luni, 5 iulie 2010

Lloyds Banking Group sells control of finance unit


Lloyds Banking Group has agreed to sell a controlling stake in its Bank of Scotland Integrated Finance business.

Lloyds said monday that Coller Capital, a private equity company, is paying 332 million pounds ($504 million) for a 70 percent stake in the unit. Lloyds will remain as a minority partner with a 30 percent stake.

Lloyds, which was bailed out by the British government during the financial crisis, says it has now disposed of 750 million pounds in assets.

Samsung H2 could play spoilsport to strong recovery


By Miyoung Kim Reuters

Samsung Electronics' (005930.KS) second-half performance might be hit by weak European markets, and the launch of its new smartphones is key as the world's No. 1 memory chipmaker is set to report a record quarterly profit.

The mainstay memory chip unit of Samsung is benefitting from a robust recovery in the global consumer electronics market, but Apple Inc's (AAPL.O) fastest ever global rollout of its latest iPhone is posing as a strong headwind to Samsung's nascent smartphone business.

Last month, BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM.TO) reported disappointing quarterly shipments, rekindling worries it is losing market share to Apple and other rivals. Nokia also issued a second profit warning as it struggles to compete against iPhone.

Samsung, the first major global technology firm to unveil second quarter estimates, could be hit by its exposure to Europe.

"The biggest risk factor for Samsung at the moment is whether European demand will normalize back in the third quarter," said Benjamin Ban, an analyst at Daishin Securities.

"A further slowdown in European demand for electronics goods such as TVs and handsets will eventually depress buoyant component market, which has been the main source of record profit this year."

Europe is estimated to make up 30-40 percent of Samsung's TV and handset sales.

South Korea's exports to Europe rose around 16 percent so far this year, far underperforming a 30 and 50 percent growth to the United States and China and underscoring fiscal crisis in Europe has weakened demand from the region, customs data showed.

"Chips and LCD flat screens are doing well and will lead Samsung to continue to report record-breaking results until July-September," said Song Myung-sub, an analyst at Hi Investment & Securities.

"But things have turned somewhat downbeat from the very upbeat picture we had earlier this year, as we now expect prices of chips and LCDs would start falling from the fourth quarter and demand could weaken, initially starting from unstable Europe."

Samsung, which unveils April-June earnings guidance on Wednesday, is likely to estimate quarterly operating profit at a record 4.8 trillion won ($4.0 billion) on 38.4 trillion won sales, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

It would beat the previous record of 4.4 trillion won seen in the first quarter and almost double from the previous year's 2.67 trillion won, mainly helped by record chip sales, which would make up around half of Samsung's total operating profit.

Sales of LCD flat screen panels were also seen strong thanks to robust orders from TV producers betting healthy demand growth during this summer's World Cup soccer event.

But handset business, one of Samsung's weakest performing units, suffered another setback due to delays in smartphone launches and weak feature phone sales, analysts said.

EUROPEAN WOES

Analysts expect weak demand from Europe and almost a 10 percent tumble in the euro might lead Samsung to report telecoms margin and profit nearly halved in the second quarter from the preceding quarter.

Shares in Samsung, Asia's most valuable technology firm worth $92 billion fell 11 percent over the past three months from a record high of 875,000 won, lagging the market's 3 percent drop.

After peaking at a new record of 5.0 trillion won in Q3, earnings are set to shrink 20 percent to 4.0 trillion won in the fourth quarter, as gains in its mainstay memory chip prices falter amid rising supply growth.

CLSA expects Samsung's average selling prices of DRAM, mostly used in computers and servers, are likely to fall 10 percent in Q3 and 20 percent in Q4, although a strong pick-up in demand for NAND chips, used in smartphones, will make up for the slowdown.

To boost its smartphone sales, Samsung is launching Galaxy S, its answer to Apple's iPhone, globally with 100 carriers including the top five U.S. carriers.

While Apple has so far limited iPhone distributions to a single partner in each major market, Samsung is targeting multiple carriers to sell Google's (GOOG.O) Android-based phone, as the smartphone laggard aims to treble shipments this year.

Mortgage rates scream buy, but who is listening?


By ALAN ZIBEL and ALEX VEIGA, Associated Press

An odd scene has been playing out lately in the offices of mortgage brokers and bankers around the country.

Mortgage rates have sunk to levels not seen in more than a half-century — a seductive 4.58 percent for an average 30-year fixed loan. Yet brokers and lenders report not a flood but a trickle of customers.

So what's going on?

Call it a tale of the haves and have-nots.

The haves are those who stand to save money from refinancing and have the financial standing to do so. Since mortgage rates have been low for so long, most of them already have refinanced in the past 18 months. Doing so again wouldn't be worth the cost for most.

The have-nots? Those are the millions of Americans pummeled by the housing collapse. They have little or no home equity or no money for down payments. Or they lack the credit or steady income to get or refinance a mortgage.

The result is that brokers like Ginny Ferguson are filling their days doing something other than handling a stampede of customers buying homes or refinancing.

Ferguson, CEO of Heritage Valley Mortgage in Pleasanton Calif., has managed to stay busy: She's archiving files, reviewing marketing plans and calling previous clients and agents to try to drum up business.

"Am I sitting around playing Solitaire on my computer? No," she says.

The 4.58 percent average for a 30-year fixed-rate loan last week was the lowest on records that mortgage company Freddie Mac has kept since 1971. The last time rates were lower was the 1950s, when most long-term home loans lasted just 20 or 25 years.

Under normal circumstances, 4.58 percent would be irresistible. A decade ago, if you'd told David Christensen, owner of Mountain Lake Mortgage in Lakeside, Mont., that rates would drop this low, he wouldn't have believed you. And if rates did somehow fall this far, he never thought he would lack for customers, as he does now.

Yet both have come true.

Christensen argues that mortgage lending standards have tightened so much since the financial crisis that many people with decent but not-stellar credit can't qualify. Lenders are demanding stronger credit scores and higher down payments or home equity.

"The pendulum has swung too far the other way," Christensen said. "It needs to come back to the middle."

Overall lending has ticked up in recent weeks, driven by borrowers looking to refinance. But it remains only about half the level of early 2009.

Stricter lending rules aren't the only factors behind the restrained demand. A tax credit for home buyers that helped lift home sales expired April 30. The result is that fewer people are taking out loans to buy homes.

And some borrowers who do have good credit and solid jobs are still being rejected for refinanced loans. It's because their homes are worth less than they owe on their mortgage. They're "under water," in real estate parlance. About a quarter of American households with a mortgage are in this predicament.

Blame the housing bust. It shrank home values and depleted home equity.

Most people in the lending industry acknowledge that lending standards were far too lax during the boom. Yet these days, some brokers recall the boom times with a tinge of nostalgia. Buyers and refinancers were everywhere. And yet rates were higher than they are now.

In the summer of 2005, lending activity was about 30 percent more than it is today. And homebuyers and refinancers had to pay about a full percentage point more for a mortgage than today's 4.58 percent.

"If the money was as easy as it was three or four years ago, I'd be the richest guy in town," says Joe Bell, a mortgage broker and real estate agent in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Now?

"The phone rings a lot, but a lot of people can't qualify."

Part of the problem is that people have been able to receive mortgage rates under 5 percent at several points over the past 15 months. For them, spending thousands on fees to take out a new loan wouldn't make sense.

For many of the homeowners who refinanced over the past two years, rates would need to drop to around 4 percent for refinancing to be financially worthwhile, said Patrick Cunningham of Home Savings and Trust Mortgage in Fairfax, Va.

"We're turning down a number of people for every one person that we can get through," Cunningham says. "That part is frustrating for us, certainly. I would say it's even more frustrating for the consumer."

The drop in rates this spring and summer has been a surprise. Mortgage rates had been expected to rise after the Federal Reserve ended its program to lower rates by buying up mortgage-backed securities.

At the start of April, rates started to rise. Good economic news had caused long-term U.S. Treasury bonds, a safe haven during the recession, to lose some appeal. As demand for Treasurys fell, their yields rose. And so did mortgage rates, which track the yields on long-term Treasurys.

But then several European countries fell into crisis over their debt burdens. Investors rushed back into the safety of Treasury bonds. That drove down Treasury yields — and mortgage rates.

The costs of refinancing are generally considered worthwhile for homeowners who can shave at least three-quarters of a percentage point off their rate and plan to stay in their homes for several years.

For mortgage lenders and brokers, refinancing clients are generally people with excellent credit, stable jobs and plenty of equity in their homes.

People like Chris O'Donnell, 43, of Centreville, Va.

He and his wife are on track to close their refinanced loan this month. They are pulling money out to buy a new heating and air conditioning system for a home they bought last year.

But they're able to do so only because they had put down 50 percent of the purchase price when they bought the home. Few can afford to do that.

O'Donnell is shaving his mortgage rate by about half a percentage point to just over 4.6 percent. He'll save about $100 a month on payments. But he notes the main reason he can do that is the economy's feeble state.

"It's good for us," he said. "But it scares the heck out of me for the economy."

marți, 29 iunie 2010

Build Buzz With a Business Blog 9 strategies for generating word-of-mouth publicity and marketing success


The most powerful aspect of business blogging is the potential to generate word-of-mouth marketing from the content you publish. If you can engage your audience members and get them talking about your business, products and services outside of your website, you've hit marketing gold. Blogs are a perfect tool to achieve that goal because they're conversational in nature. They're also filled with personality (at least the good ones are) that encourages readers to participate and build relationships with the bloggers and businesses behind them. Relationships drive customer loyalty and create vocal brand advocates who want to talk about the brands they love and are willing to defend those brands from criticism. When that conversation moves from your business blog and turns into online buzz, you've achieved a goal that marketing managers dream of.

The power of the social web comes from the conversations and buzz that occur on it. With a business blog, you have a chance to start those conversations, nurture them and let them grow. As a marketer by profession, I think we live in the most incredible time because the power of the social web and blogging provides more opportunities for businesses to connect with consumers and drive word-of-mouth marketing wider and louder than ever.



Home > Marketing > Marketing Communications Columnist Susan Gunelius > Build Buzz With a Business Blog
Susan Gunelius: Marketing Communications
Build Buzz With a Business Blog
9 strategies for generating word-of-mouth publicity and marketing success
By Susan Gunelius | June 24, 2010
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By Susan Gunelius

* Build Buzz With a Business Blog
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The following is an edited excerpt from Blogging All-in-One for Dummies by Susan Gunelius (Wiley, 2010).

The most powerful aspect of business blogging is the potential to generate word-of-mouth marketing from the content you publish. If you can engage your audience members and get them talking about your business, products and services outside of your website, you've hit marketing gold. Blogs are a perfect tool to achieve that goal because they're conversational in nature. They're also filled with personality (at least the good ones are) that encourages readers to participate and build relationships with the bloggers and businesses behind them. Relationships drive customer loyalty and create vocal brand advocates who want to talk about the brands they love and are willing to defend those brands from criticism. When that conversation moves from your business blog and turns into online buzz, you've achieved a goal that marketing managers dream of.

The power of the social web comes from the conversations and buzz that occur on it. With a business blog, you have a chance to start those conversations, nurture them and let them grow. As a marketer by profession, I think we live in the most incredible time because the power of the social web and blogging provides more opportunities for businesses to connect with consumers and drive word-of-mouth marketing wider and louder than ever.

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Start thinking about the types of promotions and public relations posts that you can publish on your own business blog that would actually help your readers and put smiles on their faces. You don't want to bore them with promotional information. Instead, you want to make them feel like they're special because they take the time to read your business blog. For instance, you can thank them for their loyalty by publishing exclusive discounts for blog readers only--further connecting your business and blog to them.

Following are some suggestions for how you can use your business blog as a marketing tool:

1. Share sale information.
Your blog is a great place to share sale and discount information with consumers. Over time, they'll learn to expect to find this type of information on your business blog and they'll come looking for it.
2. Link to your online catalog or store.
If you mention your products in your blog posts and have an online catalog or store, be sure to link to it!
3. Offer tips and advice.
It's possible that consumers might have questions about how to use your products, so it's always helpful to publish blog posts that not only offer tips but also provide suggestions for new ways to use your products.
4. Publish referral program details.
You can get the conversation going by offering an incentive for referrals.
5. Hold a contest.
People love to win prizes. You can take advantage of that by holding contests on your blog. For example, hold a contest on your blog and offer a gift card for a future purchase from your business as the prize, or offer products as prizes. When you send the product to the winner, ask whether she'd like to write a review of the product for your blog or whether you can interview her about her experience using it.
6. Answer questions.
Engage your blog readers by asking them to send questions and answer them on your business blog. If a person has a question, chances are good that they're not the only one.
7. Solicit customer stories.
People love to see their names and photos in lights, so to speak. Ask your customers to send in stories about their use of your products and publish them on your blog. It's likely each person you talk about on your blog will want to share the post with their friends.
8. Include a "Share This" links on your posts.
Be sure to include a link or button that allows readers to share posts they enjoy through social networking sites, social bookmarking sites, Twitter and e-mail. It's an easy way to foster buzz.
9. Respond to all comments.
Make sure your readers feel valued. Respond to every comment left on your blog and keep the conversation going.

The possibilities are practically endless. While outright promotions are generally frowned upon, don't be afraid to think outside the box and be creative about using your business blog as a marketing tool.

Japan's economic recovery falters in May

By TOMOKO A. HOSAKA, Associated Press

Japan's economic recovery faltered in May as moderating export demand dented factory output, household spending fell and the jobless rate unexpectedly rose for a third straight month.

Industrial production dropped 0.1 percent from the previous month — the first decline in three months, the government said Tuesday. Shipments overseas fell 1.7 percent.

Lower output from automakers such as Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. dragged the index south, reflecting softening overseas demand. Factories also made less machinery used for semiconductors and flat-panel displays, according to the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.

"Production momentum is slowing, and with the index coming in below expectation for a fourth month in a row, it seems to be doing so sooner than expected," said Goldman Sachs economist Chiwoong Lee in a note to clients.

The government predicts output to rebound 0.4 percent in June and 1 percent in July — notably smaller gains than in March and April.

The results point toward weaker growth in the world's second biggest economy, which has relied on a rebound in exports to underpin recovery. Brisk overseas demand, particularly from Asia, drove annualized economic growth of 5 percent in the January-March quarter.

But that momentum is starting to cool as governments roll back stimulus measures and focus instead on controlling spending and debt. Data last week showed that while export growth is still robust, it has slowed every month since February.

World leaders who gathered for the Group of 20 meeting in Toronto pledged Sunday to slash government deficits in most industrialized nations in half by 2013, despite warnings from U.S. President Barack Obama and others that overly aggressive austerity measures could derail the global recovery.

Japan's new Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who has made debt reduction a priority, has a more immediate concern. With upper house elections looming on July 11, he must convince voters that his party can also figure out a way to fuel growth and fight deflation.

Separate data Tuesday showed that the country's seasonally adjusted jobless rate climbed to 5.2 percent, up from 5.1 percent in April and the highest level since December.

The number of jobless stood at 3.47 million, which is unchanged from the previous year, according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications. Those with jobs fell 0.7 percent to 62.95 million.

The export boom has been slow to translate into sustained improvements for workers and families, which has persistently dampened domestic demand and pushed prices down. Government incentives for cars and energy-efficient household appliance gave consumption a much-needed boost earlier, but the effects now appear to be fading.

Household spending in May fell a real 0.7 percent from a year earlier as incomes retreated, the government said in another report. Average monthly household income fell a real 2.4 percent from a year earlier to 421,413 yen ($4,714).

A picture of the mood in corporate Japan will emerge Thursday when the central bank releases its closely watched "tankan" survey of business sentiment.

Bank overhaul bill has plenty of rules and critics

By BERNARD CONDON and DANIEL WAGNER, AP Business

To keep taxpayers from having to bail out giant banks again, lawmakers faced two choices: design rules to try to prevent them from failing, or shrink them so that if they do fail, they won't threaten the financial system.

Our political leaders chose the rules.

At more than 2,000 pages, the new financial regulatory bill takes aim at everything from megabanks straddling the globe to street-corner payday lenders. And with a bit of luck, the overhaul — the most sweeping since the Great Depression — will help make big bank failures less likely and less damaging if one does occur.

The House and Senate hope to pass the bill this week in time for President Barack Obama to sign it before July 4. Its backers say it is needed to avoid the kind of cascading fear that brought the financial world to a near standstill after Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008.

Whether it succeeds rides on how dozens of regulators, including the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Reserve, fill in the details, because a lot was left up to them. The bill calls for banks to hold more money as a cushion against risks, but it doesn't say how much. It also was mum on the amount of cash that firms dealing in complex derivatives need to set aside in case those bets sour. Lobbying by industry and advocacy groups is expected to be fierce in the months ahead and take place mostly behind closed doors. It will take years for many of the rules to take effect.

But one thing is clear: For the nation's biggest banks, it could have been a lot worse.

In the Senate's version of the bill, banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. would have been barred from trading derivatives. In the final one, banks lose only a sliver of that business.

Another near-miss for Wall Street involved a ban on banks investing in hedge funds and private equity firms. The bill limits those investments, but not enough to hurt most big banks, says Dean Baker, co-director of the left-leaning Center for Economic and Policy Research.

"Those guys walked away pretty happy," he says.

Shares of big financial companies rose Friday after the bill was approved in the wee hours of the morning by a House and Senate conference committee.

Perhaps the biggest victory for giant banks: They get to stay big. A proposed amendment to cut them down to size was killed after receiving scant support.

"There's no magic bullet, so they need to be small enough to fail," says former International Monetary Fund chief economist Simon Johnson. Dallas Federal Reserve chief Richard Fisher agrees, stating in a recent speech that the "only" way to end bank bailouts is to "shrink 'em." Henry Kaufman, an elder statesmen among economists, puts it succinctly: "Break them up."

The stakes are high because banks are bigger than ever.

Thanks in part to acquisitions of Countrywide Financial Corp. and Merrill Lynch & Co., the assets of Bank of America Corp. have jumped 36 percent from before the financial crisis to $2.34 trillion. JPMorgan bought Bear Stearns Cos. and Washington Mutual Inc. and has assets of $2.14 trillion, up 37 percent.

The top four banks now have 40 percent of the nation's deposits.

The legislation increases government oversight of these and other big, interconnected financial firms. The goal is to identify problems early and address them — not allow them to grow until a giant bank is in trouble and a threat to the financial system. If the problems do mushroom and a big bank is failing, the new rules include a plan to seize and liquidate the bank. The enormous cost of doing that would be paid by other giant banks, not taxpayers. At least, that's the theory.

When Lehman got in trouble two years ago, the government lacked the authority to take it over. Lehman filed for bankruptcy, and other banks feared that firms with money tied up at Lehman might fail, too. Trust evaporated. Credit markets froze, and the stock market crashed. Under the new plan, the thinking goes, everyone linked to a failing bank would know that money was on its way and so they would be less likely to panic. Think of the orderly closings of smaller banks by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. every week — writ large.

To keep financial firms from collapsing in the first place, the bill calls for a new Financial Stability Oversight Council headed by the Treasury secretary to crack down on risk that threatens the financial system.

But a big question remains: Will these top cops even be able to spot problems early? The record isn't encouraging.

As late as May 2007, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke predicted damage from reckless lending to homeowners with bad credit would "likely be limited." Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson also failed to finger these risky loans as a systemic risk. "I don't see (it) imposing a serious problem," he said in April of the same year.

Before the crisis, there was a patchwork of regulators overseeing the financial industry. But each was too focused on firms under its watch to see dangerous practices across the industry. For instance, few regulators among the many overseeing mortgages questioned lenders who stopped requiring borrowers to prove they could pay back their loans. Defaults mounted. When regulators woke up to the danger, it was too late.

The bill's key change aimed at fixing that problem eliminates the Office of Thrift Supervision. The OTS oversaw many of the riskiest players during the housing boom: Washington Mutual, IndyMac Bank and Countrywide. All were either sold in a fire sale, bailed out by taxpayers or seized by the government before they collapsed.

But critics are skeptical about whether the new council will be able to coordinate the various regulatory agencies and fulfill its mission.

"People are worried about the next bubble, and whether regulators will miss it and refuse to act upon it," says Robert Litan, an economist at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which supports entrepreneurship programs.

The legislation gives regulators power to break up the biggest financial firms if they threaten the entire system. But some proposed crackdowns were cut from the bill. And the fate of many of those that remain are in the hands of regulators who must write the rules and then implement them in the years ahead. The record of regulators — like the OTS — is spotty.

The big banks could also claim a victory, of sorts, when it comes to the regulation of derivatives.

Derivatives are bets between two parties on how the value of an asset will change. They are often used by companies to hedge risks. A bank that fears its borrowers will default on their loans might use a derivative that pays off if that happens, thus minimizing its losses.

But derivatives can be used to speculate, too. A bank might use derivatives to bet that the value of an asset it doesn't own will go up or down. Derivatives were used just this way to bet on the housing market. Often, banks borrowed huge sums of money to make these bets. That magnified losses when home prices crashed. It was as if the market was several times bigger than its actual size, and that made the meltdown worse.

Thanks to such gambles, American International Group Inc. nearly collapsed and required a $182 billion bailout by the government. Regulators were scarcely aware of the massive bets made by AIG and other financial firms because they were struck in private deals.

The new bill requires federal oversight of lucrative derivatives for the first time. It requires many types of derivatives to trade on exchanges so regulators can better watch them. Banks using them must put aside money in case they lead to losses, something AIG was not required to do.

An original version proposed by Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., would have forced federally insured banks to spin off their derivatives trading businesses. Under the bill approved early Friday and now heading to the full House and Senate for votes, banks would only have to spin off their riskiest derivatives trades. They would be able to keep trading derivatives related to things such as interest rates, foreign currencies, gold and silver. They could even arrange credit default swaps, the notorious instruments involving mortgages that were blamed for the meltdown, as long as they were traded through the exchanges.

Hedge fund manager Michael Lewitt, who lashes out at derivatives in his book "The Death of Capital," says that AIG-like bets with derivatives should have been banned, not just moved to exchanges so they will be visible.

"We can have an AIG again because everyone is interconnected and for what? So people can speculate?" Lewitt says. The bill "will prove completely inadequate to prevent future crises."

Under a provision known as the Volcker rule, named for former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, banks also won't be allowed to buy and sell securities for their own profit, as opposed to doing that for clients. But the distinction is sometimes vague. For instance, banks often buy shares of companies for "inventory" in their role as middlemen helping clients in their own share purchases. If the bank buys more than needed to help others, it can generate profits. Analysts who have studied the bill say it isn't clear that this would violate the rules.

Likewise, the legislation will impose a cap of 3 percent on the amount of its capital that a bank can invest in risky hedge funds, private equity funds and real estate funds. Typically, though, such investments already fall below the 3 percent threshold. And banks will still be able to manage such funds and collect fees and a percentage of trading profits.

Richard Bove, an analyst at Rochdale Securities, thinks gray areas like that will leave banks such as Goldman Sachs relatively unscathed from the new rules. "I don't see how (the bill) is going to hurt Goldman much at all," he says.

His prediction: Goldman shares rising nearly a third to $182 in a year.

joi, 24 iunie 2010

New iPhone in short supply at Japan launch

By JAY ALABASTER, Associated Press

– Apple's newest iPhone was in short supply just hours after its global launch began in Tokyo on Thursday morning as hundreds queued outside stores across the city to become among the first in the world to own the device.

At the Apple store in the swanky Ginza shopping district, several hundred lined the street in the early afternoon heat, as staff handed out bottled water and loaned black umbrellas with the company logo. A man dressed as a giant iPhone danced and waived his arms as he made it to the front of the line.

"I like the design. It's sleek — I think it's cool!" said Yoko Kosugi, 41, a graphic designer, who took her new phone out of her bag to show it off, plastic wrapping still on the screen.

Long lines formed from early morning across the city at Apple stores and retail outlets across the city.

Thursday's global launch of the iPhone 4 was being carried out at 7 a.m. local time in each region, so Japanese were among the first in the world to get their hands on the device. The U.S., France, U.K. and Germany are also part of the global launch.

In the trendy shopping district of Harajuku, over 300 people were lined up at the flagship store of Softbank, Japan's exclusive carrier, when its doors opened in the morning. That store ran out of phones by early afternoon, said company spokesman Naoki Nakayama.

"We've been selling out at each launch, it's the same conditions," he said, declining to release any numbers.

When the initial version of the iPhone was released in Japan two years ago, some questioned whether it could succeed without many of the advanced hardware features common on Japanese models. But the phone's addictive touch screen and broad selection of downloadable applications have made it a runaway hit in the country.

The newest model is thinner with a better-resolution screen and longer battery life. It features a new operating system that can also be installed on some older models.

Even among Apple's most faithful, some said the phone has become a victim of its own success in Japan.

"As Softbank has cut prices and more and more people signed up, it has made the network much slower," said Motoki Sato, a university student who lined up outside of Softbank's store in urban Shibuya.

But he still waited through the night before the launch along with dozens of others at the Shibuya store, to get "a birthday present for myself" when he turned 24 on Thursday. He occasionally glanced at his black iPad as he spoke, and said he tried not use his older iPhone too much to conserve battery life through the long wait.

A swarm of pre-orders earlier in the week also led to long lines around Tokyo and overwhelmed computer servers struggling to keep up with demand.

Toyota president apologizes to shareholders

By YURI KAGEYAMA AP Business

Toyota Motor Corp. President Akio Toyoda bowed deeply and apologized to shareholders Thursday for the troubles caused by massive global recalls of the company's vehicles.

Toyoda was facing shareholders for the first time since the Japanese automaker's reputation for quality was damaged by the recall crisis that started last October.

Again bowing deeply after the remark, Toyoda also said the company was doing its utmost to improve quality control and thanked shareholders for their support.

"I apologize deeply for the concerns we have caused," he said. "We believe our most important task is to regain customers' trust."

The shareholders' meeting was closed to the media, but the proceedings could be seen in a TV monitor in another room at Toyota headquarters in the city named after the automaker. Atonement for Japanese company heads typically comes as a deep bow held for several seconds to show heartfelt remorse for wrongdoing.

Toyota, the world's biggest automaker, has been working to patch up its reputation after more than 8 million vehicles were recalled worldwide over reports of unintended acceleration and other defects.

U.S. authorities slapped Toyota with a record $16.4 million fine for acting too slowly on the recalls. Toyota dealers have repaired millions of vehicles, but the automaker still faces more than 200 lawsuits tied to accidents, the lower resale value of Toyota vehicles and the drop in the company's stock.

Although the recall debacle hung over the shareholders' meeting, the statements from Toyoda and other officials were met with polite applause. A handful of shareholders shouted their anger.

The region where the automaker is headquartered is packed with Toyota plants, suppliers and other businesses like hotels and restaurants that are heavily reliant on Toyota and fiercely loyal.

"The company stumbled badly over the recalls, and it became a big problem," said one shareholder, who identified himself only by his surname Nishikawa.

He also expressed hopes Toyoda as the "face of the company" will handle the recall problem bravely, without breaking into tears, referring to a widely reported meeting that a tearful Toyoda had with dealers in the U.S. where the recalls were concentrated.

Others asked about Toyota's strategy for green vehicles and how it planned to expand in emerging markets, including dealing with labor strife that has temporarily shut down production n China.

Toyota Executive Vice President Satoshi Ozawa said recall-related costs for the fiscal year ended March totaled 380 billion yen ($4 billion).

Executive Vice President Shinichi Sasaki acknowledged that Toyota had failed to fully understand the feelings of customers about safety.

But he said the company was working harder to beef up quality controls, including appointing outsiders to assess the company's transparency, and finding out more how drivers were using Toyota vehicles.

"We want to make Toyota No. 1 in quality from the customers' viewpoint," he told shareolders.

Toyoda said directors on the board will forego their bonus payments for the second year in a row. Directors didn't get bonsues the previous year after Toyota reported the worst losses in its history as the financial crisis sent auto sales plunging.

That won the approval of at least one shareholder, who pointed out the contrast with Japanese rival Nissan Motor Co., which disclosed at its shareholders' meeting Wednesday that Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn had received $9.5 million in compensation.

Analyst opinion has been mixed about Toyota's prospects, which remain shaky and depend on a global auto recovery.

"I'm not that pessimistic. I am hopeful the world's economy is going to grow happier," Nomura Securities Co. auto analyst Shotaro Noguchi said in a telephone interview.

"The image that Toyota cars were dangerous got serious three months ago so that even kids knew about it. But people forget and that has changed," he said.

Toyoda pointed to his striking a deal last month with Tesla Motors Inc., a U.S. electric car manufacturer, to open an electric car plant at the site of Toyota's former venture with General Motors Co. as an example of how Toyota will start anew.

In April, Toyota closed the California plant, called New United Motor Manufacturing Inc., or NUMMI.

He promised Toyota will continue to grow, but without pursuing size for size's sake.

"Our company is about doing the right thing in the right way," he told the meeting. "And I like to think we are the kind of company that cares about people's feelings."

Spanish EU presidency marred by economic crisis

by Pierre Ausseill

Spain's ambitious presidency of the EU was eclipsed by the European debt crisis which thrust the country's fragile economy into the global spotlight and weakened the Spanish government, analysts said.

Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero had planned to use the six-month presidency of the 27-nation bloc, which wraps up on July 1 when Belgium takes over, to bolster his international stature.

But nothing went as planned as the eruption of the Greek debt crisis, and the subsequent fears that it could spread to other southern European nations like Spain and Portugal, caused stock markets and the euro single currency to plunge.

Under pressure by EU heavyweight Germany, the Spanish government adopted unpopular austerity measures, including public sector spending cuts, aimed at slashing a public deficit that hit 11.2 percent of gross domestic product in 2009, the third-highest after Greece and Ireland.

The government also adopted an overhaul of its rigid labour market as recommended by the International Monetary Fund to fight an unemployment rate of 20 percent.

The reforms, which make it easier and less expensive to fire workers, put an end to Zapatero's honeymoon with the nation's unions, which have called a general strike for September 29, and caused his popularity to drop.

Spain was ending its stint as EU president as a "protectorate" of the bloc with its "economy managed from abroad", the leader of the main opposition Popular Party, Mariano Rajoy, charged Wednesday during a debate with Zapatero in parliament.

"The circumstances of the Greek crisis and the widespread problem of fiscal deficits overtook Spain as they would have overtaken any rotating presidency," said Ignacio Molina, a Europe analyst with the Elcano Institute think tank in Madrid.

"But Spain also emerged as one of the weakest countries in this scenario. It found itself without a margin for manoeuvre, being in the position of judge and litigant at the same time. It was difficult for other countries to consider it a neutral president," he added.

Hierlemann Dominik, a specialist in European affairs at German's Bertelsmann Foundation, said all other priorities "such as relations with the Maghreb, the rights of women, were swept away by the crisis in the euro, they were marginalized."

On the diplomatic front Spain's presidency of the EU was marked by the cancellation of two key summits, one with the United States in May and the other with the Mediterranean Union in June.

The EU-US summit was called off after US President Barack Obama cancelled the trip citing his busy schedule while the Mediterranean Union summit was postponed to give time for progress in indirect talks between Israel and the Palestinians.

The death of Cuban dissident Orlando Zapata in February torpedoed Spain's bid to get the EU to soften its common position regarding the communist island.

Spain did achieve its goals for the EU-Latin America summit held last month with the announcement of a free trade agreement between the bloc and Central America and the relaunch of free trade talks with South American trading bloc Mercosur, which is made up of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay.

Zapatero defended Spain's performance during the EU presidency, saying Wednesday it had been "satisfactory" and "useful".

He pointed to the approval at an EU summit last week of Madrid's proposal to make bank stress tests public -- which he said would be "fundamental" to restore calm in the markets -- as an example of the success of the Spanish presidency.

"We had to deal with difficult circumstances for the European Union and also for our country," he added.

vineri, 18 iunie 2010

Santander makes bid for RBS branches

Spanish bank Santander has submitted an offer to buy Royal Bank of Scotland's (RBS) Williams & Glyn's subsidiary.

RBS is selling the unit and its 318 branches after the European Commission ruled last year that it must dispose of the business as a condition of the bank being bailed out by the UK government.

Virgin Money, who had earlier dropped out of the bidding, told the BBC it was still interested in the RBS branches.

Santander said it was not sure when the tender process would end.

Santander is understood to have offered considerably less than £2bn.

"There is a pretty high probability that the board of RBS will conclude that Santander is not offering enough and will therefore withdraw the branches from sale, in the hope that market conditions for the auction of such assets improve in a year or two's time," BBC business editor Robert Peston said.

Under the agreement RBS reached with the European Commission on the disposal of certain of its businesses, RBS has another three and half years to complete the sale of the branches.

'Sale still open'

RBS said it was "seriously reviewing" Santander's offer, but added that the tender process remained open to other interested parties.

"This remains a competitive process and we will continue to do what is right for our shareholders in disposing of these assets," it said in a statement.

A number of other banks have been named as potential bidders, including National Australia Bank and US private equity group Blackrock, but reports have said they have dropped out of the running.

Santander already has a substantial presence on the UK High Street having bought Abbey National, Alliance & Leicester and Bradford & Bingley in recent years.

Obama warns G20 leaders on budget cuts

Barack Obama has warned against cutting national debts too quickly as it would put economic recovery at risk.

In a letter to G20 leaders, the US president said that while it was important to put in place "credible plans" to cut deficits, withdrawing economic stimulus early was dangerous.

"[In the past] stimulus was too quickly withdrawn and resulted in renewed hardships and recession," he warned.

But Mr Obama said the US would still aim to halve is own deficit by 2013.

The US budget deficit would be cut to 3% of GDP by 2015, the president said.

The leaders of the world's 20 leading economies are due to meet in Toronto on 26 June.

Mr Obama said the priority of the meeting should be "to safeguard and strengthen the recovery".

The BBC World Service's economics correspondent Andrew Walker said the letter appeared to express the US administrations reservations over recent changes in economic policy in Europe.

"There has been a marked change in emphasis in the G20 in the last few weeks," he said.

"For many of the group's member countries, especially in Europe, the case for stimulating economic recovery using the public finances has been overtaken by concerns about stabilising government debt."

The governments of several large European countries, Germany and the United Kingdom among them, have recently outlined plans for spending cuts.

In comments apparently directed at China, Mr Obama also stressed the need for flexible exchange rates to ensure a balanced global economy.

China has been criticised by the US for failing to allow its currency to trade freely.

The G20, which includes both developed and developing economies such as Russia, China and Argentina, has taken the lead in efforts to tackle the global financial crisis.

Chevron vows to pay for Salt Lake City oil spill


By PAUL FOY, Associated Press

Salt Lake City attorneys expect Chevron Corp. will quickly agree to a financial settlement related to last weekend's pipeline spill that dumped 33,000 gallons of crude oil into city waterways, a spokeswoman for Mayor Ralph Becker said Friday.

Becker has vowed to make Chevron pay for the cleanup, and the company has repeatedly pledged to cover the city's expenses, as well as damage or reimbursement claims from others.

A deal could be announced next week, said Lisa Harrison Smith, the mayor's spokeswoman.

"We won't be satisfied until it's done," she said.

San Ramon, Calif.-based Chevron believes an improbable series of events led to last Saturday's spill, which sent crude oil into pristine Red Butte Creek.

A short in an overhead 46,000-volt power line traveled to a fence post that acted like an electric arc welder, melting a quarter-size hole in the pipeline, the company said.

The bottom of the fence post was anchored just inches above the buried pipeline — an obvious danger that went unnoticed for 30 years, Chevron said.

"It would be highly unusual, but it's a plausible theory," Rocky Mountain Power spokesman Dave Eskelsen said.

Some of the spilled oil traveled in the creek through Salt Lake City to the Jordan River, which drains into the Great Salt Lake.

Chevron said it has cleaned up 21,000 of the 33,000 gallons of spilled oil. Much of that has been mopped and vacuumed from city waterways. Absorbent booms on the Jordan River have been capturing traces of oil, and workers were seen digging up oil-soaked soil Wednesday and sucking up residual oil from Red Butte Creek near the spill site.

Chevron said it plans to flush the Red Butte Creek with water Saturday to capture residual oil with absorbent booms. It warned residents the flushing could stir up oil fumes for three or four hours.

But the latest samples from 13 locations along Red Butte Creek and the Jordan River show no danger to human health or aquatic life, Utah Division of Water Quality officials said.

The U.S. Department of Transportation has jurisdiction over oil pipelines and is investigating what caused the spill, said Patricia Klinger, a spokeswoman for the department's pipeline-safety group. A metallurgist is examining the pipe, she said.

The department's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration can fine Chevron, but has no authority over Rocky Mountain Power, which owns the nearby fenced compound and power lines near the pipeline, Klinger said.

Chevron officials said earlier this week that more than 30 claims had been filed with the oil company. The company is taking full responsibility and expects to get hit with a large amount of bills for damages and expenses, Chevron spokesman Dan Johnson said Friday.

"We think that's appropriate," he said. "People who pay their bills are trusted."

The Utah Rivers Council on Friday called for Chevron to deposit $15 million into an escrow account to pay for damages and cleanup expenses. But the expected settlement agreement would make an escrow account unnecessary, Smith said.

Stocks post biggest two-week gain since November


By TIM PARADIS and SETH SUTEL, AP Business

Here's something for investors beaten down by the market's sharp declines this spring: The Dow Jones industrial average just had its best two weeks since November.

The Dow's gain of 16 points on Friday was relatively modest, but it capped a surge of 5.2 percent over the past two weeks that puts the average nearly halfway back to the high for the year that it reached on April 26.

Stocks had a longer winning streak earlier this year, an eight-week stretch that ended in late April, but those gains were more gradual. Then a sharp drop in May and early June brought the Dow down as much as 12.4 percent below its 2010 high, a decline that market analysts call a "correction."

The debate now is focusing on whether that correction phase is over. A correction is generally considered a drop of 10-20 percent from a recent peak. The Dow has risen back 6.5 percent from its lowest close of the year on June 7, but it's still down 6.7 percent from its 2010 high.

"I don't know that we're totally through the correction," said Stu Schweitzer, global markets strategist at JPMorgan's Private Bank in New York. "I do expect markets to remain quite volatile all through the rest of this year, but I still expect that we're going to end the year higher."

Minerals companies led other shares higher after gold settled at another record high. Barrick Gold Corp. jumped 3.5 percent, while Newmont Mining Corp. rose 2.6 percent.

Corporate news also brought out buyers. CVS Caremark Corp. rose 1.9 percent and Walgreen Co. rose 2.8 percent after the two companies settled a dispute over pharmacy prescriptions that had threatened to hurt profits. Dow component Caterpillar Inc. gained 1.4 percent after reporting sharply higher sales.

The Dow rose 16.47, or 0.2 percent, to close at 10,450.64. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 1.47, or 0.1 percent, to 1,117.51. The Nasdaq composite index edged up 2.64, or 0.1 percent, to 2,309.80.

All three indicators posted solid gains for the week. The Dow is up 2.3 percent, the S&P 500 2.4 percent and the Nasdaq 3 percent.

The Dow posted its second consecutive weekly gain of more than 2 percent. Before that, the Dow had been down for three weeks. The last time the Dow had a two-week stretch of gains that strong was in November 2009.

Advancing stocks narrowly outpaced those that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 4.9 billion shares, versus 4.6 billion the day before. Volume was heavier because of the simultaneous expiration of four kinds of futures and options contracts, which occurs once every quarter.

Trading was relatively quiet considering the options and futures expirations, which can often bring volatility as traders adjust their portfolios. The week that follows the June expiration is often a losing one for investors. The Dow has posted a loss during that week for the past 11 years, according to the Stock Trader's Almanac.

Bond prices slipped, pushing interest rates higher. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.23 percent from 3.20 percent late Thursday.

The dollar edged lower against the British pound and Japanese yen, while the euro edged down versus the dollar. The euro has regained strength over the past week amid encouraging signs in Europe's efforts to control its debt crisis. Spain had successful bond sales this week, and European leaders pledged to disclose the results of stress tests on banks.

Crude oil rose 39 cents to settle at $77.18 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Randy Frederick, director of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab, said the market's bounce from its recent lows has come too quickly. He said professional traders are building up positions in investments that would cushion their losses if the market fell again.

"Not that we're going into this big ugly bear market but to go back down to the lows that we were at just a few weeks ago, I think, seems very possible based on what I see," Frederick said. "I see a reason to be a little cautious right now."

The coming week brings readings on home sales and consumer sentiment. The Federal Reserve also will meet on interest rates.

Gold settled up $1,258.30 an ounce, a gain of $9.60. Barrick Gold rose $1.56, or 3.5 percent, to $46.38, and Newmont Mining climbed $1.57, or 2.6 percent, to $61.25.

CVS rose 59 cents to $32.43, while Walgreen gained 82 cents to $30.09. Caterpillar gained 90 cents to close at $65.85.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 1.07, or 0.2 percent, to 666.92.

joi, 17 iunie 2010

On the Call: Kroger CEO David Dillon

By The Associated Press

Companies always keep a close eye on competitors, but when your rival is the biggest retailer on earth the pressure is even tougher. Supermarket retailer Kroger Co. reported its first-quarter results Thursday — net income fell but the results beat expectations and sales grew. However, the grocer is facing tough competition from Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which recently rolled out some of its fiercest reductions in food prices to help boost its slumping sales. Wal-Mart gets about half of its revenue from groceries.

Kroger CEO discussed the issue during a conference call with analysts:

QUESTION: Wal-Mart started the roll-back campaign on April 1st and started to do the deep discounts on May 1st. Wondering in markets where you overlap with a Wal-Mart super center, have you seen any discernible trends since they began that roll-back activity?

RESPONSE: Let me talk generally about Wal-Mart and how we see our markets for a moment.

We don't often talk about individual competitors, but many of you have asked about them, so it is probably worth commenting.

Wal-Mart affects any of the marketplaces in which they operate like any other competitor affects those marketplaces. Wal-Mart has become publicly more aggressive in what they're saying that they're doing, and if you look at what's happening in the stores and in the markets — just like we said the last two quarters — the marketing behavior, merchandising behavior Wal-Mart is (doing is) a lot more consistent with a traditional grocery supermarket operation than it is consistent with what Wal-Mart used to do.

It is a lot more feature items, sometimes features are on a little longer than a week, but it is feature items. And when you operate that way, there are items that come down in price which get lots of publicity, but there are also items that go up in price that don't get much publicity.

So we see the behavior as there is a lot of marketing noise around it, but we see the behavior as pretty much what happens in a lot of grocery. ... As a result, the most important thing I think for you to think about is that our behavior in those markets and in every market is based upon our plan and what we believe to be consistent with our customer-first strategy and what we think our customers want.

We can't do that with a blind eye to what competition does, but we also can't let competition dictate what we're going to do in those markets and we have chosen not (to do).

We're approaching this from purely from the point of view of 'What do we think our customers want from us in this kind of environment?' and using our data and insight in order to drive that.

Feds announce arrests in mortgage fraud crackdown

By KEN RITTER, Associated Pres

Some 500 people have been arrested in a nationwide crackdown on mortgage fraud, and federal officials pointed to Las Vegas as one of the centers of the scams that pumped up home prices until the housing market bubble finally burst.

"I heard this many times," said Scott Hunter, a Las Vegas FBI agent who has interviewed hundreds of so-called "straw buyers" lured into buying homes by unscrupulous real estate agents, brokers and loan officers. "They said, 'Don't let your good credit go to waste. You can purchase these properties. This is how you acquire wealth.'"

"What happened here was, when the party stopped and they were not able to keep inflating the prices on these houses, the whole thing collapsed."

Nevada's U.S. attorney, Daniel Bogden, counted 123 defendants charged, convicted or sentenced in the Silver State since March 1 as part of a national crackdown dubbed Operation Stolen Dreams. Bogden put losses in Nevada alone at almost $250 million.

In Washington, the Justice Department linked nearly 500 arrests nationwide to the crackdown. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called the push the largest collective enforcement effort aimed at confronting mortgage fraud.

Holder said 1,215 criminal defendants had been netted in cases that uncovered more than $2.3 billion in losses, and said the Justice Department also engaged in civil enforcement actions to recover more than $147 million in the operation.

FBI Director Robert Mueller called mortgage fraud "a risk to our economic stability" as a nation.

More than lending institutions were victimized, said Michael Gibson, a Los Angeles-based federal Housing and Urban Development inspector who has been investigating cases in Las Vegas.

Homeowners, taxpayers, reputable real estate industry officials and the Federal Housing Administration were also hurt, Gibson said. "They're all victims in this. Every time you have a bad loan that's FHA-insured, the federal government pays that claim amount."

Real estate analyst Rick Sharga, of Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac Inc., said places with the most foreclosures today were the most fertile places for mortgage scams during the housing boom.

"The states that had the highest fallout in foreclosure and price depreciation certainly didn't have markets built on sound business practices," Sharga said. "The running gag was, you'd put a home on the market at breakfast and have three offers for twice the asking price by lunch. We're seeing the consequences of that now."

"As soon as prices stopped going up, the whole house of cards came down," he said.

Prosecutors and investigators said schemes typically involved straw buyers with good credit buying homes at an inflated price or obtaining loans greater than the cost of the home. The resulting cash was skimmed by the person controlling the scheme.

Homes were "flipped," or quickly sold at inflated prices, driving up prices of comparable or neighboring homes, said Hunter, supervisor of the Las Vegas FBI white collar crime unit.

"If you didn't lie on your loan application, and you later go into foreclosure, there's no fraud there," he said. "But if you lie about everything about the application, and you mislead a lender into believing that all the information on that document is accurate, that's what we're going after."

Foreclosures have decreased in Nevada during the last year, according Realty Trac. But the state continued to lead the nation in May, followed by Arizona, Florida, California and Michigan. One of every 66 homes in the Las Vegas area received a foreclosure filing last month.

The Justice Department said the probe announced Thursday resulted in significant criminal cases in places like Duluth, Minn.; New Jersey and Atlanta.

Officials said that in Chico, Calif., a home builder sold houses built before the market cooled in 2006 to straw buyers at inflated prices, then rebated tens of thousands of dollars to shell companies controlled by the buyers' agents. The lenders were unaware of the rebates. The Justice Department said that to date, 38 of the homes are in foreclosure.

In New Jersey, a servicing manager at U.S. Mortgage pleaded guilty in the fraudulent sale of more than $136 million in mortgage loans to Fannie Mae and other investors.

In Oregon, the U.S. attorney said the FBI had received almost 5,000 reports of fraud since the height of the housing market in 2006.

In Detroit, investigators broke up a "ghost loan" mortgage scheme in which conspirators recruited more than 108 straw buyers and obtained some 500 mortgages totaling more than $100 million.

In Minnesota, convicted mortgage fraud defendant Michael Fiorito was sentenced in April to more than 22 years in prison for conspiracy and mail fraud. Prosecutors said he led homeowners who were in or near foreclosure to refinance or sell their homes, then stole their money.

An indictment in Miami accused two defendants of targeting Haitian-Americans, with one defendant also offering help with immigration issues.

In Las Vegas, Hunter said industry insiders controlling scams didn't spend their own money, but reaped cash from homes "like ATMs."

"They took as much money out of them as they could, and when they were done, they left southern Nevada in the wreckage," the FBI agent said. "Now it's our job to hold these people accountable."

Smart Modular Technologies returns to 3Q profit

Smart Modular Technologies Inc., which makes computer memory products, on Thursday reported a profit for its fiscal third quarter, as renewed spending by businesses on technology helped it recover from a loss posted in the same period last year.

For the three months ended May 28, Smart Modular Technologies' net income was $14.9 million, or 23 cents per share. In the same period last year, the company reported a net loss of $2.4 million, or 4 cents per share.

Excluding stock options expenses and the divestiture of a business, the company earned 26 cents per share in the latest quarter.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had forecast net income of 18 cents per share. Analyst estimates typically exclude one-time items.

Revenue more than doubled to $201.2 million from $91.6 million in the year-ago quarter. Analysts predicted revenue of $180.7 million.

Shares jumped 25 cents, or 3.9 percent, to $6.75 in after-hours trading. During the regular session, the stock added 3 cents to close at $6.50.

Bank of Japan unveils $33bn loan scheme


BBC News

apan's central bank has announced plans to provide up to 3 trillion yen (£22bn; $33bn) in low interest loans in an effort to spur economic growth.

The bank plans to make the money available to commercial banks to encourage them to lend more to private businesses.

Firms in growth sectors including energy, the environment and tourism will be targeted by the scheme.

The Bank of Japan also confirmed it would hold interest rates near zero.

Rates have remained at 0.1% since the end of 2008, with Japan contining to fight deflation and recover slowly from recession.

The bank gave no indication that interest rates would rise in the near future, saying it planned to keep montary policy "extremly accomodative".
Impact questioned

Meanwhile it said its lending programme should help boost productivity and raise the economy's growth rate.

The plans allow approved banks to borrow up to 150bn yen each for up to four years at an interest rate of 0.1%.

The scheme is due to begin at the end of August.

But economists questioned what impact, if any, the plan would have on economic growth.

"We see little impact at this stage due to a lack of demand for funds," said Chiwoong Lee, economist at Goldman Sachs.

The Bank of Japan is also likely to come under further pressure from Japan's new prime minister, Naoto Kan, who has cited the country's massive debt levels as a chief concern.

Deflation is also a worry, with prices currently falling at an annual rate of 1.5%.

Russia becomes leading oil producer, BP says


Russia overtook Saudi Arabia to become the world's leading oil producer in 2009, while global oil consumption fell the most since 1982, BP has said.

According to the oil giant's latest Statistical Review of World Energy, Russia increased oil production by 1.5% in 2009, claiming a 12.9% market share.

Production in Saudi Arabia fell 10.6%, giving the country a 12% market share.

Global oil consumption fell by 1.2m barrels a day, or 1.7%, while natural gas use dropped 2.1%.

The world's oil production dropped by 2m barrels a day, or 2.6%, also the largest decline since 1982.
'Unconventional supplies'

BP also said that "global gas production declined for the first time on record", falling 2.1%.

"Production fell sharply in Russia (-12.1%) and Turkmenistan (-44.8%), driven by declining consumption - in Russia and much of the rest of Europe - and the availability in Europe of competitively priced liquefied natural gas," the report states.

The US became the world's largest gas producer, surpassing Russia, thanks to "continued expansion of unconventional supplies".

Global proven oil reserves increased by 700m barrels to 1.33 trillion barrels last year.

At the same time, the world's gas reserves grew by 2.21 trillion cubic meters to 187.49 trillion cubic meters.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac delisted from stock exchange

US home loan giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are to cease trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).

The state-sponsored lenders were ordered to leave the exchange by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).

They have both continued to suffer heavy losses in the aftermath of the financial crisis.

Their share prices have slumped to the NYSE's minimum level of $1 a share - requiring them to try to boost their stock, or delist.

The FHFA said the decision to exit the exchange did not "constitute any reflection on [Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's] current performance or future direction".

FHFA's acting director Edward DeMarco added that delisting the shares "makes sense and fits with the goal... to preserve and conserve assets".

The two lenders, which provide mortgage finance to other lenders, were placed under government control in September 2008 after being severely hurt by the collapse in the mortgage market.

Both have continued to make heavy losses, however, so far costing US taxpayers $145bn in bail-out costs.

Murdoch's News Corporation in BSkyB takeover bid


By Robert Peston BBC Business

Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation is seeking to take full control of satellite broadcaster BSkyB, by acquiring the 60.9% of the shares it does not already own.

News Corporation's initial offer of 700 pence a share, which values BSkyB at around £12bn, was rejected.

Talks are now expected to continue until a deal is reached. BSkyB said it wants "in excess of 800p" per share.

News of the bid pushed shares in BSkyB up 16.6%.

News Corporation also owns the Sun, Times and News of the World newspapers.

Industry giant

Agreement between News Corporation and BSkyB would go some way to clear the way for Mr Murdoch's ambitions, though any deal would also need regulatory approval.

"Both parties have agreed to work together to proceed with the regulatory process in order to facilitate a proposed transaction," said News Corporation.

BBC business editor Robert Peston said that if the deal did go ahead, it would "erase any scintilla of doubt that Mr Murdoch's News Corporation would be the most powerful of all the traditional media groups in the UK".

"The combination of Sky with his newspapers, such as the Sun and the Sunday Times, would generate annual revenues of around £8bn, compared with the £4.6bn income of the next largest player, the BBC."

Our editor added that any agreed deal between News Corporation and BSkyB may cause problems for the UK's coalition government.

He said this was because while the Conservatives had benefited from the support of News Corporation's newspapers during the general election, the Liberal Democrats were far more hostile to Mr Murdoch's media empire.

Whether to grant regulatory approval for any agreed takeover would be decided by the European Commission - unless it was called in by either Business Secretary Vince Cable or the Office of Fair Trading (OFT).

Mr Cable would have to say he had public interest concerns, while the OFT would have to stress competition fears.

British Sky Broadcasting was formed in 1990 by the merger of News Corporation's Sky Television and rival British Satellite Broadcasting.

Bebo sold by AOL after just two years

Internet company AOL has sold Bebo, the social networking site it bought two years ago for $850m (then £417m).

Criterion Capital Partners, a small private investment firm, announced that it had bought the business, but did not disclose the amount paid.

However, analysts suspect it to be just a fraction of the price paid by AOL in 2008.

Since then, Bebo has struggled to compete effectively against social networking rivals such as Facebook.

Earlier this year, AOL announced plans to sell or shut down Bebo because it was unable to provide the "significant investment" needed to prevent its decline as a business.

The BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones called AOL's decision to buy Bebo "one of the worst deals ever made in the dotcom era".

"The extraordinary thing is the deal was made years after the dotcom crash which was supposed to have taught the industry lessons," he said.

"The interesting thing is that the founder, Michael Birch, walked away with $300m - it's the art of timing."
'Active user base'

Criterion Capital's plans for Bebo are unclear, and the company was not immediately available to give further details.

But the new owners are believed to see significant potential in the business.

Bebo's headquarters is set to remain in San Francisco, at least in the near term, but job losses have not been ruled out.

In a statement, Adam Levin, Criterion Capital's managing partner, said there was plenty to be positive about.

"The young, highly active user base, revenue history, presence in countries throughout the world and solid technical infrastructure make it an attractive media platform," he said.

The Other U.S. Energy Crisis: Lack of R&D R&D Neglect is holding back innovative energy technologies

By Peter Coy Businessweek

BP (BP) says it's throwing its best people at stopping the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Nevertheless, it took an outsider—Energy Secretary Steven Chu, who has a Nobel Prize in physics—to come up with the idea of peering inside the malfunctioning blowout preventer with high-energy gamma rays. BP tried Chu's idea—after a few snickers and Incredible Hulk jokes, according to the Washington Post—and lo and behold, it worked. The probe was "crucial in helping us understand what is happening inside the BOP [blowout preventer] and informing the approach moving ahead," said Jane Lubchenco, head of the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration.

The gamma ray incident is symptomatic of a problem that's bigger than London-based BP: Energy companies worldwide are far less science-oriented than one might expect from an industry that is heavily dependent on technology for safety and profit. In the U.S., energy companies' spending on research, development, and deployment amounts to just 0.3 percent of sales. That's barely more than a tenth what the auto industry spends as a share of sales and is dwarfed by the pharmaceutical industry, which spends nearly 19 percent of sales. (American Petroleum Institute chief economist John Felmy says R&D measures understate his industry's "overall investment for the future.")

Many economists argue that government needs to step in when the private sector isn't providing the socially optimal amount of something like research. But government R&D spending on energy has been scarce, too. It was less than 0.03 percent of U.S. gross domestic product as of 2007, about one-third the share in Japan. The dearth of investment in energy R&D helps explain why the world is still getting its energy by punching holes in the sea floor rather than from safer, renewable sources such as the sun and the wind.

In his Oval Office speech on the Gulf spill on June 15, President Barack Obama cited a rapid boost in energy R&D as one of several ideas that "have merit and deserve a fair hearing in the months ahead." That was a paler endorsement than some boosters hoped for. On June 11, the American Energy Innovation Council called for a gradual increase to $16 billion in annual federal R&D energy spending, from around $5 billion now. The seven-member council includes Microsoft (MSFT) Chairman Bill Gates, General Electric (GE) Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt, and Silicon Valley venture capitalist John Doerr.

The drive for more energy R&D is up against formidable obstacles, starting with the budget deficit. Representative Ralph Hall, the ranking Republican on the House Science & Technology Committee, tried in May to cut about $40 billion from the $86 billion sought by House Democrats for the America COMPETES Act, which funds federal research and math and science education. "We must be mindful of our spending if America is to continue to compete globally," Hall said then. The House eventually voted to reauthorize the act without Hall's cuts, while the Senate hasn't yet acted. Even if Congress agrees to authorize the full $86 billion, funding could still be cut in the appropriations process.

Money isn't the only problem. On the right, many Republicans say the federal government should be involved only in basic science, not steps toward commercialization. On the left, many Democrats hope to kick-start research and investment in green energy via measures such as carbon caps that would make coal and oil more expensive.

Hanging in the balance are initiatives such as ARPA-E, a 20-employee Energy Dept. program that funds what Director Arun Majumdar calls "really high-risk, high-reward, disruptive technologies." ARPA-E is modeled on DARPA, the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which helped launch the Internet and the global positioning satellite system. Like DARPA, the Energy program is free from civil service hiring rules, so it can bring in top scientists and engineers for short stints. It began operations last year with a two-year allocation of $400 million in stimulus funds. The Obama Administration is seeking $300 million for ARPA-E for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.

Defying bureaucratic convention, ARPA-E is funding an unorthodox technique for producing fuel from plant matter even though it competes with another project of the Energy Dept., the Joint BioEnergy Institute. "That's the kind of environment we want," Majumdar said in a June 14 interview. "I'd rather have the competition inside the U.S. than outside the U.S."

What looks like fruitful competition to Majumdar can look like wasteful redundancy to a Congress that's worried about deficits. He says that's a problem. "Frankly we haven't done a good enough job of explaining what we're about. It's a new model."

The American Energy Innovation Council argues that ARPA-E merits $1 billion a year. Majumdar says he'd be happy just getting the requested $300 million given the big budget deficit. On the other hand, Energy's Chu testified last year that China is spending $9 billion a month on clean energy investments. Says Energy Under Secretary Kristina Johnson: "We're competing with some very fierce competitors that are throwing everything they have behind being successful in this clean energy economy."

The bottom line Lack of R&D is limiting development of new energy technologies, and prospects for a big increase remain cloudy.

Toyota is latest car maker hit by strike in China

By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business

Toyota Motor Corp., the latest automaker to be hit by a strike at a China parts supplier, said Thursday its car assembly operations were not affected by the short-lived dispute.

The strike comes amid mounting concern over signs of increasing unrest among the migrant workers who are the backbone of the country's industrial sector.

Niu Yu, spokesman for Toyota China in Beijing, said the strike at affiliate Toyoda Gosei Co. Ltd.'s plant in the northeastern city of Tianjin, had ended.

"So far, operations of our car assembly plant have not been affected," Niu said.

Toyoda Gosei spokesman Tomotaka Ito said the strike at the plant, Tianjin Star Light Rubber and Plastic Co., began Tuesday and ended Wednesday after the company agreed to review the pay structure for its 800 workers.

Production resumed Wednesday afternoon, despite a national holiday, to make up for lost time, said Ito, who would give no further details.

The strike was the first reported for Toyota following strikes at several China suppliers of Honda Motor Co. that forced that Japanese automaker to suspend car assembly intermittently in the past month due to a lack of parts.

So far, most of the auto-related labor disputes have been reported in southern China, near Guangzhou, where both Honda and Toyota have manufacturing bases along with their local partner Guangzhou Auto Group. Toyota has a separate joint venture in Tianjin with FAW Group.

Although Beijing has so far said little about specific labor disputes, earlier this week Premier Wen Jiabao signaled the leadership's concern, urging better treatment for the country's legions of young migrant workers.

"Migrant workers should be cared for, protected and respected, especially the younger generation," the official Communist Party paper, People's Daily, cited Wen as telling a group of migrant workers in Beijing.

In a commentary Thursday, the newspaper said China's economic model is facing a "turning point."

"Raising workers' income levels and adjusting the gap between rich and poor is not just an emergency response to protect stability," said the author Tang Jun, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank.

A labor law that went into effect in 2008 has accelerated an upsurge in workers' awareness of their rights. Meanwhile, there has been a generation shift between older migrant workers, who grew up in poverty and usually were the first in their families to seek non-farm work, and their children, who have higher expectations and less tolerance for low wages and harsh conditions.

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Swiss parliament clears way for US tax deal


By ELIANE ENGELER, Associated Press

Swiss lawmakers on Thursday gave final approval to a treaty with the United States that will hand Washington thousands of files on suspected tax cheats, agreeing to drop plans to allow a referendum on the issue.

Parliament's upper and lower house agreed that there will be no possibility of referendum on the deal that will see the country's biggest bank, UBS AG, divulge the names of 4,450 American clients suspected of tax evasion to U.S. authorities.

The agreement between both houses secured final approval of the treaty, which the government hopes will eventually end UBS's three-year battle with U.S. tax authorities that culminated in revelations the bank had for years helped American clients hide millions of dollars in offshore accounts.

UBS chief executive Oswald Gruebel welcomed the decision.

"I and the whole bank thank the Federal Council and those parliamentarians who worked to find a solution to this issue," he said in a statement.

The lower house voted 81-63 to drop its earlier demand that Swiss voters should be allowed to approve the deal in a referendum before it comes law. Forty-seven lawmakers abstained.

A popular ballot would have made Switzerland miss a late August deadline to hand over all 4,450 names because the vote would have been held in November at the earliest.

"Nothing now stands in the way of UBS client details being disclosed in cases where the decision handed down has taken legal effect," said the Swiss Justice Ministry in a statement.

The deal is crucial to UBS, which has faced intense pressure from U.S. authorities since 2007. Last year the bank agreed to turn over hundreds of client files and pay a $780 million penalty in return for a deferred prosecution agreement. But Washington has signaled that unless UBS reveals the further 4,450 American names demanded in the U.S.-Swiss agreement, it may face a crippling civil investigation just at a time when the bank is recovering from the subprime crisis and seeking to rebuild its U.S. business.

Swiss authorities have already transmitted the names of about 400 UBS clients who signed waivers as part of the Internal Revenue Service's voluntary disclosure program, according the Swiss Federal Tax Administration. A further 100 UBS clients gave their consent directly to Swiss authorities.

Shares in UBS were up 1.10 percent at 15.68 Swiss francs ($13.95) on the Zurich exchange.

miercuri, 16 iunie 2010

Bloomberg BusinessWeek Business Exchange


by: Arik Hesseldahl Bloomberg

Apple announced a new version of the Mac Mini today, bringing its design more in line with its siblings, the iMac and the MacBook Pro.

It’s nice to see Apple remaining committed to the Mac Mini. The line has been the subject of recurring rumors that Apple was close to killing it over the last few years, only to have its fans lobby Apple to keep it going. It once went an entire 19 months between updates. While It’s popular not only among consumers for being easy to connect to a TV. It’s also turned out to be a popular small and light server for small businesses. Apple sells a version specifically aimed at use as a server, which sells for a starting price of $999.

The new machine sports a unibody aluminum design similar to that used for the MacBook Pro, and is about 20 percent smaller than the previous Mac Mini. It’s less than an inch-and-a-half thick.

However don’t take its smaller size as any suggestion that it lacks power. Inside is an Intel Core 2 Duo processor clocked at 2.4 GHz and 2.66 GHz, an Nvidia GeForce 320M graphics processor, giving it twice the graphics power of its predecessor. The standard model comes with a 320 gigabyte hard drive and two gigabytes of RAM. Its starting price is $699.

Other big news is on the back. Like the iMac and MacBook Pro before it, the Mini now sports an SD memory card slot, and for those who use it like a digital media center, an HDMI display port for connecting to TV sets. There are also four USB ports.

Apple has also dubbed this new Mac Mini as the world’s most energy-efficient desktop. It bases that claim on how this machine compares to other desktop computers in the Energy Star 5.0 database as of this month. It also meets EPEAT Gold certification status.

A few other interesting notes about the new design. There’s a removable panel underneath the body that gives aces to the memory slots, allowing for easy RAM upgrades. It supports as much as 8 GB of RAM.

Heavy digital media users will find a lot to like. While the Mac Mini is a natural for watching movies from within iTunes and the Front Row, the Mini sports a DVD player, and can just as readily be connected to a nice set of stereo speakers, whether the music is coming from an iTunes playlist or a CD, or is streaming from the Web. Install software like Boxee or the Hulu desktop application for the Mac, and you’ve got a pretty good all-in-one digital media machine

Bloomberg BusinessWeek Business Exchange

Posted by: Arik Hesseldahl Businessweek

How bad was the AT&T data breach on Apple’s iPad? According to AT&T, and the information about affected subscribers was limited to their email address, and a serial number known as an ICCID.

AT&T sent an email apologizing to affected customers, blaming “malicious hackers,” for the incident in reference to Goatse Security, a security consulting firm that publicized the vulnerability last week.

Now a wireless security consultant says that an ICCID number, once disclosed, can lead to further vulnerabilities that have been known for more than two years. An ICCID is a 19- or 20-digit serial number printed on a SIM card, the thumbnail-sized chip that gives the iPad and most wireless phones access to the cellular networks on which they operate.

Chris Paget, president and CTO of H4RDW4RE, a Sunnyvale, California-based firm that specializes in wireless security wrote in a blog post that on the AT&T network, the ICCID number directly correlates to another more sensitive and important number known as an IMSI, or International Mobile Subscriber Identity. An IMSI is a unique 15-digit number stored inside a SIM card, and it’s the number that a phone to identify itself on the wireless network.

Anyone who understand the correlation between the ICCID and IMSI numbers could use that information to carry out other kinds of attacks against wireless subscribers, Paget writes.

It turns out, that the correlation between the two numbers has already been documented. In a 2008 paper, security researcher Lee Reiber, owner of Boise, Idaho-based Mobile Forensics, Inc., a firm that trains law enforcement in collecting evidence from wireless phones, documented exactly how to extract an IMSI number from an AT&T ICCID number.

With the IMSI number in hand, the potential for trouble-making by an attacker grows much more serious, Paget says. In one scenario, the IMSI can be used to retrieve the subscriber’s full name, phone number, and approximate location relative to the nearest cell tower. Additionally, an attacker might be able to listen to their voice mail messages, something that obviously doesn’t apply to iPad owners.

In a second, more extreme scenario, a determined attacker could program a notebook PC to mimic a cell tower, and then drive within a few miles of their location, and intercept traffic from their phone or iPad. He describes the scenarios in more detail here and cites more original research in making his case.

AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel declined to comment on Paget’s observations in an email.
The list of people whose addresses were exposed include New York Times CEO Janet Robinson and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg Businessweek.

SEC proposes new disclosures for target-date funds


By MARCY GORDON,

Federal regulators on Wednesday proposed new disclosure rules for target-date retirement funds that would require sponsors to spell out how they are investing the money and to warn about risks.

The Securities and Exchange Commission voted 5-0 to propose that marketing materials for target-date funds include how investments are being allocated among stocks, bonds, cash and such.

The proposed rules could be formally adopted sometime after a 60-day public comment period, possibly with changes.

Target-date funds, also called lifecycle funds, are pegged to a person's expected retirement year. They are an increasingly popular way to invest in 401(k) accounts and are appealing because of their "set-it-and-forget-it" approach. Usually named for the year the investor expects to retire, the funds now command a total of about $270 billion in assets.

The funds allocate investments among various types of assets, shifting to a more conservative mix as the target date for retirement approaches. The shift is called the fund's "glide path."

The funds drew criticism in the market meltdown of 2008 for wide variations in their returns, and excessive risks and high fees for some funds.

More than 40 companies offer target-date funds. The funds' complexities are so great that comparison tools from financial analysis companies are geared toward advisers and retirement plan administrators, not individual investors. It's difficult to make comparisons because of the wide variation in asset mixes.

Under the SEC proposal, target-date funds' marketing materials, whether electronic or in print, would have to include a prominent table, chart or graph showing the allocations among the various assets over the life of the fund. A statement would have to explain that the asset allocation changes over time.

The marketing materials also would have to include a statement telling prospective investors that they should consider their financial situation and tolerance for risk before going into a fund, and that it is possible to lose money investing in the fund, including at and after the target date.

"It's clear that investors need more information than just the date in a fund's name," SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said before the vote.

The government has designated the funds as a qualified "default" investment option. That means employers are protected from liability when they invest a worker's contributions in a target-date fund if the worker hasn't chosen otherwise.

"It's not true that this is a good default investment," said Richard Michaud, president and chief investment officer of Boston's New Frontier Advisors and a critic of target-date funds.

Michaud said the SEC's proposed disclosure rules are helpful. However, the agency also should make clear "that these funds are a pretty risky bet on a long-term market," he said in a telephone interview.

Michaud calls "a dangerous myth" the idea that an investor's level of risk should be based on age, since stocks are shown to outperform bonds around three-quarters of the time over the long run. Factors more relevant than age are the investor's financial and personal situations and tolerance for risk, he says.

Target-date funds came under criticism during the market meltdown of 2008 and in its aftermath. Among 31 funds with a 2010 target date, the average loss in 2008 was nearly 25 percent. Returns for those funds varied widely: from minus 3.6 percent to minus 41 percent. Some had half or more of the assets allocated to stocks, only two years from the retirement target.

The funds have mostly recovered their losses since then. However, returns have continued to range widely, according to the SEC, from 7 percent to 31 percent last year for 2010 target funds — with an average return of around 22 percent.

A Senate investigation raised the question of whether some funds charged unreasonable fees and carried excessive risk. Several major fund companies have made changes in response to the criticism, cutting fees for their target date funds and making asset mixes more conservative sooner.

Among the largest providers of target-date funds are Fidelity Investments, Vanguard Group and Principal Financial Group.