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MERGER MONDAY IS BACK: TIME WARNER TO BUY INSIGHT FOR $3 BILLION

Time Warner Cable has reached a dealto buy The Carlyle Group’s cable operator Insight Communications Co for around $3 billion in cash, a source familiar with the matter said on Sunday.

Time Warner could announce the deal as soon as Monday morning, the source said.

Insight is the 10th-largest cable operator in the United States, Carlyle’s website says. It sells cable television, high-speed Internet and telephone services, serving around 750,000 customers in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio.

Time Warner and Carlyle declined to comment. Insight could not immediately be reached for comment.

(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke, Writing by Michael Erman; Editing by Dale Hudson)

SOURCE: REUTERS

 

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Anxious Investors Look for Calm

From Reuters

Shell-shocked stock investors will search this week for calm to return to markets after the worst three weeks for stocks in 2-1/2 years.
With the blow from the August 5 U.S. credit rating downgrade behind them, investors will focus on the outlook for the U.S. economy as well as signs that European policymakers may be able to contain the euro zone debt crisis.
Widespread investor panic put the market on a roller-coaster ride last week, with steep losses followed by nearly-as-steep gains in high-volume trading. It was the busiest week for volume since October 2008.
Though investors are still searching for a bottom in the selloff that has taken the benchmark Standard & Poor’s index down 12.4 percent since July 22, indexes rose both Thursday and Friday — the S&P index’s first two-day rally since mid-July — and volatility eased.
The move could set stocks up for a calmer week, especially if economic data shows the United States is not headed for another recession, strategists said.
“Every bit of data that shows the economy not slipping into recession is going to be the basis for the market to begin to calm down in the weeks ahead,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital in New York.
While Wall Street stocks ended higher on Friday, the market fell for the week. The Dow fell 1.5 percent and the Nasdaq lost 1 percent. The S&P 500 fell on 11 of the past 15 days, dropping 12.4 percent in three weeks.
Housing and manufacturing reports are among indicators on tap, including the New York and Philadelphia Federal Reserve regional manufacturing surveys and existing home sales.
Manufacturing has been among the strongest sectors of the economy, but a report earlier this month dented that picture.
The Institute for Supply Management manufacturing report, a gauge of factory activity, fell to in July to its lowest in two years and was barely above the mark dividing growth and contraction.
It was quickly followed by an ISM report showing the pace of growth in the U.S. services sector ticked down unexpectedly.
More recent data has suggested the economic recovery will stay on course.
U.S. Commerce Department data on Friday showed retail sales posted the biggest gains in four months in July, which was a catalyst for stocks to rise.
“We think the deterioration in the U.S. macro outlook got us into this mess and will likely get us back out,” said Barry Knapp, head of US equity portfolio strategy at Barclays Capital in New York.
“If we’re right … we will get the stock market to trade at least back into its old 1,250 to 1,350 range that prevailed from March through the recent downturn.”
Retail earnings were among the few bright spots in the market last week. Kohl’s Corp reported earnings that beat estimates and raised its full-year profit view.
Results from more top retailers are expected this week, including Wal-Mart Stores, due to report on Tuesday.
“I will be looking for any data that show what back-to-school (sales) might look like, and later, into the fall, we’ll be looking for what the holiday season might look like,” said Natalie Trunow, chief investment officer of equities at Calvert Investment Management in Bethesda, Maryland, which manages about $14.8 billion.
Earnings growth for the second quarter is expected to have risen 11.8 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data, and many analysts consider the solid growth to remain a cushion for stocks going forward.
The S&P 500’s price-to-earnings ratio is at 10.46, according to Thomson Reuters data, considered cheap by historical standards.
That valuations are cheap suggests to some strategists that stocks remain attractive, especially when compared with U.S. Treasuries, but others say earnings expectations are likely to deteriorate going forward.
Besides concerns about the U.S. economic outlook, worries about the European debt crisis persist.
Investors look forward to a meeting this week between French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who are expected to discuss how to make the euro zone work more effectively in dealing with the crisis.
TECHNICAL DAMAGE
Technically, the market remains weak.
“Most technicians would agree that the long-term market cycle has been damaged, given two-year uptrends have been broken, monthly momentum indicators have turned down, and a lengthy list of stocks have collapsed through important long-term support levels on expanding volume,” analysts at RBC Capital Markets said in a research note Friday.
Bruce Zaro, chief technical strategist at Delta Global Asset Management in Boston, said one sign the market’s downturn may not be over is a measure of stocks with 52-week highs versus 52-week lows, which is low.
(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; editing by Kenneth Barry)

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Blame it on Milli Vanilli

Riots, wild markets: Did space storms drive us mad?

(Reuters) – Rollercoaster financial markets and the worst riots Britain has seen in decades have made it quite a week for a time of year that is usually so dead the newspapers are filled with “silly season” tales of amusing pet antics.

Everyone is pointing fingers — at blundering politicians, hooded thugs, disaffected youths, bumbling police and greedy bankers — but could the cause for all the madness really be the star at the center of our solar system?

There isn’t a lot of evidence pointing to little green men involving themselves in Earthly affairs, but the sun has been throwing bursts of highly charged particles into space in a phenomenon known as coronal mass ejections or CMEs.

Three large CMEs prompted U.S. government scientists to warn of solar storms that can cause power blackouts and the aurora borealis, or northern lights, caused by disturbances in the Earth’s atmosphere, have been spotted as far south as England and Colorado, NASA said.

“Earth’s magnetic field is still reverberating from a CME strike on August 5th that sparked one of the strongest geomagnetic storms in years”, website SpaceWeather said.

Some academics have claimed that such geomagnetic storms can affect humans, altering moods and leading people into negative behavior through effects on their biochemistry.

Some studies have found evidence that hospital admissions for depression rise during geomagnetic storms and that incidents of suicide increase.

A 2003 study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta found that such storms could affect the stock market, as traders were more likely to make pessimistic choices.

“Unusually high levels of geomagnetic activity have a negative, statistically and economically significant effect on the following week’s stock returns for all US stock market indices,” the authors found in their report.

It could of course be mere coincidence that this has been a rollercoaster week on the markets, and that Britain was rocked by a wave of ferocious rioting and looting.

But market watchers may take comfort from the fact that the space weather forecast for Friday has gone quiet again.

They shouldn’t be too complacent though. The solar cycle is on an upswing due to peak in 2013 and there are likely to be more geomagnetic storms heading Earth’s way in the months to come.

SOURCE: REUTERS

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Here is the Full George Soros Editorial: Germany Must Defend the Euro

Source: Reuters

By George Soros
The opinions expressed are his own.

Financial markets abhor uncertainty; that is why they are now in crisis mode. The governments of the eurozone have taken some significant steps in the right direction to resolve the euro crisis but, obviously, they did not go far enough to reassure the markets.

At their meeting on July 21, the European authorities enacted a set of half-measures. They established the principle that their new fiscal agency, the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF), should be responsible for solvency problems, but they failed to increase the EFSF’s size. This stopped short of establishing a credible fiscal authority for the eurozone. And the new mechanism will not be operative until September at the earliest. In the meantime, liquidity provision by the European Central Bank is the only way to prevent a collapse in the price of bonds issued by several European countries.

Likewise, Eurozone leaders extended the EFSF’s competence to deal with banks’ solvency, but stopped short of transferring banking supervision from national agencies to a European body. And they offered an extended aid package to Greece without building a convincing case that the rescue can succeed: they arranged for the participation of bondholders in the Greek rescue package, but the arrangement benefited the banks more than Greece.

Perhaps most worryingly, Europe finally recognized the principle – long followed by the IMF – that countries in bailout programs should not be penalized on interest rates, but the same principle was not extended to countries that are not yet in bailout programs. As a result, Spain and Italy have had to pay much more on their own borrowing than they receive from Greece. This gives them the right to opt out of the Greek rescue, raising the prospect that the package may unravel. Financial markets, recognizing this possibility, raised the risk premium on Spanish and Italian bonds to unsustainable levels. ECB intervention helped, but it did not cure the problem.

The situation is becoming intolerable. The authorities are trying to buy time, but time is running out. The crisis is rapidly reaching a climax.

Germany and the other eurozone members with AAA ratings will have to decide whether they are willing to risk their own credit to permit Spain and Italy to refinance their bonds at reasonable interest rates. Alternatively, Spain and Italy will be driven inexorably into bailout programs. In short, Germany and the other countries with AAA bond ratings must agree to a eurobond regime of one kind or another. Otherwise, the euro will break down.

It should be recognized that a disorderly default or exit from the eurozone, even by a small country like Greece, would precipitate a banking crisis comparable to the one that caused the Great Depression. It is no longer a question whether it is worthwhile to have a common currency. The euro exists, and its collapse would cause incalculable losses to the banking system. So the choice that Germany faces is more apparent than real – and it is a choice whose cost will rise the longer Germany delays making it.

The euro crisis had its origin in German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision, taken in the aftermath of Lehman Brothers’ default in September 2008, that the guarantee against further defaults should come not from the European Union, but from each country separately. And it was German procrastination that aggravated the Greek crisis and caused the contagion that turned it into an existential crisis for Europe.

Only Germany can reverse the dynamic of disintegration in Europe. That will not come easily: Merkel, after all, read the German public’s mood correctly when she made her fateful decision, and the domestic political atmosphere has since become even more inhospitable to extending credit to the rest of Europe.

Merkel can overcome political resistance only in a crisis atmosphere, and only in small steps. The next step will likely be to enlarge the EFSF; but, by the time that step is taken, France’s AAA rating may be endangered. Indeed, by the time Germany agrees to a eurobond regime, its own AAA standing may be at risk.

The only way that Europe can escape from this trap is by acting in anticipation of financial markets’ reactions, rather than yielding to their pressure after the fact. This would require intense debate and soul-searching, particularly in Germany, which, as the EU’s largest and best-rated economy, has been thrust into the position of deciding the future of Europe.

That is a role that Germany has been eager to avoid and remains unwilling to accept. But Germany has no real choice. A breakdown of the euro would precipitate a banking crisis that would be beyond the global financial authorities’ ability to control. The longer Germany takes to recognize this, the higher the price it will have to pay.

George Soros is Chairman of Soros Fund Management and of the Open Society Institute. This piece comes from Project Syndicate.

 

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WINNING THE FUTURE: Broke Town Asks Citizens for Loans

OAKRIDGE, Ore. – Oakridge is facing a serious cash shortage after its bank statement showed the City had $420,000 less than planned, prompting a city planning commissioner to solicit private loans from citizens.

George Custer began seeking “investors” soon after the City acknowledged it would be laying off eight city employees, about one quarter of the staff, to fill the budget gap, saying it was a win-win for the City and the citizens.

Custer is a volunteer planning commissioner for the City of Oakridge and claims he was not working on behalf of the City. Instead, he was soliciting loans for the City as a “concerned citizen.”

Both the city administrator and the mayor knew about the plan and considered it an option to keep the City from defaulting on its payments and going into bankruptcy.

“That was a plan B in case other things didn’t work” said Donald Hampton, City of Oakridge mayor.

Custer says that half a dozen citizens have agreed to give the City a loan if a loan from the bank does not materialize, but the list of citizens will remain anonymous for now.

Not all of the citizens solicited to loan the City money were happy. Eddie Roberts, an 87-year-old man, and well-known figure in the City of Oakridge and Westfir, says Custer, a man he has never met, asked him to loan the City money, to which he replied no.

“Why would I loan them money if they can’t even balance their checkbook each month?” asked Roberts.

The City recently discovered it had far less money than officials thought. According to Gordon Zimmerman, the city administrator, the adopted budget has the City about $420,000 richer than it actually is.

The shortfall wasn’t discovered until the City become aware it did not have enough money to pay all of its bills, leading to the realization that there might be something amiss in the City’s finances.

For a city with a general fund budget of just over $3 million, a $420,000 budget mishap is a big deal.

According to Hampton and Zimmerman, the responsibility of reconciling the City’s bank account to the budget falls on Ruth Ann Plumlee, the City’s finance director, although both acknowledged the oversight ultimately fell on the city administrator.

“I am not casting blame on anyone but myself,” said Zimmerman.

The City of Oakridge has not completed an audit since 2008, something Zimmerman blames on “the difficulty in making the numbers work.”

The 2009 audit currently in process has run into a number of problems, resulting in delays and the auditor’s refusal to sign off on the audit. Zimmerman says the auditors have had a number of questions and issues over the years that needed to be resolved before the audit could be completed.

At issue now is a $67,000 temporary account with insufficient documentation, and thus the 2009 and any subsequent audits have yet to be completed.

This isn’t this first time auditors have said the City has insufficient documentation. In the 2008 audit, auditors noted a total of eight “significant deficiencies”:

  1. Lack of internal control policies;
  2. Difficulties in obtaining documentation;
  3. Untimely account balance reconciliations;
  4. Lack of compensating controls in: journal entries, bank reconciliations, cash disbursements, and utility billing revenues;
  5. No consistent process of journal entry reviews;
  6. Excessive journal entries made to correct or adjust initial journal entries;
  7. Bank reconciliations were not correctly reconciled to the general ledger;
  8. The City did not keep adequate backup for adjustments to customers’ utility accounts.

Zimmerman says most of the 2008 deficiencies have been addressed but couldn’t say which ones.

The $67,000 temporary account issue is expected to be discussed at Thursday’s Council meeting along with the bank tax anticipation loan, according to Zimmerman.

SOURCE

 

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Fannie Mae to Taxpayers: We Need Another $5.1 Billion

Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae said it would ask for an additional $5.1 billion from taxpayers as it continues to suffer losses on loans made prior to 2009.The largest U.S. residential mortgage funds provider on Friday also reported a second-quarter net loss attributable to common shareholders of $5.2 billion, or 90 cents per share.Including the latest funding request, Fannie Mae has needed $104 billion in government capital injections since the U.S. Treasury seized control of it in 2008 during the financial crisis. Fannie Mae has paid back $14.7 billion in dividends.

Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/industries/2011/08/05/fannie-mae-to-taxpayers-need-another-51-billion/#ixzz1UOC7FSEy

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Spoiled Verizon Meathead Mook Union Workers Protest While Rest of World Burns

Verizon unions strike after contract talks fail

 

(Reuters) – Almost half the workers in Verizon Communications wireline telecommunications business went on strike on Sunday as negotiations for a new labor contract failed.
The strike, involving 45,000 workers, is the first walk-out that Verizon, one of the two big U.S. telephone network operators, has faced since 2000, when about 80,000 workers went on strike for about three weeks.
Verizon and two unions — The Communications Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers — had been in talks since late June but were still far apart when their contract expired Saturday night.
The workers who went on strike are technicians and customer support employees in the wireline unit, which provides traditional phone services to homes and businesses in the Northeast as well as high-speed Internet and FiOS television service.
The two sides were unable to agree on issues related to healthcare contributions, pension plans and work rules, according to Verizon and the CWA.
Verizon is looking to keep costs in check at its wireline business, which has been declining for a decade as customers have disconnected their home phones in favor of cellphone and Internet services.
A representative for the CWA, which represents about 35,000 of the workers, said that bargaining talks were expected to resume on Sunday while employees were told to start picketing as early as 6 a.m. EDT outside their work locations.
“A strike is a hardship for all and not to be undertaken lightly,” Jim Spellane, an IBEW spokesman said in an e-mail.
“I think that the fact that we are on strike instead of finalizing an agreement is a testimony to Verizon’s intransigence throughout the process,” Spellane said.
Michael Paleski, 45, who has worked for Verizon for 23 years, was one among the roughly 250 people gathered in front of Verizon’s Manhattan corporate headquarters, where workers walked in and out of the building to chants of, “Scab! scab! scab!” on megaphones.
The strikers were all dressed in red and had signs that read, “CWA workers on strike for middle-class jobs.”
“Nobody here wants a strike. I’m sure nobody on the other side wants a strike either. But we’re also very disappointed that the company put forward so many demands for givebacks. We feel that’s really the sticking point for us,” Paleski said.
“I have two children. I have a wife, a house and two cars. And things are not cheap these days, they’re getting more expensive for us. And that’s why we need to have the right contract structure.”
On Monday morning, thousands of striking workers will join mass picket lines and rallies at over 100 Verizon work locations across New York and New Jersey to pressure the company to back off its demands, said the CWA.
VERIZON’S BACK-UP PLAN
“As of now, talks are not taking place today. We’re always willing to talk. We’re willing to return to the bargaining table at any time,” Verizon spokesman Richard Young said in an email on Sunday afternoon.
“We’re in the process of implementing our emergency action plans,” Young added.
Verizon said late Saturday night that it had trained tens of thousands of employees, from retirees to management, to fill the role of the workers who are now on strike.
“We are confident that we have the talent and resources in place to meet the needs and demands of our customers,” Marc C. Reed, Verizon’s executive vice-president of human resources, said in a statement.
Chris King, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus, played down the impact of the strike on the company.
“The wireline business is something that Verizon is less exposed to than they have ever been in the past,” King said. “They are certainly more comfortable dealing with the strike today than they were 10 years or so ago.”
King, who has a “buy” rating on Verizon, said he sees the impact limited to slower-than-usual installations.
UNACCEPTABLE DEMANDS
Among the changes it is seeking, Verizon said it wants to freeze employee pension plans and replace them with an enhanced 401(k) plan.” It also wants workers to contribute to healthcare insurance premiums.
The CWA says the contributions to healthcare that Verizon wants the union members to make were unacceptable, and that increases in deductibles would make the proposed healthcare plan unaffordable.
It said the profitable company is asking for far too many concessions from affected workers, who include technical and customer service employees in Verizon’s wireline business.
Verizon has 93,000 workers in its wireline business, of whom 58,000 are unionized. Including its Verizon Wireless venture with Vodafone Group Plc, the company’s total workforce is 196,000 employees.
(Reporting by Sinead Carew, Roy Strom and Dhanya Skariachan; Editing by Vicki Allen and Marguerita Choy)

SOURCE: REUTERS

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BREAKING: PRESS RELEASE IN FULL FROM ECB

PRESS RELEASE
7 August 2011 – Statement by the President of the ECB
1. The Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB) welcomes the announcements made by the governments of Italy and Spain concerning new measures and reforms in the areas of fiscal and structural policies. The Governing Council considers a decisive and swift implementation by both governments as essential in order to substantially enhance the competitiveness and flexibility of their economies, and to rapidly reduce public deficits.
2. The Governing Council underlines the importance of the commitment of all Heads of State or Government to adhere strictly to the agreed fiscal targets, as reaffirmed at the euro area summit of 21 July 2011. A key element is also the enhancement of the growth potential of the economy.
3. The Governing Council considers essential the prompt implementation of all the decisions taken at the euro area summit. In this perspective, the Governing Council welcomes the joint commitment expressed by Germany and France today.
4. The Governing Council attaches decisive importance to the declaration of the Heads of State or Government of the euro area in the inflexible determination to fully honour their own individual sovereign signature as a key element in ensuring financial stability in the euro area as a whole.
5. It equally considers fundamental that governments stand ready to activate the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) in the secondary market, on the basis of an ECB analysis recognising the existence of exceptional financial market circumstances and risks to financial stability, once the EFSF is operational.
6. It is on the basis of the above assessments that the ECB will actively implement its Securities Markets Programme. This programme has been designed to help restoring a better transmission of our monetary policy decisions – taking account of dysfunctional market segments – and therefore to ensure price stability in the euro area.

 

SOURCE: ECB WEBSITE–CLICK HERE FOR SOURCE & RELEASE

 

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Market Indicator with Perfect Record Just Signaled ‘Buy’

An indicator followed by veteran technical analyst John Roque that has perfect results for almost twenty years just flashed a buy signal. The beauty of Roque’s indicator, which has signaled positive returns three months out every time from its trigger point, is in its simplicity.

FULL STORY HERE

Source: CNBC.com

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