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German Officials Say Bailout Will Top $1.4 Trillion

The eurozone bailout fund’s firepower is set to be leveraged to more than euro1 trillion ($1.39 trillion), German opposition leaders said Monday following a briefing with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Governments from the 17-nation eurozone hope that the euro440 billion European Financial Stability Fund, or EFSF, will be able to protect countries like Italy and Spain from being engulfed in the debt crisis.

To do that, however, it needs to be bigger or see its lending powers magnified.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier, parliamentary leader of the opposition Social Democrats, and the Greens’ Cem Oezdemir said the chancellor informed them that the EFSF will be leveraged well beyond its current size.

That would be achieved through a combination of measures, Steinmeier said. It would insure investors against a percentage of possible losses on eurozone government bonds and also involve the participation of outside organizations such as the International Monetary Fund.

Because of the significance of the move, members of Merkel’s party proposed that the change receive full parliamentary approval on Wednesday. Under German law, it would have been enough for parliament’s budget committee to approve the plan.

The chancellor briefed lawmakers on Monday about the progress of the eurozone rescue plans following the weekend’s EU summit.

German lawmakers are set to receive the detailed guidelines of the EFSF later Monday.

The German parliament is to sign off on the eurozone rescue plans and the EFSF’s new powers before Merkel gives the final green light at a European Union summit in Brussels later Wednesday.

SOURCE 

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FLASHBACK: CNBC is the Rumor Mill Empire of the World

In response to Jim Cramer’s attack on blogs this morning, besmirching their information as rumor mill, I wanted to remind people that of the unassailable fact that CNBC is the most irresponsible and destructive news outlet in the world, more so than Fox news. From Cramer’s Bear Stearn’s rumors to Liesman’s EFSF rumors to Gasparino’s unbelievable daily Ambac rumors, they are the worst offenders.

 

Shame on the house of CNBC

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChokGbJdeSM 603 500] [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUkbdjetlY8 603 500]

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Apple Blames iPhone Rumors for Disappointing Results

(Reuters) – Apple Inc stunned Wall Street by reporting results that missed expectations for the first time in years, blaming rumors of the new iPhone for hurting demand in the September quarter.

Shares of Apple fell 7 percent in extended trading on Tuesday, wiping some $27 billion off the value of the world’s largest technology company.

It was Apple’s first quarterly earnings under Chief Executive Tim Cook, who took over from Steve Jobs in August at a critical juncture for the company. Apple is battling Google Inc in the mobile arena, as well as other challengers such as Samsung and Amazon.com Inc.

“Investors are going to start to speculate that there is change under way now that Jobs is gone, and that there’s trouble ahead. We don’t share that point,” said Channing Smith, co-manager at Capital Advisors Growth Fund, which holds Apple shares.

“The iPhone is where the weakness was and it’s an explainable one. The strong demand for the iPhone 4S set up strong demand for the holiday season.”

Apple said it sold 17.07 million iPhones in its fiscal fourth quarter ended September 24 — well short of the roughly 20 million forecast by analysts. The iPhone is Apple’s flagship product, yielding some 40 percent of annual sales.

Revenue rose 39 percent to $28.27 billion, lower than the average analyst estimate of $29.69 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. It was the first time Apple missed revenue expectations since the fiscal fourth quarter of 2008.

Net profit was $6.62 billion, or $7.05 a share. That fell shy of expectations for earnings of $7.39 per share. The last time Apple missed EPS estimates was in the first quarter of 2001, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

“Expectations for this company were red-hot, that is why we downgraded it,” said BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis, who lowered his rating on the shares days before. “The reality is their business is not an annuity. They have to sell their quarter’s worth of revenue every 90 days.”

“They had a big upgrade cycle with the iPhone, the numbers came in weak. They need to set records every time they report to keep up the momentum.”

Read the rest here.

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RajRaj has a Strong Appeal in the Works

Former Galleon Chairman Raj Rajaratnam will have to spend the next 11 years in jail, unless his attorneys can convince a judge to throw out his insider-trading conviction by taking aim at the most compelling evidence provided by government prosecutors: wiretap conversations showing that Rajaratnam traded stocks based on a series of illegal tips.

And some legal experts say it could work.

The FOX Business Network has learned that in their appeal, Rajaratnam’s attorneys at the law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld will try and show that the government’s application to wiretap conversations between Rajaratnam and government informants left out important pieces of information that might have persuaded a federal judge not to grant the wiretap application in the first place.
Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/2011/10/13/rajaratnams-attorneys-plot-aggressive-appeal-strategy/#ixzz1agh6elS1

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AOLHuffPo Begging Yahoo To Buy It

(Reuters) – AOL Inc CEO Tim Armstrong has been meeting with top shareholders in the past couple of weeks to push the idea of a sale to Yahoo Inc that could wring up to $1.5 billion of cost savings, according to sources with knowledge of the discussions.

While Yahoo’s own strategic review has bumped AOL to the back burner for many on Wall Street, Armstrong is still trying to drum up shareholder support for a deal with Yahoo, presenting it as an alternative to going it alone as an Internet media company.

“The focus in the meeting has gone from a year ago of being around the fundamentals to now being how could you carve this up, what are separate assets worth, are there ways to sell off the business to extract value from them,” said a top 20 AOL shareholder who attended one of the meetings.

Armstrong said a merger between AOL and Yahoo could wring out $1 billion to $1.5 billion in savings from overlapping data centers and duplicate news sites, such as sports, entertainment and finance, according to another major shareholder who met with Armstrong.

He is pushing the notion that a combination with Yahoo would appease ad agencies looking for more efficient buys with a bigger audience, said the two shareholders.

They said they liked the idea of a merger with Yahoo but it remains to be seen if Armstrong can pull it off.

Read the rest here.

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Start of National Basketball Association Season Now in Grave Danger

Negotiations were expected to resume on Monday between National Basketball Association players and owners to discuss revenue splitting as a lockout continued to threaten the start of the basketball season.

Representatives from the two sides met for five hours on Sunday, but sources told Sports Illustrated the talks didn’t include the sharing of revenue, which is considered the biggest issue that divides the parties.

“We had another intense meeting,” player union president Derek Fisher said Sunday, according to The Associated Press. “We’re going to come back at it tomorrow afternoon and continue to try and put the time in and see if we can get closer to getting a deal done.”

NBA Commissioner David Stern has said that the first two weeks of the regular season would be cancelled if a deal wasn’t reached by Monday afternoon.

SOURCE 

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