Monday, February 25, 2008

Getty Images to be sold to Hellman & Friedman

(Reuters) - Getty Images Inc (GYI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Monday it agreed to be bought by Hellman & Friedman affiliates for $34 per share in cash, in a deal it said was worth $2.4 billion, including the assumption of debt.
 

Auction-Rate Bonds Force `Predatory' Yields on Cities

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. municipal borrowers from Camden, New Jersey, to Sacramento, California, may face a third week of higher interest costs as failures in the auction-rate bond market persist.

Auctions run by banks to determine the rate on more than $45 billion of bonds didn't attract enough buyers last week, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. research. Even some successful auctions resulted in rates that were twice what borrowers paid in January, as investors who submitted bids demanded higher yields.

``The market right now is very predatory,'' said Marcia Maurer, chief financial officer of the Sacramento Regional County Sanitation District. The agency's weekly expense on $250 million of debt more than doubled to $343,000 from last month.

Investors enticed by rates that jumped as high as 20 percent are seeking opportunities in the $330 billion market no longer supported by dealers from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Citigroup Inc. and UBS AG that for years committed their capital to prevent failures. Thousands of unsuccessful auctions have driven up taxpayers' borrowing costs and left investors in the securities unable to get their money.

``Aggressive institutional investors have moved in to pick up auction-rate issues at short-term rates ranging from 5 percent to as much as 15 percent or more,'' George Friedlander, a municipal strategist at Citigroup in New York, said in a report at the end of last week.

Failure Rate

Four of the biggest agents that collect orders from bond dealers and determine winning rates reported failures on 258, or 67 percent, of 386 auctions Feb 22. That's in line with the average since Feb. 15, according to data compiled by Bank of America Corp. and Bloomberg.

Auction bonds, created in 1984, had until recent months allowed municipalities, hospitals, student lenders and funds to borrow long-term at money-market costs by adjusting interest rates through bidding every seven, 28 or 35 days.

When an auction fails, the rate reverts to a ``maximum'' specified in bond documents, or one pegged to money-market benchmarks. Holders of the bonds are stuck with the securities until a later auction attracts enough demand.

Hedge funds and other non-traditional investors showed ``strong interest'' last week in tax-exempt deals with high rates, Alex Roever, a JPMorgan fixed-income analyst, said in an e-mail. The average rate for seven-day municipal auction bonds rose to a record 6.59 percent on Feb. 13 from 4.03 percent the previous week, according to a Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association index.

Closed-End Funds

Many of last week's failures occurred at auctions of debt issued by closed-end funds with penalty rates ranging from 3 percent to 6 percent, data compiled by Deutsche Bank AG, Bank of New York Mellon Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and Wilmington Trust Corp. show. Closed-end funds have about $60 billion in auction securities outstanding. Municipalities have $166 billion.

The auction-rate market began unraveling late last year as investor confidence in the health of bond insurers backing many of the securities waned. A bank bailout of New York-based Ambac Financial Group Inc. might come as soon as this week, according to a person familiar with rescue talks.

The collapse accelerated as banks including Citigroup and UBS, which have taken losses of about $162 billion from securities related to the collapse of subprime mortgages, grew unwilling to commit capital to support the auctions.
 

Citigroup May Post First-Quarter Loss, Whitney Says

 (Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc., the biggest U.S. bank by assets, may post its second-straight quarterly loss because of writedowns on home-equity loans and junk-grade corporate loans, Oppenheimer & Co.'s Meredith Whitney said.

The bank may post a loss of $1.6 billion, or 28 cents a share, for the first quarter, compared with a profit of about $5 billion, or $1.01, a year earlier, Whitney wrote today in a note to clients. The prediction compares with the 63-cents per share average of 12 analyst estimates surveyed by Bloomberg.

The rate of loan losses is ``grossly underestimated by consensus estimates'' at Citigroup and other U.S. banks, Whitney wrote. ``Core fundamentals are rapidly deteriorating.'' She cut her per-share estimate for 2008 earnings by more than 70 percent to 75 cents. The New York-based company's shares could fall more than 36 percent to less than $16, she wrote. They've declined about 15 percent this year.

Citigroup posted a $9.8 billion loss for the fourth quarter, the widest in its 196-year history, after writing down subprime mortgage-linked collateralized debt obligations whose value plummeted last year as investors shunned securities linked to the least creditworthy borrowers. Vikram Pandit stepped in as chief executive officer in December, after Charles O. ``Chuck'' Prince was forced to resign.

Whitney was among the first analysts to gauge the depth of Citigroup's losses, writing in a note last October that the bank may have to cut dividend payments to shareholders for the first time since the 1990s. In January, the bank slashed its dividend by 41 percent, reversing a pledge made by its executive- committee chairman, former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, to preserve the shareholder payout.
 

Visa May Raise as Much as $17 Billion in Initial Sale

(Bloomberg) -- Visa Inc. may raise as much as $17 billion in what would be the biggest U.S. initial public stock offering.

Visa, the world's largest payment-card network, plans to sell 406 million Class A shares for $37 to $42 each, the San Francisco-based company said in a regulatory filing today. Banks have the option of selling an additional 40.6 million shares, pushing the potential size of the deal to $18.8 billion.

The company is trying to replicate the success of its smaller rival, MasterCard Inc., whose shares have surged more than fivefold since a May 2006 IPO. Demand for initial public offerings has waned this year, with 97 companies raising $12 billion, or 43 percent less than in the same period last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

At the high end of the projected range, Visa's transaction would be the world's second-biggest IPO, after the $22 billion raised by Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. in 2006.
 

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Microsoft to open up some key software blueprints

(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp said on Thursday that it would make key technology elements of some of its best-selling software products widely available to boost interoperability of its software with that of competitors and customers.

To make connecting Microsoft products with third-party software products easier, Microsoft will publish on its Web site key software blueprints, known as application program interfaces, pertaining to its high-volume products used by other Microsoft products.

Microsoft also pledged not to sue open-source developers for development or noncommercial distribution of those software blueprints.

In January, the European Commission launched new antitrust investigations into Microsoft to see whether the company broke competition rules to help its Web browser and its Office and Outlook products.
 

Morgan Stanley Hires Kenneth deRegt to New Role Overseeing Risk

(Bloomberg) -- Morgan Stanley, the second-biggest U.S. securities firm by market value, hired Kenneth deRegt to a new position in the office of the chairman, where he will oversee risk management and internal controls.
 
DeRegt, who worked at Morgan Stanley for 20 years before joining Aetos Capital in 2002, will start on Feb. 25 and join the firm's management committee, according to an internal memo today from John Mack, Morgan Stanley's chief executive officer. The contents of the memo were confirmed by Mark Lake, a spokesman in New York.
 
 

Microsoft to Change Technology Practices in Bid to Appease EU

 (Bloomberg) -- Microsoft Corp., the world's biggest software maker, announced a series of changes in its technology and in how much information it gives developers about its products, in a bid to satisfy European regulators.
 

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

AT&T, Verizon May Fall Further as Flat Rates Portend Price War

(Bloomberg) -- AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. declined for the second straight day in New York trading after adopting flat-rate mobile calling plans that could be the opening salvos in a price war.

AT&T and Verizon Wireless, the two top U.S. wireless carriers, announced plans yesterday to sell unlimited calls for a flat fee of $99.99 a month. Credit Suisse cut its ratings on shares of AT&T and Verizon Communications, co-owner of Verizon Wireless. Robert W. Baird & Co. lowered its AT&T rating to match its neutral stance on Verizon Communications.

The unlimited plans, including another announced by T-Mobile USA Inc., pose a competitive challenge as U.S. mobile carriers already struggle to reach the remaining fifth of Americans that don't yet have a wireless phone. While analysts estimated the new rates may not hurt sales, they worried about future price cuts.

``There's no going back,'' said Credit Suisse's Christopher Larsen, who cut AT&T and Verizon shares to a neutral rating from the equivalent of a buy recommendation. ``It's extremely unlikely prices go up from $99, so now you've created a ceiling for what unlimited pricing will be.''

AT&T, based in San Antonio, fell $2.41, or 6.7 percent, to $33.48 at 10:13 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, the biggest drop in five years. The shares lost 5.3 percent yesterday. New York-based Verizon declined $1.60, or 4.5 percent, to $33.74, extending yesterday's 6.6 percent loss.

While the pricing plans may only affect the less than 5 percent of subscribers who pay more than $100 a month, they will convince more customers to replace their home phones with mobile handsets, said Larsen, who is based in New York.

Upper Tier

The plans announced yesterday aim at the upper tier of customers who spend about twice what an average mobile-phone user paid last quarter, as reported by AT&T and Verizon.

The new rate plans reminded Stanford Group Co.'s Michael Nelson of the day the old AT&T Wireless began selling local and long-distance service for one price.

``It turned the wireless industry upside down,'' the New York-based analyst said in an interview yesterday. ``It caused all the carriers to come up with completely new calling plans, to really revisit their entire business models.''

The flat-rate movement ``raises the risk profile for a pricing war across the entire industry,'' said Nelson.

The former AT&T Wireless, which is now part of AT&T's mobile-phone unit, started its Digital One Rate plan in 1998, erasing the distinction between local and long-distance calls on mobile phones, keeping rates flat regardless of the caller's location.
 

U.S. Economy: Housing Slump Fails to Quell Inflation

(Bloomberg) -- The two-year housing slump pushing the U.S. economy toward a recession hasn't alleviated inflation pressures, reports today showed.

Consumer prices rose 0.4 percent from December, with costs excluding food and energy climbing 0.3 percent, the most since June 2006, the Labor Department said. Builders started work on 1.012 million homes at an annual rate in January, close to a 16- year low, the Commerce Department reported in Washington.

The figures mean Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will need to consider raising interest rates as soon as the economy stabilizes. Bernanke, who last week said the Fed is prepared to keep lowering interest rates, warned that faster inflation would ``greatly complicate'' the central bank's job.

``What this means is that they don't have as much comfort to play with rates,'' Ellen Zentner, an economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, said on Bloomberg Television, referring to Fed officials. ``Once the U.S. economy looks like it's started to stabilize, they're going to have to jump right back in to that, raising rates back up to neutral.''

Treasury securities slumped after the consumer price report, while recouping most of the losses later. Ten-year note yields increased to 3.93 percent at 9:54 a.m. in New York from 3.90 percent late yesterday. The Standard & Poor's 500 stock index lost 0.8 percent, to 1,337.97.

Lowest Since 1991

Building permits, an indication of future construction, fell 3 percent to a 1.048 million rate, the lowest level since November 1991, today's Commerce report showed.

Housing starts were projected to rise to a 1.01 million pace from an originally reported 1.006 million rate in December, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 72 economists. Permits were forecast to drop to a 1.05 million rate, from 1.068 million in December.

``We don't think housing has hit bottom yet,'' said Douglas Porter, deputy chief economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto. ``Until we get some stabilization in sales or even a mild improvement, it's likely that construction will continue to weaken.''

A jump in food and energy costs, rents and clothing prices led the consumer-price index higher last month. Economists had forecast a 0.3 percent increase, with the so-called core rate gaining 0.2 percent, Bloomberg surveys showed.

Today's price report ``certainly showed a broad-based intensification of inflation pressures,'' said Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York. While the Fed currently ``is looking at growth,'' inflation ``will come back on the radar screen'' when economic data improve, he said.

Food Costs

Food prices, which account for about one-seventh of the CPI, rose 0.7 percent, matching the biggest gain since May 2004, after a 0.1 percent increase in January. Energy prices last month increased 0.7 percent, after rising 1.7 percent the previous month.

``Even if energy prices remain flat, the continued rise in retail food prices will damp consumer spending growth,'' JPMorgan Chase & Co. economists wrote in a note to clients last week.

Fuel costs were up 4.5 percent. Apparel prices rose 0.4 percent after a 0.1 percent increase in December.

The consumer price index is the government's broadest gauge of costs for goods and services. Almost 60 percent of the CPI covers prices that consumers pay for services ranging from medical visits to airline fares and movie tickets.
 

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

U.S. Stocks Rise, Led by Energy Companies; European Shares Gain

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks rose, led by energy and mining companies, after oil gained for the seventh time in eight days and copper climbed to a four-month high.

Exxon Mobil Corp., the biggest U.S. fuel company, and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., the world's second-largest copper producer, advanced. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the biggest retailer, increased after fourth-quarter profit topped analysts' estimates. Rallies in raw-materials producers lifted Asia's stock benchmark to a two-week high, while European shares rebounded from earlier losses as insurers rose.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index added 14.13 points, or 1.1 percent, to 1,364.12 as of 9:41 a.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 121.63, or 1 percent, to 12,469.84. The Nasdaq Composite Index gained 22.46, or 1 percent, to 2,344.26. The U.S. market was closed yesterday for Presidents' Day.

``The general earnings picture is quite good,'' said Lincoln Anderson, the Boston-based chief investment officer of LPL Financial Services, which helps oversee about $271 billion. ``U.S. stocks are sort of on sale.''

Fourth-quarter profit for the S&P 500's 412 members that have reported results dropped by an average 19 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Excluding financial companies, earnings climbed 18 percent. The S&P 500 trades at 13.9 times its members' estimated 2008 profit, based on analysts' projections compiled by Bloomberg. Index members last traded at a valuation of less than 14 times historic earnings in 1990.

Weekly Gain

The S&P 500 rose last week for the third time in a month after the biggest jump in oil since November lifted energy producers, and earnings from consumer companies exceeded analysts' estimates.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 1.6 percent today to a two-week high as Rio Tinto Group said it's seeking a bigger price increase for its iron ore from steelmakers than the 65 percent obtained by a rival.

Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index rose 0.9 percent after earlier declining as much as 1.3 percent. A gauge of insurers added 2.1 percent for the biggest gain among 18 industry groups.
 

Medco profit tops estimates

(Reuters) - Medco Health Solutions Inc (MHS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings on Tuesday, helped by sales of generic drugs, and the pharmacy benefit manager boosted its full-year profit forecast, sending its shares higher.

Medco, which derives more than half its profit from home delivery of generic medicines by mail, said its rosier outlook reflected confidence in its fundamentals, new business, and more generics becoming available sooner than anticipated.

Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), which administer prescription drug benefits for employers and health plans and operate large mail-order pharmacies, have profited from the availability of low-cost generic versions of popular drugs.

Morgan Stanley analyst David Veal said in a research note, "Another quarter of solid growth, when coupled with higher guidance, affirm our positive view of the PBM industry and should offer relief for the high level of investor nervousness around the quarter."

After a huge gain in 2007, Medco shares were down 3 percent this year through Friday's close, compared with a 13 percent drop for rival Express Scripts Inc (ESRX.O: Quote, Profile, Research). Medco shares rose 4 percent to $51 in pre-market trading on Tuesday.

Fourth-quarter net income fell 9 percent to $207.6 million, or 38 cents per share, from $228.8 million, or 39 cents per share, a year earlier.

The latest results were hurt by higher-than-expected costs tied to new clients and expenses related to two acquisitions. The year-earlier earnings were boosted by the temporary availability of a generic version of a popular blood thinner.
 

Monday, February 18, 2008

Home movie DVD battle won, hard sell begins

(Reuters) - Consumers will be the winners, through better quality home movies and lower prices, when Toshiba Corp finally calls time on its DVD technology, ending a long-running battle to set the format for next-generation discs.

Viewers seeking sharper movies on high-definition DVDs will no longer have to choose between rival incompatible formats. A single format should help accelerate the shift to the new technology in the $24 billion home DVD market.

But, while they will get better audio quality and higher resolution pictures -- and they will likely wait for DVD player prices to halve -- consumers will probably have to upgrade their television sets to make the most of them.

Sony Corp's Blu-ray technology is close to winning the format war for home movie DVDs after a source at Toshiba said it was planning to exit its HD DVD business after Hollywood studios and big retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc backed Blu-ray.

"This has been a long overdue end to the format war that has frustrated and confused consumers, and will allow vendors to focus resources on the Blu-ray technology," said Claudio Checchia, an analyst with research firm IDC.

"I would expect a more aggressive push towards Blu-ray in the second half, resulting in more movie content, more stand-alone DVD players, and prices for these players falling to attractive levels by Christmas."

Checchia said the cheapest Blu-ray player on the market was Sony's PlayStation 3 video game console, costing about $400.
 

Northern Rock a lingering risk to Brown's future

(Reuters) - Nationalizing ailing Northern Rock bank may be the best option left to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, but lingering doubts over its future risk chipping away at public confidence in the run up to the next election.

Hopes for a fast Northern Rock turnaround are hostage to financial markets stabilizing, a buoyant housing market returning and approval for nationalization from the European Union that does not result in a breakup and big job losses.

Brown has staked his credibility on protecting Britain from the fallout of the global credit crisis. But with the economy and the housing market slowing, he will be in the firing line if things get worse and the public looks for someone to blame.

And if those with Northern Rock mortgages get houses repossessed in a downturn, the chances are high that newspapers hostile to the ruling Labour government will use their headlines to attack Brown's policies.

So just as the Iraq war and a scandal over political party funding dogged former Prime Minister Tony Blair until he finally threw in the towel last year, so Northern Rock risks becoming a millstone for Brown.

"It was interesting that Brown was saying the test for the government is economic stability as there are no guarantees it would pass that test given the turmoil could still pass through to the economy," said Philip Shaw, chief economist at banking group Investec.
 

Rio Seeks Higher Prices Than Vale in Iron-Ore Talks

(Bloomberg) -- Rio Tinto Group, the world's second- largest iron-ore producer, is seeking bigger price increases from Asia steelmakers than Brazilian rival Cia. Vale do Rio Doce.

Rio wants to receive a ``freight premium'' to reflect the lower cost for customers in China, Japan and South Korea of shipping ore from ports in Australia rather than Brazil, it said today in a statement distributed by the Regulatory News Service. Nippon Steel Corp., JFE Holdings Inc. and Posco today said they agreed to a 65 percent increase in Vale's prices from April 1.

This ``could mark the end of the `one price fits all' settlements of the last few decades,'' Michael Rawlinson, head of mining, resources and energy at Liberum Capital Ltd. in London, wrote today in a report. A full recovery by Rio of the freight premium to China would mean a ``massive'' 154 percent boost in ore prices, he said.

In comparison, JFE agreed to a 71 percent boost for higher- grade ore from Vale's Carajas mine in Brazil, while the biggest- ever annual gain was 71.5 percent in the year that started April 1, 2005.

Contract prices for the steelmaking ingredient have risen to a record for a sixth straight year as China boosts output of the metal to feed a construction boom. Soaring freight fees last year added to the price increases for Asian steelmakers and made iron ore from Australia more cost effective than Brazilian supplies.

Carajas Settlement

Rio Tinto ``will continue to negotiate to obtain a freight premium, to reflect its proximity to Asia and its major customers,'' Sam Walsh, chief executive officer of the London- based company's iron ore unit, said today in the statement.

Rio will also seek ``further customer clarification about the settlements, and in particular the settlement for Carajas ore, which is the relevant reference ore for Rio Tinto products,'' Walsh said.

BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's largest mining company, tried and failed to negotiate a freight premium in 2005, Macquarie analyst Jim Lennon said today by telephone from London. The company didn't get the support of Rio and other producers at the time, he added.

``This has never happened before, but it's certainly a possibility,'' Lennon said. ``The fact that spot prices are three times higher than contract prices means that 65 percent is almost being viewed as a disappointment by the market.''

BHP, based in Melbourne, has started seeking regulatory approvals for its increased $141 billion all-share hostile bid for Rio, which was rejected by Rio on Feb. 6 as too low. A combination of the companies would rival Vale in iron-ore output.
 

Stocks Rise in Europe, Latin America; Credit Suisse, Vale Climb

(Bloomberg) -- European stocks rose, led by banks and metal producers, on optimism this year's 12 percent drop in the region's benchmark index was too steep given the outlook for sales. Shares in Latin America gained, while Asian equities fell.

Credit Suisse Group rose the most in three weeks in Zurich after Qatar said it's buying shares in the second-biggest Swiss bank, while Barclays Plc and Lloyds TSB Group Plc climbed in London as traders speculated on higher dividends. BHP Billiton Ltd. followed metals prices higher in Europe, while Cia. Vale do Rio Doce rallied in Sao Paulo.

The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index added 1.7 percent as of 3:18 p.m. in London, and the MSCI World Index increased 0.4 percent, as gains from Europe and Latin America more than offset declines in Australian bank shares and Japanese insurers. Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 0.8 percent. The U.S. market is closed today for the Presidents' Day holiday.

Qatar's purchase ``gives the market a boost,'' said Salah Seddik, who helps oversee $5.9 billion at Richelieu Finance in Paris. ``There's been some good news in the financial industry. The strong declines we've seen have left some buying opportunities.''

Concern the subprime mortgage slump will lead to more losses sent Europe's Stoxx Banks Index down 17 percent this year. The gauge was valued at 7.5 times profit in the week ended Feb. 8, the lowest since at least 1998, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The MSCI Latin America Index added 2.1 percent. Brazil's Bovespa index jumped the most in a week, advancing 2 percent, while Chile's Ipsa stock index rose 0.9 percent.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 0.6 percent today, reversing an earlier gain of 0.8 percent.

European Markets

National benchmarks advanced in all 18 western European markets except Greece. France's CAC 40 rose 1.5 percent, while the U.K.'s FTSE 100 climbed 2 percent. Germany's DAX increased 1.7 percent.

The Stoxx 50 jumped 1.6 percent, as did the Euro Stoxx 50, a measure for the euro region. All of the 18 industry groups in the Stoxx 600 gained, with five stocks rising for each one that fell.

Credit Suisse rose 3.1 percent to 56.7 francs. Qatar is accumulating shares in Credit Suisse and plans to spend as much as $15 billion on European and U.S. bank stocks over the next year, the Gulf state's prime minister said in an interview.

``We have a relation with Credit Suisse and we bought some of the stock from the market, actually, but I cannot say what percentage because still we are in the process,'' Sheikh Hamad bin Jasim bin Jaber al-Thani, who is also chief executive officer of the Qatar Investment Authority, said in an interview late yesterday in Doha.

Barclays, Lloyds TSB

Barclays, the U.K.'s third-biggest bank, jumped 6.8 percent to 456.5 pence. Lloyds TSB, the U.K.'s No. 1 provider of unsecured loans, increased 6.4 percent to 421 pence.

Barclays and Lloyds, which are seeking to quell concern about financial institutions, are expected to report ``robust'' results, the newspaper said. Barclays will lift its dividend by 10 percent on Feb. 19, the Times reported, without saying where it got the information.

Barclays spokesman Robin Tozer and a Lloyds TSB spokesman Leigh Calder declined to comment on the report.

HBOS Plc, the U.K.'s biggest mortgage lender, advanced 4.1 percent to 633.5 pence. Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, the U.K.'s second-largest bank, added 2.9 percent to 360.75 pence.

UBS AG fell 1.2 percent to 35.58 francs after a Bear Stearns Cos. analyst downgraded the stock, forecasting more writedowns on debt holdings.

New disclosure of holdings affected by the subprime debacle ``revealed the full and frightening extent of UBS's potential problems,'' Christopher Wheeler wrote, cutting his stock recommendation to ``peer perform'' from ``outperform.''

Steel Price Accord

Vale do Rio Doce surged the most in three weeks, climbing 5.7 percent to 49.15 reais.

Asia's three largest steelmakers agreed to pay Rio de Janeiro- based Vale, the world's biggest iron-ore producer, 65 percent more than last year for the material. Vale said the price increase shows the market is going through ``very tight conditions.''

ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steelmaker, gained 1.4 percent to 48.22 euros. Nippon Steel Corp., the second-biggest, rose 3.2 percent to 575 yen, its highest close since Feb. 7.

``It's good that the price increases are being decided early,'' Alan Coats, an analyst at HSBC Holdings Plc in London, said today in a telephone interview. ``It means they can be passed on.''

BHP Billiton

BHP Billiton, the world's largest mining company, gained 3.9 percent to 1,612 pence. Vedanta Resources Plc, India's biggest copper producer, climbed 3.9 percent to 2,153 pence.

Copper advanced to the highest in almost four months in London after China, the world's largest user, said imports grew 6.6 percent in January from the previous month. The metal for delivery in three months rose 2.3 percent to $7,910 a metric ton, the highest intraday price since Oct. 29. Zinc and lead also climbed.

Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., Australia's third-largest bank, dropped 6.1 percent to A$22.46, the lowest since September 2005, after its chief executive said a ``bloodbath'' in debt markets will wipe out earnings growth.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the country's top mortgage lender, lost 5.1 percent to A$44.

Aioi Insurance Co., Japan's fourth-largest nonlife insurer, tumbled 6.8 percent to 439 yen, after a newspaper said it will have $740 million of subprime-related losses.
 

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Comcast, Pressured by Holders, Sets Buyback, Dividend

(Bloomberg) -- Comcast Corp., the cable-TV operator pressured to boost investor returns, said it will buy back $6.9 billion of its stock over two years and pay its first dividend in almost a decade, sending the shares up the most in five years.

Fourth-quarter net income rose 54 percent to $602 million, or 20 cents a share, from $390 million, or 13 cents, a year earlier, Philadelphia-based Comcast said today in a statement. Profit beat the 17-cent average of 17 analysts' estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales gained 14 percent to $8.01 billion.

The buyback and annual dividend of 25 cents followed criticism from investors including Chieftain Capital Management Inc., who said Comcast's acquisitions and capital spending were excessive. Last month, Chieftain called for Comcast to reward shareholders and oust Chief Executive Officer Brian Roberts.

``Investors had been looking for a return of cash,'' Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. analyst Craig Moffett said in an interview on Bloomberg Radio. ``That signals confidence from the management that they really do believe that capital intensity is going to fall. We got that this morning in a big share repurchase.''

Moffett, based in New York, rates the stock ``outperform.''

Comcast rose $1.26, or 7.1 percent, to $19.07 at 9:32 a.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market trading, after gaining as much as 7.2 percent, its biggest rise since October 2002. The stock had declined 35 percent in the past year before today.

The company may increase its dividend ``over time,'' co- Chief Financial Officer Michael Angelakis said on a conference call.
 

New York's Dinallo Considers Splitting Bond Insurers

(Bloomberg) -- Bond insurers may be split into two pieces to bolster credit ratings and protect municipalities and bondholders, New York's top insurance regulator plans to tell Congress.

One part would operate the profitable municipal bond insurance business, while the other would handle so-called structured finance products, according to testimony prepared for Eric Dinallo, the New York State insurance superintendent. Dinallo is scheduled to address a U.S. congressional committee today.

``Our first priority will be to protect the municipal bondholders and issuers,'' according to Dinallo's testimony. ``We cannot allow the millions of individual Americans who invested in what was a low-risk investment lose money because of subprime excesses. Nor should subprime problems cause taxpayers to unnecessarily pay more to borrow for essential capital projects.''
 

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Coca-Cola profit rises sharply

(Reuters) - Coca-Cola Co (KO.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the world's largest maker of soft drinks, reported higher-than-expected quarterly profit on Wednesday, helped by higher sales, acquisitions and foreign exchange rates.

Coca-Cola said fourth-quarter net income was $1.21 billion, or 52 cents per share, compared with $678 million, or 29 cents per share, a year ago.

Excluding charges, Coke earned 58 cents per share, topping analysts' average estimate of 55 cents, according to Reuters Estimates.

Net operating revenue rose to $7.33 billion from $5.93 billion a year ago, helped by a 6 percent increase in sales of drink concentrate, the company's main business.

Currency exchange rates boosted revenue 8 percentage points, since the weak dollar versus foreign currencies increases the value of international sales when they are converted to U.S. dollars for inclusion on the company's income statement.

Unit case volume rose 5 percent in the quarter, supported by acquisitions.

Coke, which owns about 35 percent of its bottler Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc (CCE.N: Quote, Profile, Research), saw its year-ago profit impacted by an asset write-down the bottler took related to its North American franchise license.
 

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

JD Group: More cases pending

(Fin24) - The Financial Services Providers' ombud is investigating eight other cases pertaining to the lending practices of furniture retailer JD Group.


This follows a ruling by FSP obmud Charles Pillai, which found that JD Group subsidiary Barnetts had circumvented the FAIS Act.


The company was ordered to pay back charges, interest on those charges and case fees to a customer who had bought a television and stove on credit, after Pillai found the customer - Ntiya Thuliswe Gumede, a domestic worker earning R300 a week - had not been made aware of the terms and conditions of the sale of a stove and television she had bought at Barnetts' Port Shepstone branch.


David Davidson at the ombud's office says they had eight cases relating to JD Group, prior to the determination being made public.


Davidson says that the cases are still to be investigated, first to determine whether they fall within their jurisdiction and also whether they any grounds.


The complaints relate to dealings with, among others: JD group businesses Bradlows, Hi-Fi Corporation, Russells, and Price n Pride, as well as Ellerines, Lewis, The Furniture Shop and OK Furniture.
 
 

Vodafone still after Vodacom?

(Fin24) - Any notion that Vodafone will give in to Telkom's rejection of its offer for a controlling stake in Vodacom (the duo's joint cellular business) has been dismissed - at least given Vodafone CE Arun Sarin's declaration that Africa and Asia were firmly on Vodafone's growth radar screen.


In a carefully crafted speech steering clear of the company's intention to up its control of Vodacom, Sarin - addressing a large audience at the 3GSM Mobile Word Conference in Barcelona, Spain - said South Africa and India were two countries in emerging markets critical to Vodafone's growth strategy.


"Last year we recorded 15% growth in our South African-based business," said Sarin, adding that with most markets across Europe reaching saturation South Africa and India were critical to the company's growth plans.


In India - a market in which Vodafone made its foray after acquiring a controlling stake in Bharti Telecoms - the company had signed up nearly 1.5m subscribers.


"Our target in that particular market is to sign up close to 300m subscribers over the next three years," said Sarin.


Asked by Fin24 to state weather Vodafone would return for Vodacom with a revised offer, Sarin declined to answer before quickly making a dash to the exit door of a packed auditorium with a horde of Vodacom executives in tow.
 
 

Miller Says Microsoft Needs to Enhance Yahoo Offer

(Bloomberg) -- Legg Mason Inc. fund manager Bill Miller, the second-biggest shareholder of Yahoo! Inc., said Microsoft Corp. will need to raise its $44.6 billion offer to buy the Internet company.

``We think Microsoft will need to enhance its offer if it wants to complete a deal,'' Miller, 58, wrote in a Feb. 10 letter to shareholders released today by the Baltimore-based company.

Miller heads Legg Mason Capital Management, which owned about 80 million shares, or 6 percent, of Yahoo on Sept. 30, Bloomberg data show. Microsoft, the biggest software maker, on Jan. 31 bid $31-per-share to buy Yahoo, 62 percent more than the closing price the day before the offer. Yahoo yesterday rejected the bid, saying it ``substantially undervalues'' the company.

``We think this deal is a strategic imperative for Microsoft, and that Yahoo is in a tough spot if it wishes to remain independent,'' Miller wrote. ``It will be hard for Yahoo to come up with alternatives that deliver more value than Microsoft will ultimately be willing to pay.''

Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, responded yesterday to the Yahoo board's rejection with a statement calling its offer a ``full and fair proposal.'' The company didn't disclose its next steps and said it is ``moving forward'' with its $31-a-share bid for Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo.

Miller said Legg Mason's own calculations put Yahoo's value in the range of $40 or more per share.

Countrywide Deal

Miller, whose subsidiary is the biggest holder of Countrywide Financial Corp., said in the letter released today that he hasn't decided to back the bid by Bank of America Corp. to buy the largest U.S. home lender.

The offer has ``truncated'' any gains in Countrywide's shares, Miller said. Bank of America, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Jan. 11 agreed to buy Countrywide after the stock lost 85 percent of its value in a year. The bank's takeover bid equates to less than $8 a share for Calabasas, California-based Countrywide.
 

TPG Seeks More Than $15 Billion for Buyout Fund, Investors Say

(Bloomberg) -- TPG Inc., the private-equity firm that last year bought TXU Corp. in the largest U.S. leveraged buyout, is seeking more than $15 billion for a new fund, according to potential investors.

The investment committee of Washington state's pension fund, which met with TPG co-founder David Bonderman Feb. 7, will recommend a $750 million commitment, said Liz Mendizabal, a spokeswoman in Olympia. Bonderman is set to discuss the fund, called TPG VI, with the Oregon Investment Council Feb. 27.

TPG, based in Fort Worth, Texas, is putting together the fund even as deal-making is stalled after a doubling of financing costs in the second half of 2007. Endowments and pension funds, seeking returns that top stocks and bonds, are increasing their investments with private-equity firms, whose assets may reach $5 trillion by 2012, according to research firm Private Equity Intelligence Ltd. in London.

``The public markets are down or soft and there's no other game,'' said Lyons Brewer, a managing director of C.P. Eaton Partners LLC, a Rowayton, Connecticut-based firm that helps buyout firms and hedge funds raise money.

Funds raised a record $502 billion last year, according to Private Equity Intelligence, including $21.7 billion by New York-based Blackstone Group LP, the industry's biggest pool.

TPG Partners IV, the $5.3 billion fund the firm started in 2003, has since returned an average of almost 36 percent a year to investors, according to data on the Web site of the California Public Employees' Retirement System.
 
Read more at Bloomberg

GM Posts Loss on North America; Overseas Profit Rises

(Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp., the world's largest automaker, posted a fourth-quarter loss on shrinking sales in North America while revenue overseas rose.

The shares gained as much as 2.6 percent in New York trading as the Detroit-based company recorded a profit after excluding one-time costs. GM's net loss of $722 million followed year- earlier net income of $950 million.

The results indicate Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner is delivering on his pledge to rely more on overseas sales while cutting expenses at home. Wagoner said he will offer buyouts to speed the hiring of lower-paid new workers in the U.S., where industrywide sales are projected to fall to a 10-year low this year.

``Wagoner is doing the right things; he's just doing them at a time when the economy might be masking some of the favorable benefits from his actions,'' said Pete Hastings, a fixed-income analyst at Morgan Keegan & Co. in Memphis, Tennessee. Buyouts for 74,000 United Auto Workers members would be ``money well spent,'' he said.

The quarterly per-share loss was $1.28, versus the year- earlier profit of $1.68. Automotive revenue rose 7 percent to $46.7 billion, GM said in a statement today.

Not counting costs and gains the company considers one-time, GM reported an adjusted profit of $64 million, or 8 cents a share. On that basis, analysts estimated a loss of 64 cents. In North America, GM lost $1.1 billion, excluding some costs. By that measure, analysts predicted a loss of $400 million.

Shares Rise

GM rose 46 cents to $27.58 at 11:34 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading after reaching $27.83 earlier. Through yesterday, the shares had advanced 9 percent this year, the most in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The adjusted profit stemmed mostly from a $1.6 billion tax benefit, Chief Financial Officer Fritz Henderson said. The tax gain stems from the sale of the Allison transmission unit and a $7.7 billion reduction in GM's overall pension and retiree health-care liabilities, he said.

``It was a tough quarter in North America,'' Henderson told reporters today in Detroit. ``Volumes were down, and there was tougher pricing because we had a full incentive load for our pickups.''

2007 Loss

The full-year deficit was a record $38.7 billion and included a $39 billion expense in the third quarter related to a tax-accounting change. In 2006, GM lost $1.98 billion, or $3.50 a share.

The third quarter included the $1.6 billion tax benefit and $768 million in one-time expenses.

GM had $27.3 billion in cash, readily available assets and funds from a retirement fund at the end of December, a decline from $30 billion at the end of September. The automaker ended 2007 with a negative adjusted automotive cash flow of $2.4 billion, a $2 billion improvement from 2006.

Outside the U.S., GM had a $424 million profit in the Latin America/Africa/Middle East region and a $72 million Asia-Pacific profit. Europe reported a fourth-quarter deficit of $445 million.

The automaker today also announced details of a buyout plan for its remaining 74,000 UAW employees in the U.S. The offers would provide payments of as much as $62,500 for the most-skilled workers with at least 30 years service.
 

Monday, February 11, 2008

Eskom's buyback plan in motion

(Fin24) - State-owned power utility Eskom is negotiating to buy electricity from local industrial firms in a bid to solve an energy crisis, Public Enterprises Minister Alec Erwin said on Monday.


Eskom is under pressure to come up with a plan to increase power generation after weeks of rolling blackouts that have darkened millions of homes and forced businesses to shut. Large mining operations ground to a halt for five days last month.


"Large producers who would not normally want to be in electricity are now considering that there may be merit in them going into electricity production and selling to Eskom," Erwin told a media briefing in Cape Town.


Erwin told Reuters government was talking with Sasol, BHP Billiton and Anglo as it sought to boost power capacity.


"Clearly we are interested in that ... given the strictures on energy and the difficulties we have ... This opens an interesting possibility. We are in intensive negotiations now," Erwin said.


President Thabo Mbeki expressed confidence on Friday that the crisis would be solved quickly but did not give details of the
government's plan. There have been calls from media and opposition parties for him to sack several ministers.


Mbeki and other senior officials have blamed the country's booming economy for increasing demand for electricity, while acknowledging that warnings of such a problem went unheeded for years.
 

G7 discussed joint action to calm financial markets

(Reuters) - Finance leaders from the Group of Seven industrialized nations discussed collective action to calm markets if price moves become irrational, Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker was quoted as saying on Monday.

Juncker, who chairs the Eurogroup -- the monthly meetings of euro zone finance ministers and the European Central Bank -- told the Luxemburger Wort newspaper in an interview that turbulence on financial markets could continue for months.

"We are not yet at the end of the market crisis," Juncker was quoted as saying.

"The corrections will drag on for a few weeks, months. We have agreed in Tokyo that if there are irrational price movements in the markets, we will collectively take suitable measures to calm the financial markets," he said.

Asked what form such collective action may take, he said:

"Whoever has a strategy, should not set it out. Otherwise it will lose its effect if it is explained."

Finance ministers and central bankers from the G7 -- the United States, Canada, Japan, Britain, France, Germany and Italy -- said on Saturday in Tokyo that financial market turmoil was serious and persisting.
 

Random House to sell books by the chapter online: report

(Reuters) - Random House Publishing Group, the world's largest book publisher, is planning to test selling individual chapters of a popular book to gauge reader demand, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
 

Wall Street Shareholders Suffer Losses Partners Never Imagined

(Bloomberg) -- Less than a decade after Wall Street's last major partnership went public, stockholders are paying the price for bankrolling the industry's expanding risk appetite.

Four of the five biggest U.S. securities firms lost about $83 billion of market value last year, almost 90 percent of their net income since 1999, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That cut the annual average return for Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch & Co., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. during those nine years to 9.7 percent from 16.8 percent.

The private partnerships that once dominated Wall Street guarded their capital, used less leverage and limited their risk to trading blocks of stock for clients and shares of companies in mergers, said Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business and a former partner at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Since raising money from the public, many of the biggest firms have abandoned that caution.

``If you're betting with other peoples' money, you're more willing to take risk than if it's your own,'' said Anson Beard, 71, who retired from Morgan Stanley in 1994 after 17 years at the New York-based company, where he ran the equities division and helped with the initial public offering in 1986. ``You think differently if you're paid in cash and not in ownership. It's heads you win, tails you don't lose.''

Shareholders, stung by the securities industry's losses last year on subprime mortgage-backed bonds and leveraged loans, may be in for more pain.

Shrinking Fees

Morgan Stanley, Merrill, Lehman and Bear Stearns have lost between 3 percent and 19 percent of their value this year in New York Stock Exchange trading on concern that they may be forced to take more writedowns if bond insurers like MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc. are stripped of their top credit ratings. Revenue from structured credit and leveraged finance has dropped and demand for takeover advice and underwriting may dwindle as the U.S. economy slows, analysts say.

Even Goldman has faltered. New York-based Goldman, which went public in May 1999, evaded last year's market losses and reaped record earnings. This year, the biggest and most profitable securities firm has lost 13 percent in NYSE trading, while analysts predict earnings will drop as equity stakes in companies such as Beijing-based Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. lose value and investment-banking fees decline.

Merrill, which went public in 1971, outperformed the Standard & Poor's 500 Index in just five of the past 10 years. The largest U.S. brokerage paid more to employees last year than it collected in revenue. Morgan Stanley, public since 1986, beat the index in four of the past 10 years. Both New York-based companies diluted investors' stock last year when they sold stakes to foreign governments to shore up capital.

Other People's Money

``Shareholders share in the downside and not necessarily in the upside, that's the whole story,'' said John Gutfreund, 78, who ran Salomon Brothers in the 1980s when it was renowned for the size of its trading bets. ``It's OPM: Other People's Money.''

To be sure, the firms have been good investments over a longer period. Merrill rose at an average annual rate of 14.7 percent, including dividends, from 1980 through the end of 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Bear Stearns returned an average 15.2 percent since the end of 1985 and Lehman's average annual gain was 25.5 percent since it became a separately listed company at the end of 1994.

While none of the companies are more than one-third owned by employees today, senior executives typically receive at least half their pay in shares. At Merrill, top managers get 60 percent of their compensation in stock; they're required to keep three quarters of it each year and are prohibited from hedging it, according to the brokerage's proxy statement.
 

Europe's Economy May Stay Sick Longer After Catching U.S. Cold

(Bloomberg) -- Europe's economy has caught the U.S.'s cold, and may be sick longer.

Persistent inflation and budget deficits may prevent policy makers in the 15 nations that share the euro from moving as aggressively as their U.S. counterparts to cut interest rates and taxes. Meanwhile, Europe's labor laws will make it harder for companies to speed a recovery in profits by reducing payrolls.

``A European downturn will take noticeably longer to run its course than the U.S. one,'' Nobel laureate Edmund Phelps, an economics professor at Columbia University in New York, said in an interview.

Next year ``might be a period of `reverse decoupling,' with the U.S. economy enjoying a sharp recovery and the euro-area economy stagnating,'' says Dario Perkins, senior European economist for ABN Amro Holding NV in London. ``A relatively inflexible economy and `sticky' inflation'' will hold Europe back, he says.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said twice last week that there is ``unusually high uncertainty'' about growth amid signs that Europe's resistance to the U.S. slowdown is finally wearing off.

``Risks are on the downside,'' he told reporters in Tokyo on Feb. 9 after a meeting of central bankers and finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrialized nations. The G- 7 officials said the U.S. economy may slow further, eroding global growth, and forecast no end to financial-market turmoil.

``Europe cannot go unscathed from the U.S.'s credit crisis,'' says Phelps.

Slower Growth

December retail sales in the euro region fell the most since 1995 and service industries grew in January at the slowest pace in more than four years. The European Union's statistics office will report Feb. 14 that the economy expanded 0.4 percent in the fourth quarter, half the pace of the previous three months, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

``Euro-zone growth is in trouble, and the risk of recession at some stage should not be underplayed,'' says David Brown, chief European economist at Bear Stearns International in London. He says the region will be ``very lucky'' to expand 1.5 percent this year, which would be the weakest since 2003.

Much of what ails Europe has its origins across the Atlantic. Borrowing costs for consumers and companies jumped as BNP Paribas SA and other European banks ran up losses on investments tied to U.S. mortgages. Exporters such as Heidelberg, Germany-based Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, the world's largest maker of printing machines, blame declines in the dollar and U.S. demand for hurting profits.

Short, Shallow Recession

Economists Jan Hatzius at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Richard Berner of Morgan Stanley say the U.S. economy is already in a recession, and they predict that action by policy makers will ensure it is short and shallow.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues have cut interest rates five times in less than five months by a total of 2.25 percentage points. Congress last week passed an economic-stimulus package worth about $168 billion.

European policy makers have been slower to administer medicine. The ECB has left its benchmark unchanged at 4 percent for eight months as inflation accelerated to the highest level in 14 years and workers sought more pay in response.

While Trichet last week signaled that he's open to cutting interest rates for the first time in almost five years, he also said he doesn't anticipate inflation will moderate until the second half of the year. Consequently, while investors increased bets on rate cuts last week, they don't expect the ECB to start easing credit before the second quarter.

Delayed Response

Trichet's ``somewhat delayed and gradual policy response'' means the euro-area economy will lag behind the U.S., growing just 1.4 percent this year and 1.6 percent in 2009, compared with 1.9 percent and 3 percent for the U.S., says Janet Henry, chief European economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in London.

Few economists yet anticipate a recession in Europe. Potential housing busts are limited to a few countries, unemployment is at a record low and demand from emerging markets offsets a decline in trade with the U.S.

Inflation still may not retreat fast enough for the ECB to continue cutting as the Fed has. Price pressures persist longer in Europe than in the U.S. for several reasons. Competition among businesses is weaker, and employers have less flexibility on wages because of regulations that set minimum levels or tie worker pay to past inflation rates. German unions are still seeking above-inflation pay agreements.
 

CDO Losses Driving Credit-Default Swaps to Record, Analysts Say

(Bloomberg) -- Banks are driving the cost of protecting corporate bonds from default to the highest on record as they seek to hedge against losses on collateralized debt obligations, according to traders of credit-default swaps.

Contracts on the benchmark Markit iTraxx Crossover Index soared 17 basis points to 547 at 12:50 p.m. in London, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Markit iTraxx Asia Ex-Japan Series 8 Index soared the most in one day, rising 15 basis points to an all-time high of 144.5, according to BNP Paribas SA. The Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index rose 2.5 basis points to 132.25, Deutsche Bank AG prices show.

``Banks have taken losses, spreads are going wider and they are just cutting positions,'' said Andrea Cicione, a senior credit strategist at BNP Paribas in London. ``Lenders are probably reducing risk positions in a deteriorating credit environment by unwinding CDOs.''

Banks are facing mounting writedowns on CDOs, securities that package credit-default swaps, bonds or loans, as the fallout from the collapse of U.S. subprime mortgages spreads across financial markets. The Group of Seven estimates banks worldwide will suffer writedowns of $400 billion on home loans, German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said at a weekend meeting of officials and central bankers in Tokyo.

Credit-default swaps are financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to speculate on a company's ability to repay debt. They pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements. A rise indicates worsening perceptions of credit quality; a decline, the opposite.

CDO Downgrades

Fitch Ratings may downgrade the $220 billion of CDOs it assesses that are based on corporate securities because of rising losses, the New York-based company said last week. CDOs with AAA grades that are based on credit-default swaps and aren't actively managed may face the steepest reductions of as much as five steps, the company said.

Ratings firms are responding to criticism that they failed to react quickly enough as increasing defaults on subprime mortgages caused a plunge in the value of CDOs. Fitch, a unit of Fimalac SA in Paris, lowered $67 billion of mortgage-linked CDOs in November, slashing some top-rated debt to speculative grade, or junk.

LevX Index

Falling prices for leveraged loans may be forcing banks to unwind collateralized loan obligations. UBS AG and Wachovia Corp. are trying to sell $700 million in loans because of the unwinding of their so-called market value CLOs, which package the debt and are based on the net value of the underlying loans, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The Markit iTraxx LevX Senior Index of credit-default swaps on 26 European loans fell to a record of 90.625, according to Bear Stearns Cos. A level below 100 indicates loans are worth less than face value.

The value of the most-traded U.S. leveraged loans plunged to a record low amid reports of forced CLO sales, according to Standard & Poor's.

In the European credit-default swaps market, contracts on Carlsberg A/S in Copenhagen, the largest Nordic brewer, jumped 22 basis points to 157, according to CMA Datavision in London. The company is buying brewer Scottish & Newcastle Plc with Heineken NV.
 

U.S. Stock Futures Rise; Europe Little Changed, Asia Retreats

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stock-index futures rose as higher metal prices lifted mining companies and technology shares advanced on speculation Yahoo! Inc. will seek a higher takeover bid from Microsoft Corp.

Stocks in Europe pared earlier declines and were little changed as GlaxoSmithKline Plc climbed following UBS AG's recommendation to buy the world's second-largest drugmaker. Asian shares fell, led by Kookmin Bank and Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Barrick Gold Corp. and Newmont Mining Corp., the world's biggest gold producers, climbed as bullion advanced. Yahoo, the most-visited U.S. Web site, increased after a person familiar with the situation said the company's board will reject Microsoft's $31-a-share offer. Merrill Lynch & Co. rallied on a Citigroup Inc. analyst report that the third-largest securities firm may double annual earnings in coming years.

Standard & Poor's 500 Index futures expiring in March added 4.1, or 0.3 percent, to 1,334.4 at 8:34 a.m. in New York. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures increased 35 to 12,212. Nasdaq- 100 futures gained 12 to 1,788.5. Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index rose 0.01 to 315.51 after falling as much as 1.1 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 1.59, or 1.1 percent, to 139.24.

``The market is slowly bottoming out,'' said Claudio Meiger, a fund manager at Basel, Switzerland-based Bank Cial Schweiz, where he helps oversee about $100 million. ``Long-term investors may start building positions now. The major technology stocks are rather cheap.''

Shares in the S&P 500 Information Technology Index trade at an average 21.9 times reported earnings, according to Bloomberg data. That's near a five-year low touched on Aug. 4, 2006.

Yahoo Bid

Yahoo advanced 17 cents to $29.37. The Internet company that has failed to crack Google Inc.'s dominance of Web search plans to reject a bid from Microsoft, said a person familiar with the situation who declined to be identified because the discussions aren't public.

Yahoo wants at least $40, the Wall Street Journal reported Feb. 9. Yahoo spokeswoman Diana Wong said the company doesn't comment on rumors or speculation. Microsoft spokesman Bill Cox declined to comment.

Barrick, Newmont

Barrick Gold added 48 cents to $50.58 in Germany. Newmont gained 8 cents to $51.37. Gold rose in London as interest-rate cuts feed through to higher commodity prices, increasing demand for precious metals as a hedge against inflation. Platinum advanced to a record, silver climbed to a 27-year high and palladium reached the highest since September 2001.

Merrill Lynch gained 66 cents to $52.85. Citigroup analysts said they expect John Thain will be a ``very hands-on'' chief executive officer. Thain took over in December for Stan O'Neal, who was ousted after delivering a $2.24 billion third-quarter loss. Merrill can double annual earnings to over $10 billion in the next ``few years,'' the analysts said.

Motorola Inc. added 18 cents to $11.44 in Germany after the Wall Street Journal said the biggest U.S. mobile-phone maker and Nortel Networks Corp. may combine their wireless infrastructure units in the latest response to sluggish growth in the telecom- equipment industry. Nortel spokesman Jay Barta declined to comment when contacted by Bloomberg News. An e-mailed message to Motorola representative Kelly Harder wasn't immediately returned. Nortel rose 10 cents to $11.17.
 

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Regulators should allow bond insurers to fail: Ackman

(Reuters) - Bill Ackman, whose hedge fund has been betting against bond insurers since at least 2002, said in a letter to U.S. regulators that rescuing the bond insurers will only prolong the credit crisis, and the companies should instead be allowed to fail.

In the letter obtained by Reuters, Ackman said bond insurers in recent years have become a means for banks to avoid reporting their full credit exposure and make their capital ratios appear stronger, but that banks should be forced to own up to their full credit risk.

"(W)e understand that the banking industry counterparties to the bond insurers would prefer to avoid taking these ... risks back on balance sheet -- particularly at a time when their balance sheets are strained by subprime and other losses that have not been hedged," Ackman wrote, adding that "there are no such free lunches available in the capital markets."

Bond insurers have in turn been critical of Ackman and other investors betting against the companies. On a recent conference call, MBIA Inc (MBI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) Chief Executive Gary Dunton railed against "the fear mongering and intentional distortions of facts about our business that have been pumped into the market by self-interested parties."

New York State Superintendent Eric Dinallo is working with banks to rescue bond insurers including Ambac Financial Group Inc (ABK.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and FGIC Corp, which face billions of dollars of potential losses after guaranteeing bonds linked to risky subprime mortgages and other debt.
 

Pending Sales of Existing U.S. Homes Fell 1.5% in December

(Bloomberg) -- The number of Americans signing contracts to buy previously owned homes fell in December for a second straight month, signaling the worst housing slump in 25 years will persist well into 2008.

The National Association of Realtors' index of signed purchase agreements decreased 1.5 percent to 85.9, the group said today. The drop follows a revised 3 percent decline for November that was larger than previously reported.

Today's report reinforces concern that the housing recession will linger as foreclosures add to a glut of unsold homes. The housing slump is weighing on the job market and consumer spending, putting pressure on Federal Reserve policy makers to lowering interest rates further to keep the economy out of a recession.

``The housing outlook has deteriorated significantly and I don't see a bottom on sales and starts until the middle of the year at the earliest,'' Scott Anderson, senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co. in Minneapolis, said before the report. ``And our outlook on home prices has gotten worse.''

Economists had forecast the index would fall 1 percent, according to the median of 33 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from a drop of 3 percent to an increase of 1.8 percent.

Compared with a year earlier, the measure was down 24.2 percent.

Forecast Lowered

The Realtors lowered their forecast for existing-home sales in 2008 to 5.38 million from a January forecast of 5.7 million. Last year, 5.65 million homes were sold. Purchases of new homes will decline to 637,000 from 774,000, the group said today.

Pending resales fell in three of four regions. Purchases decreased 3.1 percent in the West, 3 percent in the South and 1.7 percent in the Northeast. They rose 3.4 percent in the Midwest.

The real-estate agents' group began reporting pending home resales in March 2005 and has supplied historical data back to February 2001. The gauge is considered a leading indicator because it tracks contract signings. The Realtors reported Jan. 24 that existing-home purchases, which are compiled from closings, fell 2.2 percent in December, more than economists had forecast.

New-Home Sales

Another leading indicator of the housing market, new-home sales, fell in December to a 12-year low, according to Commerce Department statistics. New home sales also are recorded when a contract is signed.

Homebuilder Pulte Homes Inc. said Jan. 30 that it had its fifth consecutive quarterly loss in the fourth quarter because of falling sales. Chief Executive Officer Richard Dugas forecast there will be a net loss from continuing operations, excluding potential land charges and tax benefits, this quarter.

``Sales levels are still depressed as compared to prior periods,'' even though the company has lowered prices, Dugas said on a conference call on Jan. 31.

Builders have little incentive to start new projects until they see inventories of unsold homes coming down. Both new and existing homes had a 9.6 months supply on the market in December.
 

Sales at U.S. Retailers Languish on Recession Concern

(Bloomberg) -- Sales at U.S. retailers languished in January as discounts failed to lure consumers concerned that a recession is coming. Macy's Inc. and Nordstrom Inc. reported declines, while sales at Wal-Mart Stores Inc. rose less than analysts estimated.

Sales at stores open at least a year gained 0.5 percent at Wal-Mart, the retailer said today, as winter storms hurt sales in the Midwest and fewer customers redeemed gift cards. Limited Brands Inc. and Target Corp. also reported declines larger than analysts predicted.

Department stores and mall-based shops slashed prices on clothing and bedding to attract customers following the slowest holiday season since 2002. Consumers refrained from spending as median home values probably fell for the first time since the Great Depression and employers cut back on hiring.

``You're seeing the continuing unfolding of the consumer spending slowdown,'' said Ken Perkins, president of Retail Metrics LLC, a Swampscott, Massachusetts-based research firm. ``Clearance sales were widespread, there were certainly enough incentives to draw the consumer in under normal economic circumstances, but consumers are hunkering down.''

Department stores have been hit hard by a decline in customer visits to malls and a lack of new products that excite consumers, Perkins said. Nordstrom's sales sank 6.6 percent. Analysts surveyed by Retail Metrics expected a 0.4 percent decline.

Macy's, the second-biggest U.S. department-store chain, said yesterday that January same-store sales dropped 7.1 percent, cut its fourth-quarter profit forecast and said it will eliminate 2,300 jobs. Kohl's, the fourth-largest U.S. department-store chain, said same-store sales fell 8.3 percent, worse than the estimate for a 7.9 percent drop.

Share Performance

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, rose 7 cents to $48.90 at 9:41 a.m. in composite trading at the New York Stock Exchange. The Standard & Poor's 500 Retailing Index of 31 members rose 2.3 percent. It has slumped 5.1 percent this year before today compared with a 9.7 percent decline by the broader S&P 500.

January sales at U.S. retailers probably were unchanged, the International Council of Shopping Centers said on Feb. 5. That would be the first month without a gain since last April.

Last month will probably turn out to be the worst January performance on record, said Michael Niemira, the New York-based trade group's chief economist. The ICSC surveys almost 60 chains and will report figures later today.

Same-store sales are seen as a key gauge of a retailer's performance because they exclude locations that have recently opened or closed.

Limited Brands

Sales dropped 8 percent at Limited Brands, owner of the Victoria's Secret chain. The sales decrease exceeded the average analyst estimate for a decline of 7.1 percent. American Eagle Outfitters Inc. said yesterday that same-store sales fell 7 percent.

Wal-Mart had predicted a January same-store sales gain of 2 percent, the same as the average Retail Metrics estimate.

Target Corp., the second-largest U.S. discount chain, reported a 1.1 percent decline. It had said Jan. 21 it expected January sales to be ``near the low end'' of its forecast range of a 1 percent decrease to a 1 percent gain.

Other retailers performed better than analysts expected.

Children's Place Retail Stores Inc. reported a 6 percent same-store sales increase, ahead of the 3.6 percent estimated gain. AnnTaylor Stores Corp., a women's clothing retailer, said sales were unchanged from a year earlier, better than the estimated 3.7 percent decline. Chief Executive Officer Kay Krill said in the statement it was ``promotionally aggressive'' to clear inventory.
 

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

BHP Falls After Raising Rio Offer to $147 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's largest mining company, tumbled in London trading after raising its hostile bid for Rio Tinto Group to $147 billion and reporting the first drop in profit in more than five years.

BHP declined as much as 6.4 percent in London and fell the most in 20 years in Sydney after increasing its offer 13 percent to 3.4 shares for every one of Rio Tinto's. The Melbourne-based company reported today its fiscal first-half net income unexpectedly slipped 2.4 percent to $6 billion, citing higher production costs and lower prices for some metals.

Chief Executive Officer Marius Kloppers sweetened the bid five days after Aluminum Corp. of China, China's biggest aluminum company, bought a stake in Rio to block the takeover. The combination of BHP and Rio, the world's largest mining industry takeover, would cut operating costs in Western Australia and vie with Brazil's Cia. Vale do Rio Doce as the world's largest supplier of iron ore.

``BHP would not have been surprised by the emergence of the Chinese, but it has forced them to indicate they're serious about pursuing this deal,'' said Richard Dennis, a fund manager at Bournemouth, U.K.-based Wessex Asset Management, which has $490 million invested in natural-resource stocks. ``There will be another bid to come from BHP if they are to get final acceptance.''

BHP dropped as much as 102 pence to 1,495 pence, the biggest slide in more than two weeks, and was 4.6 percent lower at 1,523 pence as of 11:28 a.m. on the London Stock Exchange. Earlier it slumped 7.5 percent on the Australian Stock Exchange, the biggest decline since December 1987, amid a plunge in Asian stocks.

`Ratio Makes Sense'

Rio fell 14 pence, or 0.3 percent, to 5,420 pence in London. The shares traded at a premium of 2.7 percent over the value of the bid, based on BHP's current share price. Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd., or Chalco, Chinalco's publicly traded unit, declined as much as 12 percent in Hong Kong trading.

State-owned Chinalco and Alcoa Inc. paid 6,000 pence ($117.85) a share for a 9 percent stake in Rio last week. That equated to 4.1 BHP shares for every one of Rio's London shares compared with BHP's initial three-for-one offer.

``Rio should be having a discussion,'' Don Williams, who helps manage $1.3 billion at Platypus Asset Management, said by phone from Sydney today. He sold half of Platypus's Rio holding on Feb. 4 after the Chinalco and Alcoa transaction. ``This ratio makes sense.''

BHP's bid values Rio at 13.6 times earnings before interest and tax, compared with the 13.7 times that Rio paid for Alcan Inc. last year.

Moody's Investors Service may cut BHP's fifth-highest investment-grade ranking of A1 following the offer, the credit assessor said in a statement. Standard & Poor's today affirmed BHP's rating and said the outlook was ``negative.''

Debt Risk

The risk of BHP and Rio defaulting on their debt, as measured using credit-default swaps, increased to records. Contracts on the BHP bonds, which rise as perceptions of credit quality deteriorate, gained 17.5 basis points to a record 110 basis points at 5:18 p.m. in Sydney.

BHP's debt will increase almost seven times to about $85 billion should the takeover proceed, said Anita Yadav, head of credit and hybrid research at UBS AG in Sydney.

Credit-default swaps on Rio Tinto's debt increased 10 basis points to 110 basis points. The price means it costs $110,000 to protect $10 million of debt from default for five years.

BHP, which made an initial approach in November, had until today to formalize its offer or walk away for six months after a U.K. Takeover Panel ruling.

Possible Counter Bid

Chinalco may be preparing a counter bid, the London-based Times newspaper said, citing unidentified people. Lu Youqing, vice president of Chinalco, wouldn't comment on the newspaper report when contacted by telephone. Chinalco and Alcoa said in a statement today they will ``closely monitor further developments.''

``What BHP faces is not just a state-owned company, but a country,'' Geoffrey Cheng, a Hong Kong-based mining analyst with Daiwa Institute of Research (HK) Ltd., said by telephone. ``I don't think Chinalco will make a general offer for Rio Tinto as it may face many regulatory hurdles.''

China needs raw materials to feed an economy that grew 11.4 percent in 2007, the fastest in 13 years. The nation's biggest commodity companies, including Chalco, have said they're concerned the combination would concentrate supplies and may wield too much pricing power.

``This is our first and only offer,'' Kloppers said in the media teleconference. ``We absolutely want full control of this company,'' Kloppers, 45, said. He wouldn't say whether it would be the final offer, a declaration that would prohibit him from raising the bid.
 

Goldman's Viniar Says `Fear Overwhelms Greed' in Credit Markets

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. credit markets are trading ``like we're in the middle of the worst recession we've seen in a very, very long time,'' Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief Financial Officer David Viniar said at an investor conference today.

``There is a lot of liquidity out there, but people are very hesitant to use it,'' Viniar said at the conference in Naples, Florida, sponsored by Credit Suisse Group. ``Within the credit markets, fear has overwhelmed greed.''

Goldman, the most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history, is down 12 percent in New York Stock Exchange trading this year on concern a weakening economy will damp revenue from investment banking, trading and fund management. The level of interest from investment-banking clients is ``very high,'' though the economy will determine whether deals get done, Viniar said.

Viniar, 52, also said he expects to see a plan devised that will help the monoline bond insurers, which are facing potential rating downgrades.

``It is likely that you will see some solutions to what's going on with the monolines,'' he said. ``You have a number of companies who are involved in a lot of different things, so I think it's going to be more complicated'' than the industry bailout of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP in 1998.
 

U.S. Productivity Increases 1.8%, More Than Forecast

(Bloomberg) -- Worker productivity in the U.S. grew more than forecast in the fourth quarter as companies cut employees' hours at the fastest pace in almost five years.

Productivity, a measure of employee efficiency, rose at an annual rate of 1.8 percent, after a 6 percent pace in the third quarter, the Labor Department said today in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 0.5 percent gain. Labor costs rose less than forecast, the figures showed.

Businesses are trimming staff to control expenses as the economy hovers on the verge of the first recession since 2001. That may help keep consumer prices in check, giving Federal Reserve policy makers more leeway to lower interest rates, economists said.

``Productivity still looks fairly healthy and labor costs are tame,'' said James O'Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. ``This gives the Fed more flexibility to respond to weakness in growth. It certainly looks like there is more easing to come.''

The median forecast for productivity was based on 71 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from a drop of 0.6 percent to a gain of 2.7 percent.

Treasury notes, which had fallen earlier in the day, stayed lower after the report. Ten-year yields advanced to 3.59 percent from 3.57 percent late yesterday.

Labor Costs

Unit labor costs, which are adjusted for gains in efficiency, rose 2.1 percent after dropping 1.9 percent in the prior three months. Economists in the Bloomberg survey had projected a 3.5 percent increase.

Hours worked dropped at a 1.5 percent pace, a second consecutive decline and the biggest since the first three months of 2003.

Compensation for each hour worked increased at an annual rate of 3.9 percent, compared with a 4 percent gain the prior quarter.

Productivity for all of 2007 rose 1.6 percent after increasing 1 percent the previous year. Labor costs rose 3.1 percent, the most since 2000.

Productivity at non-financial corporations, a measure watched by former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, rose at a 3.7 percent rate in the third quarter after rising 2.1 percent in the prior three months. The figures are released with a one- quarter lag.

Among manufacturers, productivity increased at a 2.5 percent pace last quarter, following a 4 percent gain.

Productivity gains may be harder to come by as the economy weakens because businesses are usually slow to reduce staff, economists said.

Slower Growth

Economic growth slowed to an annual rate of 0.6 percent in October through December, down from a 4.9 percent pace in the third quarter, according to government figures last week. A report from the Institute for Supply Management yesterday showed service industries unexpectedly contracted in January at the fastest pace since the 2001 recession.

Still, some businesses have already reacted to the demand slowdown. Companies added 1,000 workers to payrolls in January, while government agencies reduced staff. The economy lost 17,000 jobs overall, the first decline in more than four years. Hourly wages rose 0.2 percent last month, less than economists had forecast.

Labor expenses account for about two-thirds of the cost of producing a good or service.
 

Wall St eyes bounce at open on media profits

(Reuters) - Stocks headed for a higher open on Wednesday as profits from Walt Disney Co (DIS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Time Warner Inc (TWX.N: Quote, Profile, Research) pointed to strength in earnings outside of the financial sector.

In economic news, U.S. productivity in the fourth quarter rose at a stronger-than-expected pace as the biggest cutback in working hours in nearly five years helped restrain growth in labor costs, the Labor Department said.

The market was poised to rise a day after recession fears sent Wall Street and markets in Europe tumbling, while overnight markets in Asia also slid.

"It's probably the natural inclination of markets to try to bounce after a bad day," said Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co in New York. "There's no question that Disney helped and productivity numbers coming in better than expected didn't hurt either."

S&P 500 futures rose 4.7 points and were above fair value, a mathematical formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract.

Dow Jones industrial average futures were up 20 points. Nasdaq 100 futures rose 6.5 points.

In deal news, global miner BHP Billiton Ltd/Plc (BHP.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) launched a hostile $147.4 billion bid for rival miner Rio Tinto Ltd/Plc (RIO.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) on Wednesday, ending months of speculation and setting the stage for the world's second-largest takeover.
 

Mattel CEO sees positive 2008, cost concerns

(Reuters) - Mattel Inc's chief executive said on Wednesday he does not expect a repeat of last year's recalls of millions of Chinese-made toys and is "optimistic about 2008" despite an economic slowdown.

But Robert Eckert told Reuters in an interview that higher commodity and labor costs would force the world's leading toymaker to increase prices this year, noting a rise in the currency of China, where it makes a majority of its products.

"I am very optimistic about 2008 for Mattel and the toy industry on the whole," Eckert said.

"I think last year's recall news is behind us and the industry in general ... I just have a real sense of optimism about 2008.

"We are always mindful of what is going on in economies, but if you look at history, the toy industry has always held up very well in tough economic times and I think this will remain the case," he said.

Despite posting a better-than-expected profit for the fourth quarter -- earnings rose to $328.5 million from $286.4 million a year earlier -- operating profits fell as a result of increased costs, notably from the extensive recalls.

Mattel recalled over 21 million Chinese-made toys worldwide in 2007 due to excessive levels of lead paint and other unsafe components, stoking fears of a loss in consumer confidence.
 

Justice Dept seeks change on futures exchanges: report

(Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department has called for change in financial futures exchanges, saying they should not own the trade clearing business as it inhibits competition, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
 

BHP raises Rio bid; no immediate Chinese riposte

(Reuters) - BHP Billiton Ltd/Plc (BHP.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) launched a hostile $147.4 billion bid for rival miner Rio Tinto Ltd/Plc (RIO.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) on Wednesday, ending months of speculation and setting the stage for the world's second-largest takeover.

BHP hopes to sell Rio shareholders its idea of assembling a super miner, supplying the lion's share of the world's industries with millions of tonnes of minerals, but runs the risk of igniting a bidding war with Rio's largest shareholder, state-run aluminum group Aluminum Corp of China (Chinalco).

BHP (BLT.L: Quote, Profile, Research) sweetened its initial approach by 13 percent, offering 3.4 of its shares for every Rio (RIO.L: Quote, Profile, Research) share after a November proposal of three shares for one failed to persuade the Rio board to bless a friendly tie up.

"Rio Tinto shareholders will now decide," BHP Chief Executive Marius Kloppers told reporters. He added: "This is our first and only offer," though he later would not say if that meant it was the final one.

Some analysts doubted the sweetened bid would be enough to win Rio and create the world's third-richest company, ranked behind only Exxon Mobil (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and General Electric (GE.N: Quote, Profile, Research).

"It's a lot fairer than the offer we've had before, (but) it's by no means a knock-out offer," said Bertie Thomson, a fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management (ADN.L: Quote, Profile, Research), who holds both Rio and BHP shares.

"Given our market conditions and the outlook, if you look at comparative mergers and acquisitions, it probably is not going to get there," said Ken West, a Perennial Growth Management partner.
 

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Yahoo Owners May Prefer Microsoft Bid to Google Fight

 (Bloomberg) -- Jerry Yang, who pledged last year to lead his team of ``Yahoos'' to victory, may find investors would rather team up with Microsoft Corp.

Yahoo! Inc. rose the most since its first day of trading when Microsoft offered $44.6 billion for the company, the second-most popular search engine, on Feb. 1. Yang, who returned as Yahoo's chief executive officer to try to reverse a two-year stock slump, had presided over a 32 percent drop before the bid.

Microsoft said Yahoo executives snubbed its overtures last year in favor of tackling Internet search leader Google Inc. independently. Yahoo's stock performance shows investors don't embrace that strategy and that Yang's promises to revamp the company's search engine and gain on Google were in vain.

``It's hard to look shareholders in the eye and say it doesn't make sense,'' Robert Doll, chief investment officer of global equities at BlackRock Inc. in Princeton, New Jersey, said of Microsoft's unsolicited offer. ``There won't be a whole lot of options for Yahoo.'' He oversees $1.3 trillion in assets, including stock in Microsoft, the world's biggest software maker.

Microsoft's $31-a-share bid came three days after Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo posted an eighth straight quarter of declining profit and projected sales that trailed most analysts' estimates.

Shares Gain

Yahoo was trading at $19.18 before the offer. The shares rose 48 percent in Nasdaq Stock Market trading on Feb. 1 and advanced 95 cents to $29.33 at 4 p.m. New York time today. Microsoft fell 26 cents to $30.19, while Google dropped $20.47 to $495.43.

Google Chief Executive Officer Eric Schmidt called Yang to suggest a potential partnership between the two companies to thwart Microsoft's bid, the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal reported today, citing people familiar with the matter.

``Yahoo has a lot of options, and you can look at what analysts have said about those options,'' spokeswoman Diana Wong said when asked about the Journal's report. Yahoo said in a statement on Feb. 1 that it will review the offer ``promptly.''

Yang, 39, agreed to take over at Yahoo in June, replacing Terry Semel, after its share of Web searches tumbled and the company lost out on sales of graphics-based ads mainly to social-networking sites like News Corp.'s MySpace and Facebook Inc.

In Semel's six years at the helm, he built Yahoo's online ad business through acquisitions and internal development. While the shares jumped almost sevenfold under his watch, Google's rising dominance led the stock to plunge 35 percent in 2006, and investors began calling for Semel to resign.

Yahoos Rally

``I'm ready to rally our near-12,000 Yahoos around the world,'' Yang said on a conference call when he took over. He planned to foster ``a winning culture, while strengthening our leadership team to galvanize Yahoos around our goals.''

Microsoft's bid came too soon for Yang to prove himself, said Ellen Siminoff, who worked with him at Yahoo for seven years and now leads Mountain View, California-based Efficient Frontier, which helps companies advertise on search engines.

``It's hard to get any sort of change that quickly,'' Siminoff said. ``He would rather sell having fixed the company than sell after a perception of weakness.''

Microsoft chose Yahoo as a partner after repeatedly coming in a distant third in Internet searches and failing to bolster advertising revenue on its own. Yahoo would give Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft the most popular group of Web sites in the U.S., which reach about 500 million people worldwide.

Reviewing the Deal

The U.S. Justice Department is ``interested'' in reviewing the antitrust implications of the deal, agency spokeswoman Gina Talamona said last week. Neelie Kroes, commissioner of competition for the European Commission, said her agency also would scrutinize a Microsoft-Yahoo deal.

The offer ``raises troubling questions'' for Web users, Google said yesterday, questioning whether Microsoft would seek to exert ``inappropriate'' influence over the Internet. Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith disputed the claims in a statement.

Microsoft and Yahoo explored ways to work together in late 2006 and early 2007, according to a letter by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer to the Yahoo board dated Jan. 31. Yahoo rejected the idea of being taken over by Microsoft a year ago, according to Ballmer, 51.

``I doubt that Jerry and David want to sell Yahoo,'' said Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of basketball's Dallas Mavericks, who sold Broadcast.com to Yahoo in 1999. ``But this is a very smart move for Microsoft. There will surely be a ton of duplication on the technology side, which should cut costs significantly.''

Next Step

The offer from Microsoft is one of many options Yahoo is evaluating, Yang and Chairman Roy Bostock said in a Feb. 1 e- mail to employees obtained by Bloomberg News. The board will respond after reviewing the alternatives, they said. If Yahoo accepts the deal, Yang stands to get about $1.6 billion in cash or Microsoft stock for his 52.8 million shares.

Microsoft may seek to oust Yahoo board members should they reject its offer, said a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified. Under Yahoo's bylaws, stockholders must nominate directors by March 13, ahead of the company's annual meeting, the person said. Microsoft spokesman Frank Shaw declined to comment. Wong didn't immediately return a voicemail message.

Yahoo's advisers, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., are approaching other potential bidders in search of a higher offer, the New York Times reported Feb. 2.