every $10 the typical household earns before taxes, almost a full dollar now goes toward gas, a 40 percent bigger bite than normal. Households spent an average of $369 on gas last month. In April 2009, they spent just $201. Families now spend more filling up than they spend on cars, clothes or recreation. Last year, they spent less on gasoline than each of those things. Jeffrey Wayman of Cape Charles, Va., spent Friday riding his motorcycle to North Carolina’s Outer Banks, a day trip with his wife. They decided to eat snacks in a gas station parking lot rather than buy lunch because rising fuel prices have eaten so much into their budget over the past year that they can’t ride as frequently as they would like. “We used to do it a lot more, but not as much now,” he said. “You have to cut back when you have a $480 gas bill a month.” Alex Martinez, a senior at Arcadia High School outside Los Angeles, said his family’s trips to San Francisco, which they usually take once or more a year, are on hold. As he stopped at a gas station to put $5 of fuel in his car – not much more than a gallon – he said the high prices are crimping social life for him and his friends. “We’re always worrying, `How are we going to get home. We’ve got less than half a gallon left,’” Martinez said. “We definitely can’t go out as much, and we can’t go as far.” As Memorial Day weekend opens, the nationwide average for a gallon of unleaded is $3.81. Though prices have drifted lower in recent days, analysts expect average price for 2011 to come in higher than the previous record, $3.25 in 2008. A year ago, gas cost $2.76. The squeeze is happening at a time when most people aren’t getting raises, even as the economy recovers. “These increases are not something consumers can shrug off,” says James Hamilton, an economics professor at the University of California, San Diego, who studies gas prices. “It’s a key part of the family budget.” The ramifications are far-reaching for an economy still struggling to gain momentum two years into a recovery. Economists say the gas squeeze makes people feel poorer than they actually are. They’re showing it by limiting spending far beyond the gas station. Wal-Mart recently blamed high gas prices for an eighth straight quarter of lower sales in the U.S. Target said gas prices were hurting sales of clothes. Every 50-cent jump in the cost of gasoline takes $70 billion out of the U.S. economy over the course of a year, Hamilton says. That’s about one half of one percent of gross domestic product. The Commerce Department reported Friday that consumer spending rose just 0.1 percent in April, excluding the extra money spent on more expensive gas and food, while wages stayed flat for the second straight month. Mike Nason, a marketing consultant from Laguna Niguel, Calif., says he’s clipping coupons to save money for gas and cutting back wherever else he can. His daughter Chandler, 17, recently settled for a prom dress that cost $170 instead of asking her parents to spend $400 for another that caught her eye. “In prior years we would have spent more money on the dress, but money has become a big object,” he says. The tourism industry is bracing for an uncertain summer. AAA predicts the typical family will spend $692 on its vacation, down 14 percent from $809 last year. Many of those surveyed said they are planning shorter trips and expect to pinch pennies when they arrive. AAA estimates 34.9 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more from home this weekend, an increase of about 100,000 from last year. But they will have to do more complicated math to make the summer budget work. The median household income in the U.S. before taxes is just below $50,000, or about $4,150 per month. The $369 that families spent last month on gas represented 8.9 percent of monthly household income, according to an analysis by Fred Rozell, retail pricing director at Oil Price Information Service. Since 2000, the average is about 5.7 percent. For the year, the figure is 7.9 percent. Only twice before have Americans spent this much of their income on gas. In 1981, after the last oil crisis, Americans spent 8.8 percent of household income on gas. In July 2008, when oil price spiked, they spent 10.2 percent. Average hourly earnings, meanwhile, have risen just 1.9 percent in the past year. That’s only just enough to keep up with inflation. The good news is that analysts expect gas to fall to $3.50 a gallon in the coming weeks. In order for household gasoline expenses to return to their historical place in the family budget for the year, gas prices would have to fall by about half and stay that way for the rest of the year. Demand for gasoline has fallen for eight straight weeks as drivers try to cut back, but higher prices can’t keep drivers parked for long. Even with high prices this year, the government expects gasoline demand to grow slightly for the year. “Drivers try to do what they can, but they have to go almost all the places they go,” says David Greene, a researcher at the Center of Transportation Analysis at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and manager of the Department of Energy website fueleconomy.gov. “There’s no magic gizmo that will drastically change someone’s gasoline use.” Mike Siroub clutched his heart as he described the experience of filling up lately. He owns a Union Oil gas station in Arcadia, Calif., but one of his cars is also a 1975 Oldsmobile. “Think about it,” he said. “If you’ve got a car with a 30-gallon tank and gas is $4 a gallon and you fill it up, you’re out $120.” He says high gas prices will keep him home this weekend. And he runs a gas station for a living. As he greeted a steady stream of customers at his station, he laughed and said, “I have to pay for gas just like everyone else.” ___ Associated Press writers John Rogers in Los Angeles and Brock Vergakis in Norfolk, Va., contributed to this story. Jonathan Fahey can be reached at . http://www.facebook.com/Fahey.Jonathan

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Global housing markets take a turn for the worse

May 27, 2011

We present the latest Global Property Guide survey of global house prices for the year ending Q1 2011.

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Demand Drops For Durable Goods

May 25, 2011

WASHINGTON — Businesses cut back on their orders for heavy machinery, computers, autos and airplanes in April, reducing demand for long-lasting manufactured goods by the largest amount in six months. Orders for durable goods fell 3.6 percent, and a key category that serves as a proxy for business investment was down 2.8 percent, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. The weakness was widespread across a number of industries as the impact of supply disruptions stemming from the Japanese earthquake in March rippled through U.S. manufacturing. Demand for autos, auto parts, steel, computers and electronic equipment all fell, and those declines were attributed in part to difficulty in getting critical component parts from Japan, where manufacturing has been disrupted by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and nuclear plant disaster. Many analysts viewed the setbacks as temporary, but said they could dampen manufacturing for several months, until U.S. companies find alternative supply sources. “We think the disruptions from Japan will be temporary. Manufacturing will still be a bright spot for the economy this year,” said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor’s in New York. Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said that the April durable goods report was just another sign that “the U.S. economy is encountering its fair share of speed bumps” at the moment. Strong demand domestically and overseas has kept U.S. factories humming, making manufacturing one of the strongest sectors of the economy since the recession ended in June 2009. The overseas demand has been supported by a weaker dollar, which makes U.S. products cheaper in foreign markets. U.S. factories have added 167,000 jobs over the past six months, the best stretch of hiring gains in manufacturing since 1997. The April decline left orders at $189.9 billion, still 22.5 percent below where orders were in December 2007, the month the recession began. However, the April level is 27.7 percent above the recession low hit in April 2009. The big drop last month came following a 4.4 percent increase in March, a gain that was revised up from a previously reported 2.9 percent increase. In addition to the weakness in autos, demand for commercial aircraft fell 30 percent in April. Analysts had expected a big drop in this highly volatile category because new orders at Boeing slowed sharply in April. Orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, a category viewed as a good indication of business investment plans, fell 2.6 percent in April after a big 5.4 percent rise in March. Despite the April drop, economists are forecasting strong gains in business capital spending for the rest of this year as companies boost purchases of equipment to take advantage of a one-year tax break that Congress passed in December. Excluding all transportation categories, orders would have been down 1.5 percent in April after rising 2.5 percent in March. Other industries seeing a drop in demand in April included primary metals such as steel, down 1.5 percent, and computers, down 4.4 percent. Demand for machinery fell 3.4 percent in April.

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Bank Profits Soar And Corporate Bonuses Swell As Broader Economy Stagnates

May 25, 2011

The divide between corporate fortunes and those of ordinary Americans continues to widen, as banks post strong profits and the nation’s largest companies boost executive pay. Banks and corporations are exhibiting a confidence reminiscent of pre-crisis days, even as the broader economy still sputters. Bank profits soared in the first three months of the year, and corporate profits likewise swelled last year. And executives saw ever fatter bonuses. But the amount of cash banks sent out into the economy as loans declined last quarter, and the pace at which companies are hiring new workers remains disappointing with the unemployment rate stuck around 9 percent. For big corporations, the recession’s legacy has all but faded. But for much of the rest of America, finances are still tight. Home values are falling at an accelerating pace, and high energy prices recall the nightmarish summer of 2008. The widening divide in fortunes constitutes a long-term drag on the economy, experts say. “If a very small number of people have everything, everybody else has nothing,” said Mark Blyth, professor of international political economy at Brown University. “If they decide not to spend, or if they decide basically not to invest, then everyone else’s health and well-being depends upon the decisions of a few, whose consumption decisions are utterly different and completely independent of everyone else’s.” Bank revenue fell during the first three months of the year, but profits soared as institutions set aside less money to cover losses, according to new government report. Bank profits rose to reach $29 billion, a 66.5 percent increase from the same period last year and the best quarterly performance since the second quarter of 2007, the report said. Net operating revenue at banks insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was 3.2 percent less than the same period a year ago, marking only the second time on record that the industry has reported a year-over-year quarterly revenue decline, the Tuesday report from the FDIC said. But banks stored away 60 percent less money to cover losses than a year ago, the smallest rainy-day provisions since the third quarter of 2007, according to the report. “The process of repairing bank balance sheets is well along, but is not yet complete,” FDIC chair Sheila Bair said in a Tuesday release, adding that “there is a limit to how far reductions in loan-loss provisions can boost industry earnings.” In corporate America, pay is up. For chief executives at the Standard & Poor’s 500 index companies, compensation grew last year after two years of decline, according to a report from private research firm Equilar. Median total compensation for S&P 500 chief executives swelled by 28.2 percent last year, largely driven by swelled bonuses. The median bonus for S&P 500 chiefs was nearly $2.2 million last year, a 43.3 percent increase from 2009, the report says. A variety of factors gave large companies a boost last year, including the Federal Reserve’s $600 billion asset-purchase program that began in the fall. As the Fed’s purchases of Treasury securities lowered interest rates, investors searching for yield turned toward riskier assets like equities, contributing to a stock market rally in the second half of the year. But in the broader economy, challenges remain. Companies have added hundreds of thousands of jobs so far this year, but the unemployment rate has still been hovering around 9 percent. Oil prices remain at highs reminiscent of 2008, when months of high energy prices helped drag the economy into recession. And home prices continue falling, with economists forecasting the decline to last at least through the rest of the year. Banks decreased their lending last quarter, with many still compensating for the excesses of the years leading up to the financial crisis. And nearly half of the loans to commercial and industrial borrowers — which increased overall — went to foreign borrowers, the FDIC says. Small loans to farms and businesses, a crucial source of jobs, declined by 2.8 percent, according to the FDIC. Economic weakness contributed to the erosion in bank revenue last quarter. Interest-earning assets showed weak growth, so that six of the 10 largest institutions reported year-over-year declines in net operating revenue, according to the FDIC. Banks’ other operations also proved less lucrative. Trading income was down by $1 billion last quarter, and service charges on deposit accounts declined by $1.7 billion, the FDIC says. Losses from bad loans, though, are gradually declining as the volume of delinquent loans goes down. Loans overdue for at least 90 days declined for the fourth quarter in a row to $341.7 billion by the end of March, a 4.7 percent decline from the end of 2010, according to the FDIC. The number of banks at risk of failure increased last quarter, as the FDIC’s “problem list” grew to 888 institutions from 884. That’s almost 12 percent of the banks insured by the FDIC. The pace of banks’ being added to the list, though, is slowing.

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U.S. Should Raise Interest Rates, OECD Says

May 25, 2011

WASHINGTON (By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa) – The Federal Reserve should begin to hike interest rates in coming months, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Wednesday, as it raised its outlook for U.S. economic growth. In its semi-annual forecast, the OECD said it sees U.S. economic growth of 2.6 percent in 2011, up from its forecast last November for growth of just 2.2 percent. The outlook, however, is much lower than the Fed’s own “central tendency” estimates, which as of April 27 pegged growth for this year in the 3.1 percent to 3.3 percent range. Despite what it sees as significant potential downside risks to expansion from higher energy and commodity prices, the OECD recommends the Fed begin slowly withdrawing some of its extraordinary aid to the economy as 2011 progresses. “A modest reduction in monetary stimulus should get under way in the second half of this year,” the OECD said in its report. Alan Detmeister, the OECD Economics Department’s U.S. desk officer, said in a press briefing the Fed should raise its benchmark federal funds rate to 1 percent from the current zero to 0.25 percent range before the end of the year. Continued high levels of unemployment are not enough of a reason to keep rates at rock-bottom lows, the OECD said, since low rates raise the risk of future bubbles or inflationary shocks. The group predicts the U.S. jobless rate, currently at 9 percent, will remain close to 8 percent for much of 2012. “At present there is little sign that continued extraordinarily loose monetary policy settings have increased inflation expectations more than a small amount or are resulting in another asset price bubble,” the OECD added, citing oil and other commodities as a “possible exception.” The OECD expects the trend of subdued inflation to continue for the foreseeable future, predicting U.S. consumer price inflation of 1.9 percent for this year and just 1.3 percent next year — well beneath the Fed’s implicit target of 2 percent or a bit below. The Fed looks set to complete its $600 billion bond-buying program aimed at keeping long-term rates down in June, as scheduled. Its balance sheet now stands at a record $2.74 trillion, but a large amount of bank reserves remain parked at the Fed rather than being lent out to businesses. A LITTLE TOO LOOSE? Still, the OECD’s call for rate hikes, potentially controversial given a still-fragile U.S. recovery, appears to be based on the presumption that rates are so far below their normal levels that the tightening process must begin soon. Detmeister believes a “neutral” U.S. benchmark rate that neither retards or stimulates growth should be around 4.5 percent. “Tightening somewhat now would reduce the need for steeper, and potentially disruptive, increases in interest rates later,” the OECD said. At the same time, the group said long-term unemployment presents a dangerous challenge for the United States, since it risks becoming self-reinforcing and reducing the productivity of the labor force over time. Just under half of the 13.7 million jobless Americans have been out of work for six months or longer, the highest ever. The OECD noted that countries such as Germany and Japan, where firms were either reluctant to lay off workers or were able to reduce their hours through workshare arrangements, fared better than countries without such programs in place. “The ability of these countries to cushion the employment impact of the crisis may offer lessons that could help improve labor market resilience to future shocks,” the report said. (Reporting by Pedro Nicolaci da Costa; Editing by Leslie Adler) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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EU Crisis Could Infect U.S., Fed Official Warns

May 24, 2011

FARMINGTON, Missouri (By Mark Felsenthal) – Turmoil over sovereign debt problems in Europe could weigh on the U.S. economic recovery, St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said on Monday. “I am concerned about the situation in Europe,” Bullard told reporters after a speech. “Prolonged financial market turmoil could be a negative for the U.S.” Financial markets piled pressure on heavily indebted euro zone countries on Monday and global stock markets fell as investors worried about heightened risks in Spain and Greece and ratings agencies stoked new concerns over Italy and Belgium. Italy, which has the euro zone’s biggest debt pile in absolute terms, was hit by credit ratings agency Standard & Poor’s decision on Saturday to cut its outlook to “negative” from “stable”. Uncertainty in Europe is one reason why U.S. longer-term bond yields have dropped, Bullard said, as investors move into less risky assets. Discussing monetary policy, Bullard said not to expect action for a while after the Federal Reserve ends its $600 billion bond buying program in June. “Past behavior of the (Fed) indicates that the committee sometimes puts policy on hold,” he told the Mineral Area College Foundation. “A pause allows more time to assess the strength of the economy.” While waiting to see how the economy evolves, the Fed would hold interest rates near zero, said Bullard, who is not a voter on the central bank’s policy-setting panel this year. Being on hold also signals no change to the Fed’s pledge to keep rates extremely low for an extended period, he said. In addition, it means reinvesting securities to keep the Fed’s much-expanded balance sheet at whatever level it reaches after the bond-buying initiative comes to a close, likely above $2.7 trillion, he added. He said that if the economic recovery gains pace in the second half of the year, it would be reasonable to expect the Fed’s next move would be to tighten financial conditions. However, he said that U.S. growth in the first half of 2011 has been slower than anticipated. U.S. home sales and factory activity data released last week showed the economy was stuck in low gear, although a drop in claims for jobless aid offered hope the labor market’s recovery was on track. Bullard also cautioned that stripping energy and food costs from inflation measurements may understate inflation. Fed officials have argued that despite recent jumps in the prices of commodities and food, inflation is in check because underlying measures have climbed only modestly from historic lows. Commodity prices have logged “dramatic” increases in recent months, he said. “Ignoring energy prices in a price index may systematically understate inflation for many years,” he added. Many Fed officials believe the best way to measure whether their efforts to keep inflation at bay are working is to look at measures of underlying inflation, because that is a better gauge of where inflation is headed. Bullard further renewed his call for the Fed to adopt an explicit numerical inflation target. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled after the Fed’s last meeting at the end of April that the U.S. central bank is in no hurry to reverse its massive support for the modest U.S. economic recovery in which unemployment remains above what Fed officials believe is the norm. That support includes rock-bottom benchmark interest rates and will amount to $2.3 trillion in purchases of longer-term assets when the current program winds up. Many economists and some Fed officials are concerned that inflation risks are rising. Even though oil prices have moderated recently, there is concern that the Fed is ignoring overall inflation because prices for gas and many food items are noticeably higher to many consumers. Fed officials such as Bernanke have argued that higher energy prices reflect increased global demand from emerging markets such as China, India, and Brazil, rather than too-easy monetary policy in the United States. The chairman and others also say that there is no indication consumers or businesses expect inflation in the future. However, Bullard said recent events show so-called core inflation that strips out volatile food and energy prices is no longer an accurate gauge of trends and raises doubts in the public’s mind about the Fed’s effectiveness. Still, Bullard told reporters he believes the Fed would still be in no rush to tighten policy if it focused on overall inflation rather than underlying inflation. The main problem with an emphasis on core inflation is it makes the Fed look out of touch with the prices most consumers are encountering, he said. “This is hurting Fed credibility to be talking about core inflation when everyone sees headline inflation,” Bullard said. (Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Gary Hill & Kim Coghill) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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State, Local Governments Could Face Larger Layoffs Next Year, Report Says

May 23, 2011

NEW YORK (Joan Gralla) – Around 450,000 people who work for U.S. states, counties, cities, towns and villages could get pink slips in fiscal 2012, sharply up from the 300,000 positions shed this year, a report said on Monday. The number of job cuts will rise mainly because the federal stimulus program is ending while the cost of Medicaid is “spiraling,” said the report by UBS Investment Research. States got billions of extra dollars primarily for education and Medicaid from the stimulus plan. Medicaid is the state-federal health plan for the poor and disabled. Maury Harris, a UBS economist, on a conference call said the deficits states and municipalities will have to close will climb to $155 billion in fiscal 2012 from about $108 billion in the current fiscal year. Most states and municipalities begin new fiscal years on July 1. The deep cuts state and local governments will have to make to balance their books in the next fiscal year should clip about one percentage point from the U.S. gross domestic product — about 30 basis points more than in the current fiscal year, the report said. “The public sector is holding back growth but it doesn’t derail it altogether,” Harris said. But the $2.9 trillion municipal bond market — so far at least — has withstood much of the pressure from the recession-weakened finances of states and municipalities. Thomas McLoughlin, UBS head of municipal research, told reporters that at present only about $9 billion of municipal bonds have defaulted, most of which were small, unrated issues that financed risky projects like developments. Spooked by headlines about possible defaults, investors in municipal bond funds have sold shares for the past 27 weeks, according to Lipper data. “I think we are seeing more traditional retail buying in the front end of the curve — even as people investing in mutual funds were selling,” McLoughlin said. Strong demand for individual securities with short maturities is hitting during a period of exceptionally low supplies. Estimates for issuance this year have fallen to a range of $197 billion to $240 billion, McLoughlin said. That works out to about half of last year’s supply of new bonds. Still, McLoughlin’s list of hazards facing the muni market include possible problems states and localities will have finding new letters of credit for variable-rate debt and what he called “rating volatility.” Credit agencies are more likely to downgrade credits they have not analyzed for 18 months, for example, than ones they survey more frequently. Muni prices, which fell last Thursday for the first time since April 12, were unchanged on Monday, leaving yields on top-rated 10-year bonds at 2.64 percent and 30-year yields at 4.31 percent on Municipal Market Data’s benchmark triple-A scale. (Editing by James Dalgleish) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Sony To Post Huge Loss For The Year

May 23, 2011

TOKYO (By Isabel Reynolds) – Sony Corp said it expected to post a $3.2 billion net loss for the year that ended on March 31 due to a write off on tax credits, the latest in a string of grim headlines for the consumer electronics giant. The maker of PlayStation video games, Vaio computers and Bravia TVs has been battling to recover from the devastating Japan earthquake in March, and more recently, a series of computing hacking attacks that affected more than 100 million user accounts. “I have been skeptical about Sony for a long time. Sony has been overtaken by Apple and other companies,” said Yuuki Sakurai, CEO and president of Fukoku Capital Management in Tokyo. “The management is not able to show shareholders the future of the company.” Sony, once a symbol of Japan’s electronic and manufacturing excellence, has found itself outmaneuvered by Apple in portable music and Samsung Electronics in flat-screen TVs and is facing a tough fight in video games with Nintendo and Microsoft. Sony said it now expected a net loss of 260 billion yen ($3.2 billion) versus a previous forecast for a profit of 70 billion yen due to a “non-cash charge” of around 360 billion yen related to Japanese tax credits. It is due to announce its full-year earnings on Thursday. The net loss would be Sony’s biggest since 1995 and its second-largest ever. The company stuck with its earlier forecast, issued before the March 11 earthquake, for an annual operating profit of 200 billion yen, which is broadly in line with consensus forecasts. CLEAN SLATE Sony said it expected sales to rise this year and forecast a net profit. Some investors saw the revisions as a way for Sony to put the slew of bad news behind it and start with something of a clean slate. “Sony sharply revised down its net forecast to a big loss to show that the impact of the earthquake has been largely factored-in during the previous financial year, while the impact would be limited for the current year,” said Mitsushige Akino, chief fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management. “Probably the company is expecting the global economy to recover during the second half of the year. Maybe this perception could be a bit optimistic, but we still have to wait and see.” In its first estimate for the year to March 2012, Sony said its operating profit would also be around 200 billion yen. The devastating earthquake and tsunami in March damaged Sony plants in northeastern Japan, snarled the global supply chain in several industries and triggered a plunge in domestic consumption. Sony estimated the impact of the quake in the current year at 150 billion yen at the operating level. Many rival corporations, including Panasonic Corp, have yet to issue forecasts for the current financial year to March 2012, due to uncertainty following the disaster. Sony last month disclosed that it had been a victim of one of the biggest cyber-attacks in history. It shut down its PlayStation Network across the globe in mid-April and has slowly started to restore access, starting in the United States. The company is still working with Japanese government authorities to restore access in that country. Sony said “known costs” were estimated at 14 billion yen. Sony is targeting the end of May for fully restoring the affected networks. Shares in Sony ended down 0.5 percent in a Tokyo market down 1.5 percent. It shares though have fallen 24 percent so far this year, compared with a 7 percent fall in the Nikkei average. ($1=81.71 yen) (Additional reporting by Tim Kelly and Chikafumi Hodo; Writing by Lincoln Feast; Editing by) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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China’s manufacturing growth retreats during the first months of the year

May 23, 2011

China’s manufacturing growth retreats during the first months of the year

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Cost Of Natural Disasters: ‘Ten Billion Dollars Would Be Conservative’

May 19, 2011

This year’s record-breaking tornadoes, floods, droughts and wildfires will cost the country tens of billions of dollars in economic losses — and these estimates are expected to climb as the Mississippi flooding and severe drought in Texas continue into the summer. Economists disagree about the precise figures — with the estimates varying by billions — but most agree that $10-15 billion in losses are conservative calculations. Severe weather in April alone — the month when record-breaking tornadoes tore through much of the Southeast and killed more than 300 people — cost the country $12 billion in economic losses, according to Steven Bowen, a meteorologist with the Impact Forecasting team of Aon Benfield, one of the world’s largest insurance brokers. The cost estimates for the flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi range from $3-9 billion, and the ongoing Texas drought, which began in November and has caused more than 10,000 wildfires across the state, has so far cost between $1.5 billion and $3 billion in crop and cattle losses. As the flooding and drought continue, government agencies say that it’s impossible to predict the long-term economic impact of the losses, which include thousands of homes and buildings destroyed by the tornadoes, casinos and ports along the Mississippi temporarily closed, millions of acres of grazing land scorched by the fires and 1 percent of the country’s cropland currently submerged in water. “It’s too early to say what effect this [the flooding] would have on the national economy,” the Department of Agriculture stated in a report on May 11. “Regardless, it probably will not be extensive given the estimated percentage of land affected.” But even as the long-term effect remains unknown, the short-term impact is clear: Individuals and small businesses are absorbing the bulk of these losses, as states, government agencies and insurance companies help foot nature’s bill. April’s tornadoes are expected to wipe thousands of mom-and-pop shops off the map. This region already had a high rate of small business failure, and before April’s disasters between 6,000 and 8,000 small businesses in Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi and Georgia were expected to go under within the year, according to a report by Dun & Bradstreet, a research company that tracks small businesses. After the tornadoes, the number jumped to at least 10,000 shops. “Small businesses are definitely going to bear the brunt of this,” Byron Vielehr, President of Global Risk and Analytics division at Dun & Bradstreet told HuffPost in a telephone interview. The businesses won’t fail immediately, said Vielehr, but when they do it could produce a spike in unemployment and a loss of about a billion dollars in sales, just from these tornado-stricken small businesses alone. The situation of small farmers and ranchers in Texas is similar. After enduring the driest seven months on record, farmers and ranchers are being forced to abandon a cycle of wheat crop and sell off herds. Texas produces 20 percent of the country’s beef, and cattle ranchers are being slammed by the combination of scorched land unable to support grazing, and high feed and hay prices, both of which were driven up by the drought and the fires. “For a rancher, at this point he’s going to be losing about 30 percent of the income he would have averaged in the past,” said Bill Hymen, executive director of the Independent Cattlemen’s Association, the second-largest coalition of ranchers in the state. “And that’s not just this year but going forward because of dwindling seed stock,” he added, referring to the process of fewer cows leading to the birth of fewer calves in the future. As is the case in all industries, when a rancher has less pocket money, that creates a ripple effect in the local economy — with Hymen noting that ranchers, who know it’s likely that the drought will continue through the summer, are buying less and will ultimately pay less in taxes next year. Along the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers, a portion of small businesses and farms will likely follow the same course as the businesses that fell in the tornadoes path. Closed ports and casinos, too, are losing millions of dollars each day in lost river traffic, trade and gambling. Closing the Mississippi river itself causes even more economic damage. On Tuesday, the Coast Guard closed a 15-mile stretch of the Mississippi upriver of New Orleans by Natchez Port, a decision which could lead to losses of hundreds of millions of dollars each day, said Eric M. Holthaus, researcher at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society. The Coast Guard said that this closure is expected to last only a few days, but Holthaus also imagines a nightmare scenario in which the Port of New Orleans — the seat of our country’s agricultural exports and a handful of oil refineries — has to be closed. “I would be talking about trillions of dollars at that point,” he said. As long as the Port of New Orleans stays open, which it likely will, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, commonly known as FEMA, said that right now there is plenty of money in the $2 billion emergency fund to aid the states hit hardest by the natural disasters. FEMA has already approved about $38 million in future storm and tornado rebuilding assistance, including $9.4 million to Mississippi, $80 million to Alabama, $6.6 million to Georgia, $5.9 million for Tennessee and $16 million for Arkansas. For the flooding, FEMA has so far approved more than $11 million, including $1.4 million for Tennessee, $9 million for Missouri and $785,000 for Mississippi. As the flooding continues, the FEMA contribution is expected to rise, and these figures don’t include other public assistance that the regions will receive, either from the federal or state level. Insurance companies, too, are paying out, and April alone produced hundreds of thousands of insurance claims. Still, insurance companies and federal agencies aren’t feeling the hit of $10-15 billion in losses as acutely as individuals, towns and small businesses. “If you’re a small town in western Texas that’s lost anything, that town is going to suffer regardless of how much insurance money they get in the end. Less money in the community will mean that all unrelated jobs will take a hit,” said Holthaus, who said that the same holds true for communities affected by the tornadoes or the floods. “During a recession is a bad time for a disaster to hit,” he said.

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Home Sales Drop In April, Foreclosures Declined

May 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — Fewer people purchased previously occupied homes in April. Activity among first-time homebuyers increased and foreclosure sales declined, but those factors weren’t enough to signal a recovery in the weak housing market. Sales of previously occupied homes fell 0.8 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million units, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday. That’s far below the 6 million homes a year that economists say represents a healthy market. Purchases made by first-time homebuyers increased to make up 36 percent of sales. That’s still below the 40 percent that the trade group says is consistent with better markets. Sales to investors dropped slightly to account for about 20 percent of the market. Since the housing boom went bust, sales have fallen in four of the past five years and hit a 13-year low last year. Sharp price declines and low mortgage rates haven’t been enough to boost home sales this year. Some people who want to buy can’t, mostly because banks have tightened lending requirements and are insisting on larger down payments. Many buyers who are able to qualify for loans are holding off, worried that home prices won’t hit bottom for some time. Economists say it could be years before the housing market fully recovers. And more homes under contract for sale are being delayed, re-negotiated or canceled, mostly because of the tighter lending requirements. A separate survey from the trade group found 11 percent of Realtors said a contract was canceled because an appraisal came in below the negotiated price. And 14 percent said a contract was renegotiated to a lower price because of a low appraisal. The median sales price in April rose 2.4 percent from March, to $163,700. It’s still down 5 percent from the same month one year ago. The median price of a new home is now nearly 31 percent higher than the median price for a previously occupied home. That’s twice the normal markup. The gap is largely because of the flood of foreclosures or short sales – when the lender accepts less than what is owed on the mortgage – which are forcing down prices. Sales of homes at risk of foreclosure fell in April and made up 37 percent of all purchases. Foreclosure sales declined only because a large number of those homes are backlogged in the courts. They have been held up by a state and federal probe into troubled foreclosure practices by lenders. A record 1 million homes were lost to foreclosures last year and foreclosure tracker RealtyTrac Inc. expects 1.2 million more will be lost this year. There’s a glut of unsold homes on the market but few buyers are biting. In April, the supply of homes rose to nearly 3.9 million. At last month’s sales pace, it would take more than 9 months to clear those homes. Analysts say a healthy supply can be cleared in six months. The increase in unsold inventory “should continue to weigh on prices,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. The situation is much worse when taking into account the “shadow inventory” of homes, economists say. These are homes that are in the early stages of the foreclosure process but, because of backlogged courts or the government probes, have not hit the market for re-sale. The Mortgage Bankers Association said Monday that about 8.3 percent of homeowners missed at least one mortgage payment in the January-March quarter when adjusted for seasonal factors. That’s up 0.7 percent from the previous quarter. Sales fell across most regions of the country. In April, sales declined 7.5 percent in the Northeast, 1.6 percent in the West and 1 percent in the South. But they rose 5.7 percent in the Midwest.

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Company Issa Founded Under Scrutiny

May 19, 2011

The Vista car-alarm company once owned by Congressman Darrell Issa was paying about half the required tariffs on certain parts it imported from China for years and paid an estimated $2.5 million in back duties earlier this year to rectify the situation.

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CBO: Boehner’s Math Is Wrong, Budget Deal Will Cut Less Than Half Of What Was Promised

May 17, 2011

WASHINGTON — The big spending bill passed into law with much fanfare last month will cut the deficit by $122 billion over the next decade – less than half of what top lawmakers promised at the time – the government reported Monday. Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, had touted the legislation as reducing the deficit by more than $300 billion over a ten-year span. His prediction was based on an analysis by a Senate aide that the $38 billion in cuts this year would translate into $315 billion over a decade. But the Congressional Budget Office, the closest thing to an official referee, said Monday the cuts add up to much less. Released the same day the Treasury Department announced that the government has reached the $14.3 trillion legal limit on its ability to borrow money, the CBO study illustrates the difficulty in cutting the deficit, especially for the immediate future. Treasury has the ability to juggle the books to avoid a default for now, but legislation to lift the so-called debt limit is going to have to include significantly greater cuts than the spending bill last month. The budget office also said the compromise negotiated between Boehner and President Barack Obama actually increases the deficit this year by $3.2 billion, because of military spending. At issue is a $1.2 trillion spending measure enacted after weeks of difficult talks. Republicans had initially rammed through the House a tougher version that cut more than $60 billion this year, when compared to 2010 spending levels. But the immediate budget-cutting punch turns out to be far less, partly because the government’s fiscal year is more than half over. The final version included $25 billion in cuts to domestic agency budgets. It also contained a host of curbs to programs like federal highway funding and health care for children of lower-income families that will hardly generate any deficit savings, CBO said. A previous CBO study had predicted that the $38 billion in cuts to non-war accounts would generate just $352 million in savings through the Sept. 30 end of the 2011 budget year. That caused consternation in GOP ranks. At one point passage of the measure appeared imperiled because of disillusionment among tea party-backed lawmakers, already disappointed the cuts weren’t bigger. That prompted Boehner to highlight a study by a Senate Budget Committee GOP staff aide, which used earlier CBO data to predict the spending bill would cut outlays by $252 billion over the decade and that the actual deficit savings would grow to $315 billion once reduced interest costs were added on. The budget office doesn’t say how much the measure would reduce interest costs.

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Lowe’s Profit Falls On Cold Rain, Chilly Weather

May 16, 2011

NEW YORK — Lowe’s Cos. profit fell 6 percent in the first quarter, as the bad weather that plagued much of the country kept customers away from their gardens and other outdoor projects. The Mooresville, N.C., chain’s quarterly performance missed Wall Street expectations and the nation’s No. 2 home improvement retailer lowered its full-year outlook. Lowe’s results come a day before the country’s biggest home improvement retailer, Home Depot Inc., reports its quarterly figures. Both companies depend on the spring selling season to give them a boost, as shoppers typically head out in droves to buy seasonal items such as flowers, patio furniture and barbecue grills. But cold and rainy weather across the northern half of the country and tornadoes in the Southeast have been a drag on the season so far, Lowe’s said Monday. “It’s difficult to overcome Mother Nature when it comes to weather-related conditions,” Chairman and CEO Robert Niblock said during an interview with the Associated Press. While home owners dealing with flooding and tornado damage will be looking to make repairs, Niblock said any business related to that will be spread out over the long term. Weather is not the only concern. Lowe’s said customers remain wary about spending due to ongoing worries about the housing market and rising gas prices. On Monday, the National Association of Home Builders reported that U.S. homebuilders are concerned the housing market won’t recover this year, with some feeling it may be getting worse. Economists expect home prices will continue to struggle this year before a modest recovery begins. Lowe’s reported a 3.4 percent decline in traffic during the quarter, with average receipt nearly flat. For the three months ended April 29, Lowe’s net income dropped to $461 million, or 34 cents per share. A year earlier it earned $489 million, or 34 cents per share, a year earlier. Revenue dipped 2 percent to $12.19 billion, as sales of outdoor items fell. Revenue at stores open at least a year slipped 3.3 percent. The latter metric is a key indicator of a retailer’s health because it excludes results from stores opened or closed during the year. Analysts polled by FactSet expected higher earnings of 36 cents per share on revenue of $12.54 billion. Lowe’s first-quarter earnings came in at the low end of its projected guidance of 34 cents to 38 cents per share. Its stock declined 92 cents, or 3.6 percent, to $24.84. Lowe’s cautioned in February that consumers were still holding back on big projects. The chain was also up against a difficult comparison with last year, when shoppers took advantage of federal cash-for-appliances rebates, Niblock said. For the full year, Lowe’s now expects earnings of $1.56 to $1.64 per share and a revenue increase of about 4 percent, implying revenue of about $50.79 billion. The retailer previously forecast earnings of $1.60 to $1.72 per share on a 5 percent revenue increase. Analysts predict full-year earnings of $1.70 per share on revenue of $50.9 billion. Lowe’s anticipates second-quarter earnings of 65 cents to 69 cents per share, with revenue up about 4 percent, implying revenue of about $14.93 billion. Wall Street expects earnings of 68 cents per share on revenue of $14.82 billion. The retailer anticipates the second half of the year being stronger than the first, as it will no longer face comparisons that include government stimulus programs. Lowe’s ran 1,751 stores in the U.S., Canada and Mexico as of April 29.

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The Worst Of Consumer Inflation May Be Over

May 14, 2011

WASHINGTON — After weeks of pain at the gas pump and the grocery store, the worst appears to be over. Oil prices have fallen, with gas soon to follow. Demand for farm commodities, like the corn used in everything from cereal to soda, has dropped. And businesses remain slow to pass along higher costs because customers aren’t getting raises and might walk away. Inflation may be approaching its peak. “I think the bulk of the big price increases are over,” said Gus Faucher, an economist at Moody’s Analytics. Lower prices – or at least a break in their steady rise – will come as a big relief. Consumer prices rose 3.2 percent for the year ending in April, the most since October 2008. Higher food and gas prices drove the gains. Excluding those two categories, prices rose 0.2 percent in April. They rose 1.3 percent over the past year, below what the Federal Reserve considers healthy. Economists study this figure, known as core inflation, because food and energy prices are volatile. Some inflation can be healthy for the economy because it encourages people to spend and invest rather than sitting on their cash. More spending drives corporate growth, which makes businesses more likely to hire people. Inflation was a much bigger concern in March. Oil prices were rising steadily because of the unrest in the Middle East. Some feared gas could reach $5 a gallon, leaving Americans much less money to spend on cars, appliances and vacations. That kind of drop in spending would squeeze corporate profits, delay hiring – maybe even tip the economy back into recession. But last week, oil prices sank by the most in two and half years. Americans drive less when gas prices get high enough, and concerns about slowing energy demand sent oil prices tumbling – from $114 at the start of May to about $97 on Friday. Now the nationwide average for gas has leveled off. On Friday it was just under $4 a gallon, where it’s been for the past week. Many analysts say it could drop to $3.50 as soon as next month. The prices of milk, bread and chicken won’t fall as fast – it could take six months or longer, analysts say – but they could decline by the end of the year. That’s because the price of corn and other grains have fallen. Overseas ranchers are using less corn for feed, and U.S. farmers have planted more. Food prices had risen in March at the fastest rate in three years. Changes in grain and corn prices take longer to filter down to grocery stores than changes in oil prices do to the gas pump. That’s because grains and other commodities represent a smaller fraction of food costs in the U.S than in other countries. By contrast, oil prices are the biggest factor in the cost of gas. There was evidence in Friday’s government report on consumer prices that food inflation will slow by year’s end. Gas prices rose 3.3 percent in April, a steep rise but the smallest since November. Food costs rose 0.4 percent, half as fast as in March. Gas accounted for about half of overall inflation in April. So a decline in the price of oil should hold down the increase in consumer prices for May. Slower inflation would leave Americans with more money to spend to stimulate the economy, including keeping more of a cut in Social Security taxes that took effect in January. Economists expect the increased spending to raise overall economic growth to an annual rate of 3 percent in the second half of this year. In the first three months of this year, it was 1.8 percent. The oil price drop should bring prices down for a range of products, including chemicals, plastics, even roofing materials. Higher diesel fuels had contributed, for example, to a sharp increase in commodity costs for Procter & Gamble. In response, the company raised prices for Gillette razors, Duracell batteries and Bounty paper towels. Falling corn prices should also help. Corn is widely used as an animal feed, so when it became more expensive, meat and dairy prices went up, too. Corn is also used in sweeteners for soft drinks and snacks, so those could become less expensive. Prices of corn, wheat and other grains jumped last summer after bad weather damaged harvests in countries from Russia to Australia to Brazil. Demand for corn from producers of ethanol, a corn-based fuel, also rose. The price of a bushel of corn reached a record high of $7.76 on April 11. But supply worries have since eased. An Agriculture Department report this week predicted that U.S. corn supplies will rise later this year, based on the drop in demand overseas and the larger crop expected next year. They had earlier been forecast to fall. Demand from fast-growing developing countries such as China and India may also slow as their central banks raise interest rates to try to slow inflation. That should also slow their growth and, in turn, may cool their demand for commodities. It takes about six months for changes in commodity prices to affect consumers. Consumer food prices didn’t start to increase until January, well after commodity costs began rising last summer. Analysts also say many companies were slow to pass along those increases for fear of spooking price-sensitive shoppers. Wage growth has been weak. Average hourly pay rose an anemic 1.9 percent in the last 12 months, less than the rate of inflation. Some companies probably won’t lower prices much, if at all. Airlines, for example, lost money because of the steady rise in the price of oil. If you bought a plane ticket three months ahead of time, your flight was much more expensive for the airline when you flew than when you bought. “They will resist any pressures to reduce fares or fuel surcharges,” says independent airline analyst Robert Mann. The average price of a round-trip ticket during the first three months of this year was $341 before taxes. That was up 10 percent from the same period last year. Airlines paid 27 percent more for fuel from January through March than they did a year earlier. But there will be relief in the prices of other things. The cost of new and used cars rose in April, but some of those increases were related to temporary parts shortages caused by the earthquake and nuclear disaster in Japan. Inflation will remain a risk. Commodity prices are volatile and subject to global turmoil. As recently as last winter, economists were worried that inflation was too low. In October, the core price index had risen only 0.6 percent in a year, and the Fed expressed concern about the risk of falling prices. ___ AP Business Writers Sarah Skidmore in Portland, Ore., and Scott Mayerowitz in New York contributed to this report.

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In Mississippi Delta, Dreams Of Bountiful Harvest Wash Away With Flood

May 13, 2011

CARTER, MISS. — Where the rolling green hills of Mississippi give way to the fertile flatlands of the Delta, Bernie Jordan bounced down a dirt road in his white pickup truck, surveying thousands of acres of farmland that, until recently, looked to be a bumper crop. But thoughts of a bountiful September harvest are all but erased from his mind. Now he focuses on saving anything he can, as a historic plume of Mississippi River water courses through some of the America’s most productive natural farmland. In just the past day, Jordan’s soybean fields have transformed into lakes; his cornfields have been swallowed by nearby streams; weeds begin to choke his cotton fields, but he sees no reason to spend money to kill them. “I haven’t hardly gotten any sleep in the past week,” said Jordan, 53, a fourth-generation Delta farmer. “And when I do, I wake up and say, ‘Is this bad dream over?’” Ironically, many of the Delta farmers most at risk are like Jordan, with land at least 30 miles from the Mississippi River. The backwater streams and tributaries are causing the biggest problems so far, particularly the Yazoo River, which snakes through many of the farmlands in the area. As the crest of the river makes its way farther south, its sheer force puts pressure on major tributaries, causing those rivers and streams to back up and overflow where no levees exist to hem in the waters. Jordan, like many in the flat lowland plains along the river, is fighting a battle on two fronts: work and home. He oversees a tractor planting cotton on the highest ground he has, a last-ditch effort to salvage a portion of this season’s crop. At the same time, he and his neighbors are building massive, makeshift dirt levees around their homes. “Once this is over and the water is gone, I hope I get to take a bulldozer and push ‘em down, and they don’t get a drop of water,” Jordan reflected. “I don’t want to be the fourth generation, only to lose it to something I can’t control.” Like many who have lived in the historic floodplain of the Mississippi River, Jordan knows well the complicated relationship between man and nature. The river is the lifeblood of the region, depositing rich soils over the plains for thousands of years. But over time, settlers and eventually the federal government constructed more and more sophisticated levees to allow settlement and modern-day agriculture in the region. The 1927 flood devastated the Mississippi Delta and led to a major overhaul of the federal flood control system along the river. Yet this year’s flooding threatens to be worse. In Vicksburg, Miss., one of the closest river towns to Jordan’s farm, the historic height was 56.2 feet, in 1927. He remembers the 1973 flood from when he was in high school, when his father lost nearly half his annual yield. The height then was 51.6 feet. The river at Vicksburg on Thursday already reached higher than that, at 54.8 feet, and next week’s crest is estimated to be 57.5 feet, an all-time recorded high. “I’ve been working 32 years trying to acquire things and accumulate something, and now it’s all in jeopardy,” Jordan said. In a cruel twist of fate, Jordan decided not to take out much in crop insurance this year for his cotton, because in previous years, after droughts he hadn’t been deemed worthy of getting a claim. He hopes there may be some kind of amnesty. Just down the road from Jordan, third-generation farmer Rob Coker, 48, busily harvested winter wheat a full two weeks ahead of time. He wasn’t actually sure if anyone would buy it. Typically, wheat needs to grow tall enough to dry out in the open air and winds. If it’s sold too young or too wet, it can easily rot and ruin. This season, Coker said he had no choice but to harvest what he could, when he could. “This will all be under water next week,” Coker said over the rumble of his John Deere combine, a massive mower that separates the grain from the chaff. “It’s either that, or give up.”

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Foreclosures Fall To 40 Month Low — Due To Paperwork Delays, Not Recovery

May 12, 2011

Foreclosure activity has fallen to a 40-month low, but not because of any recovery in the housing market, a new report finds. Rather, the slowdown comes from massive delays in processing foreclosure paperwork. In April, overall foreclosure filings — including default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — declined for the seventh month straight to 219,258, a 9 percent decrease from March and a 34 percent decrease from April last year. Banks seized 69,532 homes last month, a 5 percent drop from March, according to data provider RealtyTrac. “This slowdown continues to be largely the result of massive delays in processing foreclosures rather than the result of a housing recovery that is lifting people out of foreclosure,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac, in a press release. Nationwide, foreclosures completed in the first quarter of the year took an average of 400 days from initial default notice to conclusion, up from the 340 days the process took last year and more than twice the average time — 151 days — it took to complete a foreclosure in the first quarter of 2007. In some states, that number soared higher. In New Jersey and New York, the average timeframe in the first quarter of this year was 900 days. In Florida, it was 619. With home prices still falling, a slowdown in foreclosures driven by paperwork delays is bad news for the overall housing market recovery. Home prices hit their lowest point in two years in April, falling 0.7 percent below March 2009 levels, according to a recent report by Clear Capital. Housing experts say the data from RealtyTrac’s report does not indicate a reversal of this trend will be quickly forthcoming. “As the servicers sort out their processing issues and staff up a little that means these homes will end up on the market as a distress sale and that will cause home prices to fall further,” said Celia Chen, a housing market analyst for Moody’s Analytics. “It delays the problem. It extends the recovery in the housing market,” Last fall, many of the nation’s largest lenders voluntarily halted home repossessions when flawed foreclosure practices came to light. On Wednesday, the Huffington Post reported that HSBC North America Holdings, the 12th-largest mortgage servicer in the U.S., will continue its moratorium on home seizures in some jurisdictions. According to the bank’s filings, the bank will not fully resume foreclosing on defaulted borrowers for a number of months. The Obama administration is now pushing for the creation of a federal account to help distressed borrowers and settle ongoing probes into faulty mortgage practices, the Huffington Post reported on Wednesday. There is still a large stock of homes in distress — at least 3.7 million homes are in a late stage of the foreclosure process, according to the report — and housing experts stress that processing these properties as quickly as possible is critical to the recovery of the housing market. “This is what frees up the economy to make forward progress and allows home prices to rise,” said Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics. “It will probably take about another year to work our way through the foreclosure mess.”

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Joint Ventures in Commercial Real Estate Developments for the Year …

May 10, 2011

Let’s be realistic: project funding since the collapse of Lehman Brother’s (28 months ago) has been nearly impossible to attain. Developers have come to the.

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State Lawmakers Revisit Expired Unemployment Benefits

May 9, 2011

State lawmakers in Tennessee and North Carolina want a legislative do-over after their states became ineligible for 20 weeks of federally-funded unemployment insurance last month. Democrats in the Tennessee, where the unemployment rate is 9.5 percent, are trying to revive the Extended Benefits program. They didn’t learn of the program’s untimely death until constituents reported that their checks had stopped after April 16. The U.S. Congress had previously reauthorized the EB program through the end of the year for states with persistent high unemployment. “We were pretty surprised to learn it had happened and there weren’t other efforts to get it remedied,” said Sen. Lowe Finney (D), who introduced legislation last Thursday to restore the federal EB program. “I’ve been hearing from constituents for a few weeks.” Rep. Craig Fitzhugh (D), who introduced the same bill in the state House of Representatives, also said constituents brought the lapsed benefits to his attention. “It’s certainly something, in my opinion, we should move forward on,” Fitzhugh said. In North Carolina, Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue vetoed a bill saving the benefits because Republican lawmakers attached big budget cuts to the legislation. But now Democrats and Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly have said they want to cut a new deal to reinstate the benefits, according to the Charlotte Observer . The federal Extended Benefits program provides the final 20 weeks of checks for the long-term jobless who have exhausted up to 73 weeks of state and federal benefits without finding work. (That full complement of 99 weeks of benefits is available in only 25 states .) States are eligible for the EB program if they’ve got unemployment above 8 percent and if the rate is 110 percent of what it was two years ago. Since unemployment rates have been flat since then, Congress told states in December that they could amend their EB laws to look back three years instead of two. But several states haven’t bothered , and others have done so only after coupling the benefits with cuts . Some 28,000 Tennesseans missed out on checks last month as EB expired with little or no public debate , even though the federal government put states on notice about how the program might lapse and what lawmakers could do about it. Sen. Finney said that the bill, if passed, would pay benefits retroactively for anyone who has missed checks since April. Republican leaders in the Tennessee General Assembly did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A potential obstacle to the bill’s passage is its cost: While the federal government would pay $57.7 million, the state would be on the hook for $396,000, according to the legislature’s fiscal review committee. That’s because states cover the cost of layoff claims from state, local and tribal governments, which the National Employment Law Project estimates amount to 2 percent of all claims. Finney said he didn’t know if the legislation will be taken up by the assembly before it adjourns for the year this month. “When we’re this late in the legislative session it’s difficult to get bills heard, and some committees have already shut down for the year,” Finney said.

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No Income Qualifier Apartment Loans to 3MIL

May 5, 2011

Reduced Doc Multi-Family Loans 65% to 3mil AVAILABLE PRGRAMS: · 6 Month Treasury ARM, 3/1 ARM, 5/1 ARM, or 15 YEAR Fixed · 30 Year Amortization · 30 Year Term (except the 15 yr Fixed Program) PROPERTY TYPE: · Over 5 …

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GM Posts Best Earnings Quarter in More Than A Decade

May 5, 2011

General Motors reported first quarter earnings of $3.2 billion, its fifth consecutive profitable quarter and its best quarter in more than a decade. The performance, combined with the impact of the earthquake in Japan last March on Toyota’s operation, should drive the company to regain the global lead in auto sales this year.

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GM’s Profit More Than Triples On Strong Asia Sales

May 5, 2011

DETROIT: General Motors Co’s quarterly profit more than tripled, beating expectations, driven by a recovery in the U.S. market and strong sales in Asia. The U.S. automaker also said on Thursday it expects its full-year adjusted earnings before interest and taxes to show “solid improvement” from 2010 helped by better pricing and lower fixed costs in North America. Net income in the first quarter rose to $3.2 billion, or $1.77 a share, compared with $900 million, or 55 cents a share, in the year earlier quarter. Excluding such one-time items as its sales of stakes in parts maker Delphi and Ally Financial, it earned 95 cents a share. That was 4 cents better than what analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S had expected. Revenue rose to $36.2 billion from $31.5 billion last year. Analysts had expected $35.59 billion. GM Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann said GM is set up well to profit from higher gasoline prices with a much more diversified portfolio than three years ago when gas prices last topped $4 per gallon. “We had a very high, robust April, 19.8 percent market share in April with the lowest incentives we’ve had as the new company,” he told reporters. Ammann said GM’s incentives are currently running slightly below the industry average and that they will be at or slightly below the industry for the rest of the year. GM was heavily criticized by Wall Street analysts for its lofty incentives in January and February that cut into profit per vehicle. GM cut back incentives in March and April, but still offers more incentives per vehicle sold than its cross-town rival Ford Motor Co, analysts said. GM’s North American operations posted adjusted earnings in the quarter before interest and taxes of $1.3 billion, up $100 million from last year. It expects those results to improve on average for the rest of the year as better pricing and lower fixed costs more than offset higher commodity costs and more sales of less-profitable vehicles. GM’s European unit broke even on an adjusted earnings before interest and taxes basis and is targeting break-even before restructuring charges for the entire year. GM’s liquidity at the end of the quarter rose to $36.5 billion after the sales of the Delphi and Ally stakes. Cash and marketing securities grew to $30.6 billion from $27.6 billion at the end of the fourth quarter. (Reporting by Ben Klayman and Bernie Woodall in Detroit; Editing by Derek Caney) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: Vaidya Says Toyota in Danger of Slipping Behind GM, VW

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Vivek Vaidya, automotive and transportation director at research company Frost & Sullivan, talks about the global auto industry. General Motors Co., less than two years after declaring bankruptcy, is poised to reclaim the global auto sales lead this year from Toyota Motor Corp., Japan’s automaker rattled by natural disasters and reports of slipping quality. Vaidya speaks from Singapore with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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The Worst Corporate Reputations In America

May 3, 2011

A company’s reputation is formed not only by the products it sells, but by the decisions it makes in times of crises. For some, that’s a good thing. For others, some present on this list, not so much. Using survey results, market research firm Harris Interactive has compiled a list of the U.S. companies with the best and worst reputations. For the 12th Annual Harris Interactive U.S. Reputation Quotient Survey roughly 30,000 Americans were asked to rate the 60 most visible companies in the United States based on six factors: financial performance, products and services, workplace environment, vision and leadership, social responsibility, and emotional appeal. Combining these factors, Harris tallied a total RQ Score. Scoring above 80, for reference, indicates a company’s reputation is “excellent.” Overall, companies in this year’s survey ranked higher than the previous year, with 16 companies rated as “excellent” compared to only six last year. Tech companies, in general, seem to have the best reputations, while financial and oil companies have the worst. Notorious scandals like the BP Gulf Oil Spill and Goldman Sachs’s role in the subprime crisis seem to have lingered in American minds, and companies with the worst reputations scored especially poorly when rated on whether they have “high ethical standards” and could be “trusted to do the right thing.” Car companies largely fell somewhere in the middle, but that could change in the coming years. General Motors and Chrysler, while stuck in the bottom 11 this year, did make the third and fourth highest gains on the list, respectively, of any company. Below are the 11 companies with the worst corporate reputations:

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First Profit Since Bankrupcty

May 2, 2011

DETROIT — Chrysler has turned its first profit since leaving bankruptcy two years ago. The company reported first-quarter net income of $116 million and revenues of $13.1 billion on Monday. The profit is a milestone in Chrysler’s long road back to health after its 2009 bankruptcy. It last reported a profit in 2007. Several trends put Chrysler Group LLC back in the black. Its sales rose 18 percent worldwide in the first three months of the year as the economy improved and buyers responded to a fresh lineup of new cars and trucks. “Chrysler Group’s improved sales and financial performance in the first quarter show that our rejuvenated product lineup is gaining momentum in the marketplace and resonating with customers,” Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said in a statement. Momentum is crucial. Chrysler wants to hold an initial public offering later this year or early next, but investors must first see a string of profitable quarters. Chrysler’s new vehicles caught buyers’ eyes in the latest quarter. U.S. sales of the revamped Jeep Grand Cherokee SUV jumped 64 percent, while sales of the Chrysler 200 sedan more than quadrupled over those of its predecessor, the Sebring. Chrysler said buyers were willing to pay more for its cars and trucks. Edmunds.com estimates the company lowered incentive spending by nearly $1,000 per vehicle in the quarter. Revenues rose 35 percent. Chrysler last reported a profitable quarter in 2007, just after it became a private company when it was sold by Daimler AG to private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management. But Cerberus didn’t invest the cash needed to weather the worst auto sales decline in more than 25 years, and as a result, Chrysler came close to running out of money at the end of 2008. The U.S. government stepped in, authorizing $10 billion in aid and appointing Marchionne to run the company after it emerged from bankruptcy protection in June 2009. The U.S. government remains a part owner of Chrysler, holding an 8.6-percent stake. But Chrysler is trying to sever those ties. Last week, the company said it will soon repay $7.5 billion of the bailout from the U.S. and Canadian governments using money from new bank loans and a bond sale. The move will save Chrysler millions in interest payments. Its government loans carry an average interest rate of 12 percent and cost the company $1.2 billion in interest last year. The U.S. government is also expected to recoup some of the bailout money when it sells its stock in the public offering. Chrysler isn’t out of the woods. The company still depends on sales of trucks and SUVs, and rising gas prices will likely hurt sales. The company doesn’t currently have a hybrid or a small car that gets 40 miles per gallon, as competitors Hyundai, Ford, General Motors and Toyota do. But that’s not keeping some from feeling bullish about its future. Last month, Fiat SpA, which is also run by Marchionne, gave Chrysler a vote of confidence when it said it will spend $1.3 billion to raise its stake in the American company. That will increase Fiat’s holdings from 30 percent to 46 percent.

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Starbucks To Help Pinkberry Achieve Global Frozen Yogurt Domination

May 1, 2011

If you have plans to vacation in Britain, Turkey, Morocco, and the Philippines this year, you might just find a tart, cold reminder of home. By the end of 2011, Pinkberry is planning to to be in 17 different international markets, according to Nation’s Restaurant News.

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Obama Weekly Address: End Tax Breaks For Oil And Gas Industry

April 30, 2011

JIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama says oil companies are profiting from rising pump prices and he wants Congress to end $4 billion in annual tax breaks for the oil and gas industry. “These tax giveaways aren’t right,” Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address Saturday. “They aren’t smart. And we need to end them.” Drivers in 22 states are paying more than the national average of $3.91 per gallon. In Alaska, California and Connecticut, it’s $4.20 or more. The price jump has slowed economic growth and hurt Obama’s public approval ratings. Exxon Mobil Corp. this week reported nearly $11 billion in profits for the first quarter of this year. Competitors also had huge gains. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., says he plans to consider Obama’s proposal as early as this coming week. The president said money recouped from ending the oil and gas tax subsidies should go to new energy resources and research. He said he refuses to cut spending on clean energy initiatives. “An investment in clean energy today is an investment in a better tomorrow,” he said. “And I think that’s an investment worth making.” Obama’s critics say ending the subsidies would mean tax increases that would end up costing jobs. “The president may think he’s punishing CEOs of big companies, but his plan will hurt the everyday consumer of energy and imperil the jobs of millions of hardworking people in American-based companies,” Rep. James Lankford, a first-term congressman from Oklahoma, said in the Republicans’ weekly address. In his address, Obama said the economy was growing again and took note of nearly 2 million new private sector jobs in the last 13 months. But the president did not mention that the pace of the recovery slowed significantly in the first three months of this year. The nation’s economy grew at a 1.8 percent annual rate during that quarter, compared with 3.1 percent in the previous three months. High gasoline prices, bad winter weather and steep government spending cuts were responsible for the slowdown. Eager to show action on gas costs, Obama has pushed to stop the subsidies while also conceding that would not have an immediate effect on prices. He has also called for the Justice Department to investigate possible price fixing and said this week that he was also prodding oil-producing countries such as Saudi Arabia to increase production. Lankford also said that Republicans would not vote to raise the nation’s borrowing limit, now at $14.3 trillion, in the coming weeks unless the measure also includes steps to cut government spending. Presidents have agreed to such deals in the past, and Obama told The Associated Press in a recent interview that some spending restrictions might be necessary to win an increase in the debt ceiling. Without raising that limit, the government would default on its debts.

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Video: Gaskins Sees Interest in IPOs for Oil, Gas Trusts, LBOs

April 29, 2011

April 29 (Bloomberg) — Francis Gaskins, president of IPOdesktop.com, talks about the market for initial public offerings this year and investor interest in investment trusts and leveraged buyouts. Gaskins speaks with Pimm Fox and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness”. (Source: Bloomberg)

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U.S. Economy Slows To A Crawl — At Least For Now

April 28, 2011

NEW YORK — At least temporarily, the U.S. economy has slowed to a crawl. U.S. gross domestic product — one of the key gauges of overall economic growth -– fell dramatically to 1.8 percent in the first three months of this year after growing at a rate of 3.1 percent at the end of last year, according to figures released by the Commerce Department on Thursday. While some economists argue the quarterly figure could simply be an economic blip caused by harsh winter weather and spiking gas prices, others warn that the recovery could still be a jobless one. A dramatic drop in consumer spending — which makes up roughly 70 percent of economic activity — weighed GDP in the first part of the year. Bad weather hurt construction and limited consumer spending, keeping many Americans away from winter sales in January and February. As the weather improved, soaring gas prices and higher grocery bills limited spending for many people. Consumer spending fell from 4 percent at the end of last year to 2.7 percent at the beginning of this year, according to the Commerce Department figures. “We think the GDP numbers are a little bit of a fluke,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, a financial and economic analysis firm. “There is a disconnect between the GDP numbers and some of the other data on the U.S. economy,” said Behravesh. “The other numbers we’re seeing are more consistent with 4 percent growth than 1.8 percent growth.” Behravesh said he believes growth is already picking up following the low of the first quarter of 2011. GDP numbers often lag behind other data, and revisions of the data released as the Commerce Department gets more information could reveal growth was stronger than thought, he argued. But some of the dropoff in consumer spending in the first part of 2011 was also a function of its relative height at the end of 2010, when U.S. consumers spent in earnest for the first time since the recession. The holiday season, the fact that many people had saved up during the downturn, looser financing for large purchases and even the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing program pushed personal consumption expenditures to 4 percent for the last quarter of 2010, said Constance Hunter, chief economist at the investment banking firm Aladdin Capital. For the overall year, however, that spending grew by just 1.7 percent, Hunter added. “So if we can maintain anywhere close to the current 2.7 percent rate of growth in 2011, we will be doing much better than in 2010,” said Hunter. “It’s not all a bed of roses, we have higher gas prices,” Hunter said, adding that she didn’t believe they’d stay high, as many were already cutting down on driving , which she argued, would eventually drive demand, and prices down. But, she cautioned, jobless claims for April didn’t bode well for overall unemployment figures. “The problem is the Fed is coming up against the boundary of their effectiveness in terms of generating jobs growth and Bernanke said as much,” she said, referring to the Federal Reserve’s closely watched Wednesday press conference. During the central bank’s first-ever presser, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said growth will lag this year as inflation picks up. The Fed also lowered GDP estimates for the entire year to 3.3 percent from 3.9 percent. Even the Fed’s forecast of growth isn’t enough to create a significant number of new jobs, said Josh Bivens, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank. “Just to keep our currently high unemployment rate stable, we’ve actually got to put upward pressure on it,” he said. “What it means for people is that it’s not going to get appreciably easier to find a job any time soon unless we start seeing much higher GDP growth numbers.” Other economists argued that there was enough growth to sustain moderate increases in employment, with manufacturing alone growing by 9 percent in the first part of 2011. Unemployment fell to a two-year low of 8.8 percent in March after the economy added 216,000 jobs. Many employers have wrung all the productivity they can out of employed Americans, said Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Point Loma Nazarene University in San Diego. “Companies do need to take on additional employees because otherwise the huge gains in productivity that we saw in 2010 are not sustainable,” she argued. Reaser also cautioned against directly linking GDP and jobs, explaining that the economic impact of various events often lagged behind, and that both growth and employment fluctuated from quarter to quarter. “We’re seeing growth, it’s just disappointing,” said Kathy Bostjancic, director for macroeconomic analysis at the Conference Board, an economic research group. And what little growth there was would be buffeted by major headwinds, like high unemployment and the depressed housing market, she said. Adding to the strain, state and local governments have drastically cut spending, and the same is about to happen nationally, Bostjancic said, with wrangling over the best way to cut spending in Washington. “We’re going to see more contraction at the federal level,” said Bostjancic. Government spending and hiring will be slashed, and industries and jobs dependent on them will also take a hit, she warned.

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Banks Whittle Away at CRE Assets While Waiting To Jump Back Into Lending

April 28, 2011

Coming out of the first quarter, most U.S. banks still view commercial real estate as an anathema to be further banished from their books, or at least kept off their rolls. However, for the first time in a long time, they have started talking about the day when that won’t be the case. And that day could come sometime in the second half of this year. In a review of first-quarter banking results and earnings conference calls, banks said they’re looking…

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Recovery Slows As Inflation Arrives

April 27, 2011

The Federal Reserve said growth will lag this year as the central bank finally acknowledged Wednesday what most Americans have long since realized: “Inflation has picked up.” The Fed’s statement, a customary event at the conclusion of every policy meeting, is the status update traders, bankers, businessmen and policy makers use to gauge the health of the U.S. economy. The Fed’s recognition of rising inflation did not affect its easy-money policy, though. The main interest rate will remain anchored near zero percent. Its asset-purchase program will also continue and run through its scheduled completion in June. It will be another “couple of meetings before action,” Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said during a news conference. There are five more meetings scheduled this year. The Fed’s preferred measure of inflation guides its policy decisions. That index, which is about a full percentage point lower than what consumers experience at the pump or when buying food at the register, strips out volatile prices that are not always representative of the broader price of goods. By the Fed’s measure, inflation is not yet a worry. The recovery is “proceeding at a moderate pace,” the Federal Open Market Committee, the Fed’s main policy making body, said in its statement. Last month, the recovery was simply “on a firmer footing.” The Fed lowered its estimates for growth by about half a percentage point. In January, the central bank forecast U.S. gross domestic product to rise about 3.4 to 3.9 percent in 2011 during the final three months of the year. It now forecasts GDP to increase by about 3.1 to 3.3 percent. Even though growth is expected to be lower, the Fed predicted reduced unemployment compared to its earlier estimate as well — even though the measures typically move in opposite directions. Policy makers are more confident in the strength of the labor market, which they said is finally improving, albeit “gradually.” Last month, the Fed would only say that it appeared to be getting better. The unemployment rate stood at 8.8 percent at the end of March, according to the Labor Department. The central bank forecasts unemployment to average 8.4 to 8.7 percent during the last three months of the year, a slight improvement from January’s forecast of 8.8 to 9.0 percent. But the part of the Fed’s statement that will likely be parsed by traders on Wall Street is the realization that “inflation has picked up in recent months,” which the Fed attributes to rising energy and commodity prices. Most Americans began recognizing this a few months ago. Last month, prices including food and energy rose 2.7 percent on an annual basis, Labor Department data show. Bernanke said the rate is “noticeably higher” than normal. The price of food eaten at home has risen 3.6 percent. Meats, poultry, fish and egg prices are up 7.9 percent. The average price for unleaded gasoline stands at $3.88 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association. A year ago today, fuel cost $2.86 per gallon. It’s risen 36 percent, a development Bernanke acknowledged is causing pain for working families. Prices have increased so much so fast that it’s eating into incomes and purchasing power. Hourly earnings are up only 1.7 percent over the past year, according to the Labor Department. But, when factoring inflation, wages are down 1 percent . That statistic is part of the reason why the Fed has been so aggressive in keeping interest rates as low as possible, a policy it reaffirmed Wednesday. Low interest rates spur borrowing, which should lead to spending, investing and, theoretically, hiring and higher wages. The Fed will keep the main interest rate anchored at 0 percent and will continue its asset-purchase program through completion in June, it said. The central bank has about $2.7 trillion in Treasuries and mortgage-linked securities. Another reason behind the Fed’s continued aggressiveness in the face of rising consumer prices — firms like Nike and Wal-Mart say they’re passing on commodity price increases to customers — is the central bank’s preference for an alternative measure of inflation. The Fed looks at so-called core inflation , a measure that strips out food and energy prices, when gauging the inflation rate that will guide its policy decisions. By that measure, prices are up only 0.9 percent in the year ending in February, according to the Commerce Department. The Fed aims to maintain the rate at about 2 percent. “Measures of underlying inflation are still subdued,” the Fed said Wednesday. The inflationary effect of higher commodity prices will be “transitory.” But the central bank’s inflation forecasts surged. In January, the Fed estimated that prices will rise at an annual rate of 1.3 to 1.7 percent during the final three months of the year. It now projects prices to rise 2.1 to 2.8 percent, about a full percentage point higher. Bernanke faces a dilemma, reckoned Bernard Baumohl, chief economist of the Economic Outlook Group. “There is no greater curse on Fed policymakers than the combination of a slowing economy and accelerating inflation, especially when both are largely the result of events taking place outside the U.S.,” Baumohl wrote in a note to clients. “In this instance, it is the robust demand for food and fuel coming form fast-growing emerging countries and the geopolitical turmoil that has spread across the oil-rich regions of North Africa and the Middle East. And neither of these foreign dynamics show signs of de-escalating.”

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Dylan Reid: Faced With A Grim Job Market, Young Entrepreneurs Create Their Own Employment

April 26, 2011

As June approaches, the million and a half students set to graduate from college in the U.S. this year likely have just one thing are their mind: the job market. For each of these students faced with an uncertain, unstable or imprudent future, there will be a strong impulse to pursue the safest path, often on the periphery of their passions. So to all this year’s graduates wavering between boring job prospects and graduate school admissions, debating backpacking trips across Europe or Latin American missions with the Peace Corps, we propose an alternative. Instead of looking for a job: create your own. The time for entrepreneurship is now. Employment may be scarce, but opportunities for talented students and recent grads to start companies are abundant, especially in the U.S. Increasingly, our national attention is focused on entrepreneurs, with university and government programs supporting R&D and offering low-interest loans for new ventures to start and scale. Tools like crowd-funding and out-sourcing are cutting costs and allowing entrepreneurs to bootstrap from virtually nothing. Accelerators and incubators are sprouting up across the country, transforming once quiet cities into interconnected innovation hubs. And as countries become more connected, more and more entrepreneurs are launching enterprises that operate across countries, continents and around the world, catering to cultural differences and regional needs. The international impact of startups like Facebook, Twitter and Google have laid the groundwork for new wave of global thinking. Growing up on a small farm in New Jersey, Jason Halpern remembered the difficulty of installing solar panels so far off the grid. Small farmers, he realized, had much to gain from solar but its complex and costly infrastructure placed it out of reach for many. While a student at the University of Pennsylvania, Halpern and childhood friend Pat Murphy set out to create a portable and affordable solar generator designed for farmers. After participating in contests and attending conferences at their school and around the area, they pieced together a prototype. They won a $500,000 Edison Innovation Fund Cleantech Grant from the State of New Jersey. And today their company PowerFlowerSolar is developing a range of portable solar generators for farmers, the military and for use in disaster relief. “Bringing power,” as Halpern says “to the places that need it the most.” Not every young entrepreneur has such a clear vision from the onset. Some stumble into entrepreneurship with only a vague plan. Upon graduating Wharton in 2009, Jonathan Hefter turned down lucrative job offers in finance and moved into his parent’s basement where he taught himself to code. It was then that he came up with the concept for the Neverware Juicebox, a super-fast, inexpensive server that speeds up old computers. After getting an invitation to join New York incubator Dogpatch Labs, he was able to perfect the first server. Today, Neverware Juiceboxes are revitalizing outdated computers in public schools across New York and New Jersey. While these entrepreneurs are exceptional, their stories are certainly not unique. They are only a few among the growing number of top students and recent grads in the U.S. and abroad foregoing the arduous process of job seeking for job creation. They are turning their passions into products and experiences into enterprises. They are working across a wide range of sectors and distant geographic locales. They are seeing opportunity in uncertainty and in doing so shaping the future and from the stories of their success a new generation of young talented people might be encouraged to do the same. At the Kairos Society this is not only our hope — it’s our vision. As the world’s most expansive network of student entrepreneurs, we are committed to making our vision a reality. By connecting the world’s most promising young entrepreneurs to each other and the resources they need to succeed, we are helping to foster the businesses that will drive the future and continually question what is possible.

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South Korean growth accelerates during the first three months of the year

April 26, 2011

South Korean growth accelerates during the first three months of the year

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Netflix Earnings Show Impressive Growth

April 25, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — Netflix Inc. attracted another 3.6 million customers to its video subscription service in the first quarter, the biggest growth spurt yet in a prosperous run that has established the company as a Hollywood power broker and Wall Street darling. The financial results announced Monday topped analyst forecasts. But management offered a cautious outlook that included a second-quarter earnings projection below analyst estimates. That caused Netflix shares to shed more than 5 percent in Monday’s extended trading. Netflix’s first quarter earnings nearly doubled to $60.2 million, or $1.11 per share, during the first quarter. That was up from $32.3 million, or 59 cents per share, at the same time last year. The performance was 4 cents per share above the average estimate among analysts surveyed by FactSet. Revenue rose 46 percent to $719 million about $13 million above analyst estimates. The company, which is based in Los Gatos, ended March with 23.6 million subscribers in the U.S. and Canada, up from 20 million at the end of 2010. The first-quarter surge left Netflix with more subscribers than long-established pay-TV channels such as CBS Inc.’s Showtime. Netflix charges $8 per month to stream movies and TV shows over high-speed Internet connections. Most customers pay a little more per month so they can also rent DVDS delivered through the mail. The company is trying to nudge its subscribers to stream video more frequently to help lower its postal expenses. In the process, Netflix hopes to free up more money to buy more compelling material for its streaming library, which is currently stocked with more than 20,000 movies and TV shows. Netflix spent $192 million on streaming rights in the first quarter, nearly quadrupling the amount spent at the same time last year. The company’s recent success emboldened Netflix to expand its streaming service outside the U.S. After entering Canada last fall, Netflix plans to begin streaming in another international market that management will identify later this year. The company is so confident about the next step in its expansion that it is already drawing up plans to move into another country early next year. Netflix ended March with 22.8 million subscribers in the U.S. The remaining 800,000 are in Canada. After adding more than 3 million subscribers in each of the last two quarters, Netflix expects its growth to taper off in the spring and summer – typically a tougher time to sell subscriptions because more people are taking vacation and spending more time outside. Netflix thinks it will add 1.3 million to 2.25 million subscribers in the second quarter. The company projected earnings as much as $1.15 per share for the period, below the average analyst estimate of $1.19, according to FactSet. The company’s shares fell $13.50, or 5.4 percent, to $238.17 in extended trading. After tripling last year, Netflix’s stock price had risen more than 40 percent so far this year before the reaction to management’s forecast.

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Wall Street Stocks Slip On Fears Of Inflation’s Effect Taking Place

April 25, 2011

U.S. stocks fell on Monday on signs some corporate outlooks were being strained by concerns over higher raw material costs, including consumer products maker Kimberly-Clark Corp. The market’s decline in a low-volume session followed some strong earnings last week, which helped pushed the Dow to a closing high for the year. The S&P 500 has moved to the top end of its recent trading range where it is facing resistance. Kimberly-Clark (KMB.N) sank 2.9 percent to $64.13 and was one of the S&P 500′s top percentage decliners after it cut the low end of its full-year outlook, saying the cost of pulp and other goods were rising more than twice as much as it had expected. The Kleenex tissue maker is one of the companies most exposed to rising commodity costs because its products contain oil-based materials and paper. Johnson Controls Inc (JCI.N) fell 3.3 percent to $39.38 after the company, one of the world’s largest auto suppliers, said its fiscal third-quarter results would be hit by a drop in car production following the earthquake in Japan. “There are some legitimate inflation concerns among investors related to raw material prices, which could put pressure on margins later in the year,” said John Carey, portfolio manager of Pioneer Investment Management in Boston, which has about $260 billion in assets under management. Of S&P 500 companies that have reported results so far, 75 percent beat analysts’ expectations. That is just above the average over the past four quarters but well above the average of 62 percent since 1994, according to Thomson Reuters data. Helping the Nasdaq, SanDisk Corp (SNDK.O) rose 1.6 percent to $49.81 after raising its 2011 margin outlook late on Thursday. The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 34.40 points, or 0.28 percent, at 12,471.59. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was down 2.89 points, or 0.22 percent, at 1,334.49. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up just 0.10 of a point, or unchanged on a percentage basis, at 2,820.26. Energy and materials companies’ shares ranked among the weakest of the session, with the S&P Energy Index .GSPE down 0.7 percent and the S&P Materials Index down 0.6 percent. Crude oil futures prices fell after hitting their highest level since September 2008 earlier in the session, while silver reversed course after a sharp rally. The CBOE Volatility Index .VIX, known as the VIX, rose 7.8 percent after falling last week to its lowest level since 2007. This week is another hectic one for earnings with 180 S&P 500 companies set to report, including Amazon.com (AMZN.O), Coca-Cola Co (KO.N), Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N). The week’s agenda includes a two-day meeting of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s policymaking committee on Tuesday and Wednesday. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold the first of four annual press conferences on Wednesday after the Federal Open Market Committee’s meeting ends. Investors will look for clues about the direction of monetary policy when the Fed’s bond buying program ends in June. Traders noted that activity would likely be subdued as many major European markets remain closed over the long Easter weekend. About 2.92 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq as of midday, below average for this point in the session. (Reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Editing by Jan Paschal) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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