Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Thursday 29 April 2010

Times Online April 29, 2010

Kill the Competition: Spain downgraded ... HP buys ... Defence talks

Thursday, April 29, 0730 GMT
Top stories
The Times: The crisis affecting the eurozone worsened when Spain’s credit rating was downgraded less than 24 hours after Greece was sent into financial meltdown.
http://tinyurl.com/2a7gfug
Wall Street Journal: Hewlett-Packard, the computer giant, bought Palm, the smartphone maker, for about $1 billion (£660 million) in a surprise deal.
http://tinyurl.com/2556hq3
The Times: The Iraqi Government is in talks to buy 24 Hawk trainer jets from BAE Systems, the British defence company, for up to £1 billion ($1.5 billion).
http://tinyurl.com/2wbg8ed
Comment
Carl Mortished in The Times: If high eurozone borrowing costs are sustained for a long period, the Club Med holiday is well and truly over.
http://tinyurl.com/2egss8x
Jeremy Warner in The Daily Telegraph: If Europe does not act with decisiveness and determination, the doomsday machine will soon be back at full tilt.
http://tinyurl.com/2u68aw8
John Gapper in the Financial Times: If the crisis proves anything, it is that the ratings agencies enjoy too much authority among investors and regulators.
http://tinyurl.com/2ejelk6
Upside
The Times: Royal Dutch Shell, Europe’s largest oil company, announced a 49 per cent surge in first-quarter profits.
http://tinyurl.com/2uvu37p
The Independent: Royal Bank of Scotland, the state-backed bank, bowed to shareholder pressure to make bonus targets for its executives tougher.
http://tinyurl.com/2vbekwz
Wall Street Journal: US lawmakers ended the three-day standoff holding up action on the financial overhaul bill, allowing the Senate debate to proceed.
http://tinyurl.com/26n28j4
Downside
The Times: Virgin Atlantic was so scared of US regulators that the airline admitted running a cartel with British Airways in return for immunity to prosecution.
http://tinyurl.com/233cxsg
New York Times: Germany’s banks hold €28 billion (£24 billion, $37 billion) in Greek bonds, which exceeds the $11 billion (£7 billion) planned as part of an EU bailout.
http://tinyurl.com/3ynrjrs
The Times: Lloyd Blankfein, the boss of Goldman Sachs, instructed staff to hunker down, predicting more pain to come for the embattled bank.
http://tinyurl.com/2che8wb
Mergers and shakers
The Times: Forth Ports, the owner and operator of six Scottish ports, rejected its third takeover offer in as many months from a group of its own shareholders.
http://tinyurl.com/34zhjx3
Wall Street Journal: Continental Airlines convened a board meeting and planned a second one to discuss a potential merger with rival UAL’s United Airlines.
http://tinyurl.com/2e6r7tb
The Daily Telegraph: Guillaume Rambourg, the star Gartmore fund manager, was reinstated by his employer just weeks after he was suspended.
http://tinyurl.com/277x2yd
Around Asia
Wall Street Journal: Toyota recalled 50,000 Sequoia sport-utility vehicles in the US in another safety issue for the Japanese car maker.
http://tinyurl.com/2dbf8gv
New York Times: Japanese lawmakers forced bureaucrats to defend their budgets at public hearings streamed live on the internet.
http://tinyurl.com/2etwqbe
Wall Street Journal: Japan Airlines will end flights on 45 routes this year as the carrier accelerates a cost-cutting program.
http://tinyurl.com/2br7zuy
Look ahead
The Times: The US Federal Reserve will keep interest rates at rock bottom levels for "an extended period" even as the US economic recovery is getting stronger.
http://tinyurl.com/2atjc3l
The Independent: We7, the online music service, covered its streaming costs from advertising revenue last month and hopes to be in profit by the end of the year.
http://tinyurl.com/2d25u75
Wall Street Journal: Apple, the iPad maker, aims to charge close to $1 million (£660,000) for advertisements on its mobile devices this year.
http://tinyurl.com/2cp9xxg
MARKETS
FTSE 100 5,586.61 down 0.3% (Wednesday close)
Dow 11,045.27 up 0.5% (close)
S&P 500 1,191.36 up 0.7% (close)
Nasdaq 2,471.73 steady (close)
Nikkei 10,924.79 down 2.6% (Wednesday close, Thursday closed for a holiday)
Hang Seng 20,922.46 down 0.1% (latest)
Currencies
Sterling $1.5174/1.1492 euros (latest)
Euro $1.3203 (latest)
Commodities
Brent crude $86.06 down 10 cents (latest)
West Texas crude $83.13 down 9 cents (latest)
Gold $1166.00 down $5.80 (latest)
New York
Reuters: US stocks rose after the Federal Reserve pointed to signs of strength in the economy. Energy and financial shares were the top gainers. Banking giant JPMorgan Chase rose 2.5 per cent on news interest rates will be kept low. Energy firm Exxon Mobil rose 1.4 per cent after it raised its second-quarter payout. Chemical manufacturer Dow Chemical rose 5.9 per cent on better-than-expected profit. Comcast, the No.1 US cable operator, rose 1.9 per cent on good results. Networking product maker Broadcom rose 1.7 per cent a day after reporting a first-quarter profit. Generic drug maker Teva Pharmaceutical Industries fell 1.7 per cent after warnings from regulators about manufacturing violations.
http://tinyurl.com/2g76pau
Asia
Bloomberg: Most Asian stocks rose in early trade, led by consumer-related companies, as reports of increased earnings in China overshadowed a downgrade of Spain’s debt rating. Suning Appliance, the large Chinese electrical appliance retailer, rose 3.1 per cent on good profit. China Merchants Bank, the sixth largest commercial bank in China, rose 2.6 per cent after first-quarter profit rose. ANZ Bank, the No.3 Australian bank, fell 1.4 per cent on concern over Europe’s debt problems. The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index fell 0.2 per cent to 423.34 in early trade. Japanese markets are closed today for a national holiday.
http://tinyurl.com/2f3674r
Michael Beh
michaelwbeh@gmail.com
London
On a seesaw day for stockmarkets, 888 Holdings shareholders took their money off the table.
The internet gaming company tumbled 12.1p to 81.7p after cautioning that business has been disappointing since the start of April.
Average daily revenue is running about 13 per cent lower than in the first three months of this year after punters wagered less in 888’s internet casino, poker and bingo games.
Though the company in part blamed seasonal weakness across the industry, Barclays Capital reckoned the extent of the downturn suggested that there was "clearly a company-specific problem as well".
BarCap noted that 888 has no chunky sports betting business, a big earner for some of its rivals.
888’s fall, the steepest by some way by any of Britain’s top 250 companies, came despite comments from Gigi Levy, the chief executive, that online poker could be legalised in America this year. Internet gambling was outlawed there in 2006.
Overall, the FTSE 100 - 69.92 points lower at worst, 36.46 higher at best - closed 16.91 points easier at 5,586.61 on a day dominated by the ebb and flow of of Greece’s financial rescue.
Traders headed home steeling themselves for another choppy session today after Standard & Poor’s, the debt ratings agency, turned more cautious towards Spain a bare three minutes before markets in London closed.
Some 5.47 points of the Footsie’s fall were the result of bluechips being marked lower for starting to trade without the right to the next dividend payment. These included Tesco, 18p lower at 430.6p, and Centrica, owner of British Gas, which lost 15p to 296.2p.
Banks, one of the most sensitive sectors to sentiment towards Greece, dipped. So too did miners after investors switched from commodities intothe dollar, perceived as a safer investment.
However Sir John Parker, the new chairman of Anglo American, underscored his faith in the mining giant by buying almost £50,000-worth of shares at £28.75 each. They rose 6.5p to £28.07p.
Though oil prices eased, producers still rose on the coat tails of Royal Dutch Shell, whose B shares added 47.5p to £19.69 after an unexpected return to production growth.
Gary Parkinson
Gary.Parkinson@thetimes.co.uk