iBankCoin
Home / Corporate (page 81)

Corporate

U.S. Equity Preview: $WMT, $TLAB, $PJC, $OTT, $K, $DB, $RDEA, $BMY, $AMLN, & $AMZN

Source

Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) fell 1.4 percent to $187.29. The largest Internet retailer has started shipping the Kindle Touch 3G to customers in 175 countries and territories around the world, the company said in a statement.

Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. (AMLN) climbed 10 percent to $25.30. The maker of diabetes drugs Bydureon and Byetta is seeking a buyer after rejecting an unsolicited bid from Bristol- Myers Squibb Co. (BMY) , two people with knowledge of the matter said.

Ardea Biosciences Inc. (RDEA) surged 51 percent to $31.53. The company will be bought byAstraZeneca Plc (AZN) for $1.26 billion, or $32 a share, to add experimental gout and cancer treatment in an effort to replenish AstraZeneca’s drug pipeline.

Deutsche Bank AG (DB) declined 4.1 percent to $43.52. Germany’s largest bank was said to probably book an additional charge of as much as 400 million euros ($528 million) tied to the sale of Actavis Group hf.

Kellogg Co. (K) fell 5.1 percent to $51.26. The maker of Corn Flakes cereal and Keebler cookies said it expects to have 2012 profit of $3.18 to $3.30 per share, reducing its outlook for the year after a first quarter in which sales fell 1.3 percent.

Otelco Inc. (OTT) : Time Warner Cable Inc. (TWC US) said it won’t renew a wholesale network connections contract that accounted for 12 percent of the provider of wireless telephone services to rural communities’ 2011 revenue.

Piper Jaffray Cos. (PJC) : The investment bank and asset manager will cut 2 percent to 3 percent of its workforce as part of an effort to reduce costs. The measures will result in a pretax charge of as much as $5 million in the second quarter, the company said in a statement.

Tellabs Inc. (TLAB) : Rob Pullen, chief executive officer of the voice and data systems company, said in a statement that he has been diagnosed with colon cancer and began chemotherapy “a few” weeks ago.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) dropped 3.1 percent to $60.53. Mexican Finance Minister Jose Antonio Meade said authorities don’t have enough information to open an investigation into alleged bribery at the retailer’s local subsidiary. The New York Times reported that the company curtailed an internal investigation into allegations of bribery by executives in Mexico.”

Comments »

Alcatel Lucent, $ALU, CDS Yields Rise; Ratings Cut Anticipated

Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) investors drove down the cost of insuring the phone-equipment maker’s debt by more than any other European technology company this year as its bonds imply a two-level credit-rating boost.

Credit-default swaps protecting the Paris-based company’s debt from default for five years have fallen 646 basis points, or 36 percent, compared with the 31 percent decline for second- best performer Cap Gemini SA (CAP), according to CMA in New York. The contracts imply a Ba2 rating, according to Moody’s Analytics, higher than its current B1 grade….”

Read more

Comments »

Carmakers Preparing For Slower Sales Growth In China

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s massive car market may still be young, but the auto industry CEOs descending on Beijing this week will see first hand that it’s also growing up fast.

The Beijing auto show starts on Monday at a time when China’s auto market has begun softening after a decade of breakneck growth. The days when car sales could surge 46 percent in one year – as they did in 2009 – are gone, say many industry executives and analysts. Most see growth falling off to an average of 7-8 percent this decade.

Unfortunately for car makers, slower growth comes just as new entrants appear in the market and existing competitors add to their offerings.

“There are more brands and more products in China than ever before, and that’s making market conditions suddenly more competitive and tough for everyone,” said Li Shufu, chairman of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co. and Sweden’s Volvo, which Geely acquired in 2010.

To be sure, there is plenty of growth left. Even conservative forecasts have China’s auto market surging to 30 million vehicles a year by 2020, from last year’s 18 million. Some think volume could even reach 40 million.

But the signs of a tougher market are clear.

Local Chinese auto makers like Chongqing Changan Automobile Co. and BYD Co. have seen their once-robust profitability erode significantly, thanks to the government’s decision to scrap most of the auto purchase incentives it offered in the wake of the global economic crisis in 2008.

And some global auto makers, notably a Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co., also have struggled to sustain high growth.

Comments »

After Rough Week, >25% Decline, Chesapeake To Disclose CEO Loans

HOUSTON (Reuters) – Chesapeake Energy Corp (NYS:CHK – News), in response to a Reuters report earlier this week, will disclose to shareholders the existence of loans its CEO Aubrey McClendon took out against his interest in thousands of wells granted to him as a corporate perk, according to a regulatory filing on Friday.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that McClendon has borrowed as much as $1.1 billion against his 2.5 percent interest in wells received as part of his compensation.

The loans, taken out over the past three years, were previously undisclosed to shareholders, analysts and academics said, raising concerns that McClendon’s personal financial deals could compromise his fiduciary duty to Chesapeake.

The company did not detail the amounts and terms of the loans, nor specific lenders, according to a preliminary proxy filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Wall Street analysts who follow the company characterized the disclosure as a step in the right direction, but said more was needed.

“The increased disclosure in the proxy is a start, but it’s still disappointing that Chesapeake remains tone deaf to analyst and investors and only seems to take action once they’re called on the carpet … through a journalistic expose such as the one that came to light this week,” Mark Hanson, analyst at Morningstar said in an email sent to Reuters.

Joseph Allman, analyst at JP Morgan, said the company’s shareholders would benefit most if the company eliminated the Founders Well Participation Program (FWPP) that grants McClendon personal interest in all wells the company drills.

Comments »

Vikram Pandit, Citi Board Sued By Shareholder For Compensation Abuse

REUTERS – Days after being rebuked by shareholders, Citigroup Inc (C.N) Chief Executive Vikram Pandit and the bank’s directors have been sued by a shareholder accusing them of awarding outsized pay to top executives.

The complaint, filed Thursday in Manhattan federal court, said directors breached their fiduciary duties by awarding more than $54 million of compensation in 2011 to the executives, including $15 million to Pandit, though the bank’s performance did not necessarily justify it.

At Citigroup’s annual meeting on Tuesday, about 55 percent of shareholders participating in an advisory vote rejected Pandit’s pay package. That marked the first time that investors had rejected a compensation plan at a major U.S. bank.

That vote “has cast doubt on the board’s decision-making process, as well as the accuracy and truthfulness of its public statements,” said the complaint, brought by shareholder Stanley Moskal. “Absent this (lawsuit), the majority will of the company’s stockholders shall be rendered meaningless.”

Citigroup spokeswoman Shannon Bell said the lawsuit is without merit and that the bank will seek its dismissal, “consistent with court rulings in similar cases.”

“The board takes the shareholder vote on executive compensation very seriously and will consult with representative shareholders to better understand their concerns,” she added.

Shareholders won the right to vote on executive pay at most public companies under the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. Many analysts remained skeptical the “say on pay” votes would matter much.

Richard Parsons, a Citigroup director retiring as chairman of the New York-based bank, called the rejection of Pandit’s pay package a “serious matter” that the board would address.

Pandit was paid a symbolic $1 in 2010 and $128,741 in 2009. He had joined Citigroup in 2007 when the bank bought his hedge fund Old Lane Partners for $800 million. Citigroup is the nation’s third-largest bank by assets.

Comments »

Documentary: Iraq For Sale

This is your God

Disguised as

 

I have said before that it is one thing to make a mistake, but it is entirely another to ignore that mistake.

It does not matter if your left, right, religious, atheist, young or old; you must diffuse your lines of separation and stand up against the common threat both foreign and domestic.

Cheers on your weekend!

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1T8xgHdMEM 450 300]

 

Comments »

U.S. Equity Preview: $AMD, $COF, $CPHD, $CMG, $EZPW, $MSFT, $RVBD, $SNDK, & $TPX

Source

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) : The second-largest maker of processors for personal computers forecast sales growth that beat estimates as supply constraints eased and demand increased for personal-computer chips.

Capital One Financial Corp. (COF US): The lender that acquired ING Groep NV’s online U.S. bank this year posted a higher first-quarter profit as credit-card rewards programs fueled customer spending.

Cepheid Inc. (CPHD) : The maker of a rapid test for the drug-resistance staph infection known as MRSA lowered its forecast for adjusted earnings in 2012 to between 50 cents and 55 cents a share from a previous projection of as much as 60 cents.

Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. (CMG) : The burrito seller that was best-performing restaurant stock in the S&P 500 last year said first-quarter profit rose 35 percent as U.S. consumers dined out more.

Ezcorp Inc. (EZPW) : The short-term cash lender forecast earnings in 2012 to be no more than $2.95 a share, down from an earlier projection of at least $3.05 and below the average analyst estimate of $3.06.

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) : The world’s largest software maker reported fiscal third-quarter profit that topped estimates on better-than-expected corporate software sales.

Riverbed Technology Inc. (RVBD) : The maker of computer- networking products reported first-quarter sales of $183 million, missing the average analyst estimate of $186.1 million.

SanDisk Corp. (SNDK) : The biggest maker of flash-memory cards posted first-quarter earnings of 63 cents a share, missing the average analyst estimate by 4 cents.

Tempur-Pedic International Inc. (TPX) : The maker of luxury mattresses reaffirmed its forecasts for earnings and sales in 2012, which fell short of analysts’ estimates. “

Comments »

Morgan Stanley Reduces Exposure to European Countries by Roughly 15%

Morgan Stanley (MS), owner of the world’s largest brokerage, said its net exposure to five ofEurope’s most-indebted nations was $2.41 billion, down from $3.06 billion in January.

Morgan Stanley’s net exposure to the five countries — Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain — was $4.01 billion before hedges, according to figures posted yesterday on the New York-based bank’s website. Net exposure to France rose to $4.14 billion from $1.71 billion as of Dec. 31.

Concern that Europe’s debt crisis would spark bank losses contributed to a 41 percent tumble for Morgan Stanley’s shares in the third quarter of last year. The firm said in October that its net exposure to the five was $3 billion, helping halt the decline of the shares….”

Full article

Comments »

SEC Considering Charges Against Egan-Jones

“Egan-Jones plans to contest potential charges expected from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today that the credit rating agency made material and intentional misstatements in its application to the SEC to rate securities in 2008.

Specifically, the SEC may vote on whether to charge Egan-Jones with misleading the market regulator over its rating experience, its finances, its internal procedures, as well as the adequacy of its books and records.

The SEC also may charge Egan-Jones over its conflict of interest policy. Egan-Jones gets paid by investors, whereas the larger credit-rating agencies get paid by Wall Street companies who issue securities. The SEC is not contesting the actual ratings offered by Egan-Jones.

An earlier SEC inspector general report noted the market regulator had misgivings about Egan- Jones’ application to be a credit rating agency. Reuters broke the news earlier that the SEC could vote possibly later today on whether or not to charge Egan-Jones, citing people familiar with the matter.

A person close to the matter says Egan-Jones denies any wrongdoing and will fight any charges. The SEC declined comment…”

read more

Comments »

Ford To Sink $760 Million on New Chinese Assembly Plant

Ford (F) and its joint-venture partner said Thursday they will build a $760 million assembly plant in Hangzhou, bringing Ford’s investment in China since 2006 to $4.9 billion.

The Hangzhou plant, built with Changan Ford Mazda Automobile, will open in 2015 with an initial production capacity of 250,000 units.

Comments »

ANALYSIS: Health insurers try to fool Congress with fuzzy math

Source

“Want to find out what Congress is about to vote on? Take a ride on the Washington subway.

If you’ve been on the Metro in recent days, you might have seen an ad designed to make you feel sorry for our poor health insurance companies. So sorry that you’ll call your congressman and demand he support a bill that would gut an important part of the health care reform law: the provision requiring that insurers spend at least 80 percent of the premiums they collect from us on our actual health care.

Back in the early 1990s, when most insurance firms were still nonprofits, they were spending on average 95 cents of every premium dollar paying medical claims. As they began to convert to for-profit status, though, that percentage dropped because of pressure from Wall Street. Now that the industry is dominated by a handful of investor-owned corporations, the average is around 80 percent. The members of Congress who drafted the Affordable Care Act felt that was as low as it should go. And so they inserted language in the bill requiring insurers to pay rebates to their policyholders if they go below that threshold.

Shareholders hate that provision because the less insurance companies spend on health care, the more is available for profits. And because job number one for any investor-owned company is to “enhance shareholder value,” industry lobbyists have been at work ever since the bill’s passage to get the provision repealed or weakened.  One way of doing that is by getting Congress to exempt the commissions insurance firms pay agents who sell their policies from the equation used to determine that threshold. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is set to do that as early as today.

A key component of the industry’s ongoing campaign to convince lawmakers to gut the law is to convince us that they’re barely making ends meet.  And for that they’ve  enlisted the help of one of Washington’s pre-eminent spin doctors, Rick Berman.

One of Berman’s industry-funded front groups, the Employment Policies Institute, is behind the D.C. subway ads featuring a dollar bill divided into segments that, we are asked to believe, reveals how insurance companies really spend our premiums (35 cents to hospitals, 33 cents to doctors, 14 cents for drugs, etc.). The five words above the dollar: “Where Your Insurance Dollar Goes.” The one word below it: “Surprised?”

We’re told that the sponsor of the ad is rethinkreform.com, meaning that it is the work of a front group within a front group. Berman’s “Institute” created the Committee to Rethink Reform in 2009 to stir up opposition to the health care law.

Because it is a 501(c)4 organization, the Employment Policies Institute does not have to disclose where it gets its funding—and it doesn’t. But knowing just what lobbying and PR group paid a consulting firm to create that divided dollar bill several years ago should give us a pretty good hint.

It was none other than—you guessed it—the lobbying and PR group for the insurance industry, America’s Health Insurance Plans.

Surprised?

AHIP has commissioned the consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers to develop a number of “studies” over the years to help advance whatever agenda AHIP felt needed advancing. With a tagline, “Your agenda is our agenda,” PwC has a proven track record of being a reliable agenda advancer for AHIP.

So reliable, in fact, that it put out a widely discredited AHIP-commissioned study a few weeks before the Senate voted on reform in 2009 in an attempt to get people to believe that certain provisions of the reform bill would raise premiums. PwC was forced to disavow the study’s conclusions when reporters figured out that AHIP had instructed it to ignore other important provisions of the bill that would help hold premium costs down.

I was still working for the industry when AHIP hired PwC to come up with that dollar bill that now graces Washington’s subway cars. Berman’s subway ad uses the exact numbers, down to the penny, that were featured on the AHIP/PwC dollar.

When we see that dollar and its cost breakdowns, what’s really supposed to surprise us is that just 3 cents go to health insurer profits. What AHIP/PwC and Berman’s groups don’t tell you is that the big for-profit insurers make far more than 3 cents profit off of every premium dollar they collect from us, and that the only way they were able to get the average down to 3 cents was by including several nonprofit insurers—the ones that cannot by law make a profit—in the equation.

AHIP thought up the dollar bill illusion to obscure the reality of just how profitable insurers really are. Over just the past two years, the five biggest insurers have reported more than $20 billion in profits. That’s money that could be used to provide millions of uninsured Americans access to needed care. Instead, a big chunk of our premium dollars are probably going into Rick Berman’s pocket.

Even though the Employment Policies Institute doesn’t have to disclose donors, it does have to tell the IRS how much money it takes in and how it spends it. In 2009, this “think tank” spent just $18,000 of the nearly $11 million it took in paying its staff to think, or do anything else for that matter, and $8.5 million for “advertising and promotion.” Most of the rest went to Richard Berman and Associates.

Surprised? “

Comments »