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.