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August 30, 2008

PSC staff opposes AmerenUE’s $251M requested rate hike

Filed under: news — Tags: , — Moon @ 12:09 pm

The staff of the Missouri Public Service Commission told regulators to deny most of AmerenUE’s requested $251 million electric rate hike.

Instead, the staff recommended the utility raise rates by between $28 million and $63 million, according to a filing Thursday with the commission.

Ameren, meanwhile, contends that the requested rate increase is necessary to maintain service reliability.

“We disagree with the staff’s position on our case,” Susan Gallagher, an Ameren spokeswoman, said in a statement. “We have reached out to our customers and community leaders and they told us that reliability is the most important need they have. This rate case is all about investing in reliability to provide a secure energy future for Missouri.”

http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/stories/2008/08/11/daily68.html Earlier this month, Ameren Corp. got a nod from Illinois law judges to proceed with the utility company’s requested electricity and natural gas rate hikes.

Three administrative law judges recommended to the Illinois Commerce Commission to raise rates by $163.5 million low rates payday advance bad credit payday loans. Ameren had requested a rate hike of $207 million.

Ameren said its second-quarter earnings were hurt by higher fuel prices, increased spending on utility distribution system reliability and coal-fired plant operations. Its $142 million profit in the second quarter also fell short of Wall Street estimates.

St. Louis-based Ameren Corp. (NYSE: AEE) provides electricity to approximately 2.4 million customers and natural gas to nearly 1 million customers in eastern Missouri and Illinois.

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August 29, 2008

U.K. GfK Consumer Confidence Stayed Near Record Low in August

Filed under: finance — Tags: , , — Moon @ 3:48 pm

U.K. consumer confidence stayed near a record low in August as the fastest inflation in a decade and falling house prices discouraged shopping, GfK NOP said.

An index of confidence, based on a survey of 2,001 people, rose 3 points from July's minus 39, which was the lowest since the data began in 1974, GfK said. While sentiment was lifted by the Olympic Games in Beijing this month, the U.K. index has declined from minus 4 a year ago, the report said.

“We have seen a small improvement in consumer confidence in August, but this should not be seen as a turnaround in core sentiment,'' Rachel Joy, a spokeswoman for GfK, said in a statement in London today. “Winning gold medals in the Olympics appears to have had a lifting effect.''

The Bank of England kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged this month on concerns about inflation after the economy stagnated in the second quarter. Retail sales slumped to the lowest since 1983 this month, and house prices fell by the most in three decades, reports showed yesterday.

A measure of consumers' willingness to make big purchases fell by 1 point to minus 38, GfK said. Indexes covering household finances and the economy rose.

Responses to the survey after the start of the Olympics on Aug. 8 were on average 3 points higher than those before, Joy said no fax payday loan payday loans. “This, combined with summer holiday euphoria, may have helped lift consumers' perceptions of their personal situation and the general economy,'' she said.

Housing, Retail

House prices dropped 10.5 percent in August from a year earlier, the biggest decline since 1990, Nationwide Building Society said yesterday. An index of retail sales fell to the lowest since records began in 1983, the Confederation of British Industry said in a separate report.

The outlook for the economy may be limiting the ability of workers to ask for higher wages. The median pay increase in the three months through July was 3.5 percent, Industrial Relations Services said today. That compares with the July inflation rate of 4.4 percent, the highest since at least 1997.

Central bank policy makers split three ways on the direction of interest rates this month, with the majority voting to keep the rate unchanged at 5 percent. David Blanchflower, who favored a quarter-point reduction, said yesterday that the U.K. may already be in a recession and that he will support larger cuts in the future.

The next interest-rate decision is due on Sept. 4.

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August 22, 2008

The only way to fix Social Security

Filed under: economics — Tags: , , — Moon @ 1:38 pm

John McCain and Barack Obama both talk about how they would put Social Security on sound financial footing.

The program will face the first signs of a financial crunch within a decade and have to rely on Uncle Sam - who’s in hock already - to make up for the shortfall.

But no matter the next president’s preferred fixes, he’ll have to do a lot of compromising with Congress.

Sure, any solution is likely to have elements the president favors. He will have veto power, after all. John McCain favors slow growth in benefits over raising taxes. Obama prefers just the opposite. But any voter who can fog a mirror shouldn’t be surprised to see both types of changes coming down the pike.

"To get through the Senate, [changes to Social Security] will need 60 votes. So it will have to include both Democratic and Republican ideas. It’s got to have buy-in from all sides," said Ron Gebhardtsbauer, head of the actuarial science program at Penn State and a former senior pension fellow at the American Academy of Actuaries.

Reform proponents say if the next president is serious about fixing the system he should act fast. "Delay will only make the changes ultimately needed … less attractive, more painful and more precipitous," according to a statement earlier this month from the American Academy of Actuaries.

Measuring the shortfall

Social Security is projected to start taking in less tax revenue than it has promised to pay out by 2017 because Baby Boomers will have retired in droves. By 2041, the system will only be able to pay out an estimated 78% of promised benefits.

Despite a revenue shortfall, full benefits are expected to be paid out between 2017 and 2041. The system will draw on its trust fund, a collection of special-issue bonds from the government, which borrowed prodigiously from the program’s surplus over the years.

But since the country is already running a deficit, the government will have to borrow more money to pay back its debt to Social Security. That’s a little like giving with one hand and taking away with the other.

Add the trust fund bonds to the system’s projected 75-year revenue hole and the government will have to come up with a way to address a shortfall approaching $7 trillion, according to David Walker, president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and former head of the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Of the two presumptive presidential nominees, Obama has been the most specific about how he might bolster Social Security. His advisers have said he would consider imposing a tax rate of between 2% and 4% on income over $250,000. The new tax would start a decade after taking office pay day loans guaranteed cash advance. Half of it would be paid for by employees and half by their employers. Currently, Social Security is funded by a 12.4% payroll tax - also split between workers and their companies - on the first $102,000 in wages.

If implemented, however, Obama’s idea would only take care of a small part of the problem. Since the tax hike wouldn’t go into effect for 10 years, how much money it’s likely to raise depends heavily on future economic growth. But if the hike were implemented today, it would raise $396 billion over 10 years, according to the Tax Policy Center.

"Obama’s proposal is only a down payment on the bigger reforms needed to bring the system into fiscal balance," said Roberton Williams, principal research associate at the Tax Policy Center.

Indeed, Gebhardtsbauer said, "they’ll need other fixes."

Range of fixes on tap

There’s a grab-bag to choose from. Reductions on the benefit side include increasing the age at which a retiree can collect full benefits. Today, the retirement age is 66 and on track to rise gradually to 67. Actuaries recommend that any reform package include further increases in the retirement age that have built-in adjustments to account for expected increases in life expectancy.

Other options include changing the formula by which growth in benefits is calculated for current workers or how the annual cost-of-living adjustments are made to benefits.

On the tax side, lawmakers could increase the amount of income subject to the payroll tax that funds Social Security. Or they could increase the tax rate on that income. Or all retirees could be required to pay income tax on their Social Security benefits.

None are welcome options. That’s why experts say that to make reform less onerous for future retirees, lawmakers should mix and match - and make it snappy.

If lawmakers wait until 2017 to make changes to Social Security, their options for making relatively painless ones will shrink, since a large portion of the 78 million Boomers will have started receiving benefits. "You’re probably not going to change the benefit of someone already retired," Gebhardtsbauer said.

Their options will be further constrained by other problems. Barring changes, Uncle Sam will also be contending with a long-term deficit for Medicare approaching $34 trillion, or nearly 5 times that of Social Security.  

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August 20, 2008

Bakers again in compliance with Nasdaq rules

Filed under: money — Tags: , , — Moon @ 3:42 pm

Bakers Footwear Group Inc. said Tuesday that it received notice it was again in compliance with a Nasdaq Stock Market requirement for continued listing on the Nasdaq Global Market.

Bakers had received a letter June 9 from Nasdaq that it was at risk of having its stock delisted after the company's common stock failed to maintain a minimum market value of publicly held shares of $5 million for the previous 30 consecutive trading days, as required by Nasdaq market rules. Bakers had 90 days to regain compliance.

Nasdaq notified Bakers in a letter that it had determined the company's minimum market value of publicly held shares has been $5 million or more for at least 10 consecutive trading days and has regained compliance.

Nasdaq defines "publicly held shares" as all shares outstanding less any shares held by company officers, directors, and beneficial owners of 10 percent or more of the company's shares payday advance electronic check payday advance.

St. Louis-based Bakers Footwear Group (Nasdaq: BKRS) is a mall-based retailer of footwear and accessories operating stores under the Bakers and Wild Pair names. It currently operates more than 240 stores nationwide.



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August 19, 2008

AT

Filed under: legal — Tags: , , — Moon @ 10:03 am

Telecom giant AT&T Inc. has sold its 37-story downtown office tower, One AT&T Plaza, a company spokesperson said Monday.

The sale comes as AT&T (NYSE: T) is in the process of relocating its corporate headquarters and 700 employees from San Antonio to Dallas. Representatives for the buyer, IEP Dallas LLC, a subsidiary of New York-based Icahn Enterprises (NYSE: IEP), were not available for comment Monday.

Without disclosing the exact terms of the agreement, an AT&T spokesperson says the telecommunications giant will remain in One AT&T Plaza, which is located at 208 S. Akard Street, under a lease agreement.

The spokesman added that AT&T is already spending considerable funds renovating the company’s office space at One AT&T Plaza and will continue to do so to accommodate the relocating headquarters paydayloans no fax payday loan. He stressed that this type of real estate transaction is a common move for AT&T.



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August 18, 2008

Southern Africa Starts Free Trade Area to Bolster Integration

Filed under: economics — Tags: — Moon @ 2:12 pm

Twelve Southern African nations set up a free trade area today in a bid to bolster regional exchange of goods and economic integration for a market of 247 million people and an economy worth more than $430 billion.

The accord was made at the annual summit of the 15-nation Southern African Development Community in Johannesburg. The bloc includes Angola, Botswana, Zambia, Malawi, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Seychelles, Swaziland, Tanzania, South Africa, Zimbabwe and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Angola, Seychelles and Congo have yet to sign the agreement.

The free trade area “required a lot of compromise to be made on a number of sensitive issues,'' including requiring member states to relinquish some of their sovereignty, said Tomas Salomao, SADC's executive secretary. The agreement will make “SADC an attractive area for doing business.''

The free-trade plan was first considered eight years ago and required SADC's member states to systematically cut tariffs on goods traded within the bloc. By the beginning of the year, duties on 85 percent of their trade had been abolished, meeting the World Trade Organization's definition of a free trade area payday loans paydayloans. All remaining tariffs are due to be scrapped by 2012.

“We need to recognize that regional economic integration is not only about the removal of tariff barriers,'' South African Trade Minister Mandisi Mpahlwa said in Pretoria on Aug. 13. “We need to embark on to build both our productive and trade capacity. We need to focus on expanding our agriculture and industrial base to promote intra-regional trade.''

SADC also intends to create a customs union by 2012, a plan that's been complicated by its member states signing separate trade deals with the European Union, known as economic partnership agreements, or EPAs.

“All SADC countries are participating in EPAs with the EU, but in four separate configurations,'' Mpahlwa said. “All these EPAs differ in terms of having different tariff liberalization obligations to the EU.''

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August 14, 2008

Musharraf Seeks Reconciliation Over Impeachment Plans

Filed under: legal — Tags: , , — Moon @ 2:18 pm

Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, a key U.S. ally in the campaign against terrorism, sought reconciliation with the nation's ruling coalition, which has pledged to oust him through impeachment.

“Pakistan needs political stability to fight militancy and promote economic growth,'' the president said in a televised speech from Islamabad, during celebrations to mark Pakistan's Independence Day. “For political stability, I urge all to adopt a reconciliatory rather than confrontational approach.''

This was his first public appearance since the Pakistan Peoples Party-led alliance announced on Aug. 7 it would try to remove him.

By refusing to quit, Musharraf is set to become the first leader in Pakistan's 61-year history to face impeachment unless he invokes constitutional powers to dismiss the government. A prolonged battle for control may hamper efforts to combat terrorism and improve living standards for the nation's 163 million people as food prices surge.

Three out of Pakistan's four state assemblies passed resolutions this week asking the president to seek a confidence vote in parliament or face impeachment proceedings. The fourth assembly of the province of Baluchistan is expected to vote on the resolution on Aug. 15.

The National Assembly, or parliament's lower house, will start impeachment proceedings next week, Information Minister Sherry Rehman said Aug. 12. The four provincial assemblies, the National Assembly and the Senate form the electoral college of the president.

Parliamentary Numbers

Parliament may not have the numbers to impeach the president, said Suba Chandran, assistant director of the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, a policy research group, in a telephone interview from New Delhi. “The impeachment will be more of a political statement.''

The army leadership will try for an understanding between the president and parliament, he said.

“It's not in the interest of the chief of the army staff or the military as an institution to let the former chief of army staff be impeached by parliament,'' Chandran said. Musharraf “may say he will go on his own by the end of year.''

Central Figure

Impeachment may remove a central figure in the “global war on terror'' that President George W fast cash instant payday advance. Bush launched after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the U.S.

Pro-Musharraf parties were defeated in the Feb. 18 parliamentary elections, allowing the coalition to take power in March. The PPP-led government is supported by the Pakistan Muslim League faction of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

The ruling alliance doesn't have the support of enough lawmakers to impeach Musharraf, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, the president of a faction of the Pakistan Muslim League formed six years ago to back Musharraf, said in an Aug. 10 news conference.

The coalition parties say they have more than the two-third majority, 295 of 442 votes in parliament's two chambers, required to remove Musharraf.

With the support of allies and independent lawmakers and defections from parties loyal to Musharraf, the coalition may muster 350 votes for Musharraf's ouster, Rehman has said.

The ruling alliance is preparing charges against Musharraf, which will be announced soon, Rehman said. Under the constitution, the president has the right to reply to those charges before lawmakers vote to remove him.

Constitutional Breach

PPP leader Asif Ali Zardari, in a news conference with Sharif Aug. 7, said the president breached the constitution with his 1999 coup, his firing of senior judges who questioned the legitimacy of his presidency and the declaration of a state of emergency in November.

Sharif, ousted in Musharraf's 1999 coup, and Zardari have been at odds over how to oppose the president, causing a split in the coalition after ministers from Sharif's party withdrew from the Cabinet in May. Ministers from Sharif's party returned to the Cabinet this week.

Since the 65-year-old former general relinquished control of the army in November, the military has shied away from politics, ordering officers to avoid contact with candidates in the February elections that put the president's opponents in control of parliament.

Since January, the government has faced criticism for a slowdown in economic growth, a widening budget deficit and an inability to rein in inflation running at a 30-year high. The rupee Aug. 13 dropped to record.

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August 13, 2008

Korte hires Las Vegas project engineer

Filed under: term — Tags: , , — Moon @ 12:51 am

The Korte Co. said Tuesday it hired Tom Dome as project engineer for its Las Vegas project management staff.

Dome, who is originally from Granada Hills, Calif., has worked in various capacities in the construction industry for more than 14 years. He has been assigned to the Good Samaritan Church, Diamond Resorts and MedCure projects.

Employee-owned Korte Co. is one of St. Louis' largest private companies, with 2007 revenue of $275 million. The construction-management company employs about 200 of its 300 employees here $1500 payday loan payday loan.



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August 11, 2008

Dollar Bottom Against Yuan Gets Louder in China Bet

Filed under: economics — Tags: , — Moon @ 12:21 pm

Just as the Bush administration prepares to take a bow for persuading China to let the yuan strengthen 18 percent against the dollar over the past three years, the gains are grinding to a halt.

The yuan retreated in the last two weeks after government officials said supporting growth is as important as fighting inflation. That raised speculation that currency policy will be adjusted to bolster exports as the trade surplus shrinks. Legg Mason Inc.'s Western Asset Management Co. is trimming bets on the yuan after it rose in July by the smallest amount in a year.

“Exporters are crying,'' said Rajeev De Mello, head of Asian bonds in the Singapore office of Western Asset, which manages $600 billion. “There's a slowing in the economy. There will be less and less appreciation in the currency.''

The yuan slid 0.1 percent to 6.8653 per dollar as of 10:50 a.m. in Shanghai, near a six-week low. It fell 0.24 percent last week, after a 0.34 percent drop in the previous five days that was the biggest since the government ended the currency's peg to the dollar in July 2005. The People's Bank of China has kept the yuan little changed since June, after gains of 4.1 percent in the first quarter and 2.3 percent in the second.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, writing this month on the Web site of Foreign Affairs magazine, said yuan strengthening still has “much further to go.'' Of the advance since the peg ended, Paulson said 70 percent has come about since he initiated semiannual economic talks with China in 2006.

Global Slowdown

China is reining in yuan appreciation to help exporters weather a global slowdown and deter so-called hot money, speculative funds attracted by anticipated gains in the currency. Figures due this week will show exports grew in July at the slowest pace since February and the trade surplus shrank for a fourth month, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

“For the next three to six months we could see a weaker yuan,'' said Phillip Blackwood, head of the emerging-markets division of Sydbank A/S, Denmark's third-largest bank by market value. “The slowdown is spreading to China.''

The currency may fall as much as 2 percent, Blackwood said. He oversees $5 billion of emerging-market bonds for the bank in Aabenraa, 25 kilometers (15.5 miles) north of the Danish-German border. Blackwood would consider buying if the currency falls “a couple'' of percentage points, he said.

More Gains Coming

It's too soon to start betting on the dollar rising against the yuan, Goldman, Sachs & Co. told clients last week.

“It would be the wrong decision to close long yuan exposure at these levels,'' Thomas Stolper, a London-based strategist at the world's biggest securities firm by market value, wrote in an Aug. 5 research note. China's yuan is likely to appreciate versus the dollar “almost three times as fast'' as traders predict because money flowing into the country is still increasing, Stolper said.

China's economy, the world's fourth largest, expanded 10.1 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier. While that is the slowest pace since 2005, it's still the fastest among the world's 20 biggest economies paydayloans.com payday loans application.

The yuan is likely to strengthen 3.6 percent to 6.63 in the second half of the year, according to the median estimate of 25 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Less Appreciation

So-called non-deliverable forward contracts indicate investors have been scaling back bets on currency gains. They suggest the yuan will reach 6.6095 per dollar in the next 12 months, an advance of 3.9 percent from the current exchange rate.

Two weeks ago the contracts, which allow traders to bet on the future value of China's currency, predicted an advance of 5.3 percent. At the start of last month, they priced in a 6 percent rise.

Forwards are agreements to buy and sell assets at current prices for delivery at a specified time and date. Non- deliverable contracts are used for currencies that can't be freely converted and are settled in dollars.

China let the yuan strengthen against the dollar for the first time in a decade after mounting criticism from the U.S. and Europe that the nation had an unfair trade advantage. The U.S. trade deficit with China ballooned to a record $256 billion last year, equivalent to about a 10th of the Asian nation's gross domestic product.

The central bank manages the yuan against a basket of currencies by setting a daily reference rate versus the dollar. China's currency can fluctuate 0.5 percent on either side. The bank today lowered the rate for the ninth time in a row, the longest run of reductions since the peg ended.

Growing `Headwinds'

Chinese President Hu Jintao cautioned this month against overestimating the benefits to the economy of the Beijing Olympic Games. He also said maintaining steady and fast expansion, while controlling inflation, is a priority.

New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co., the world's sixth- biggest currency trader, on Aug. 1 advised investors to close bets that the yuan will be higher in three months. It cited “increasing growth headwinds'' for the economy. Singapore-based currency strategists Claudio Piron and Yen Ping Ho had recommended the position just 12 weeks earlier.

“There's no opportunity to make money on the yuan revaluation,'' said V. Anantha-Nageswaran, head of investment research for Asia and the Middle East at Bank Julius Baer (Singapore) Ltd., part of Switzerland's biggest independent money manager.

Paulson's Visits

A retreat in the Chinese currency may take the shine off Paulson's successes in the run-up to the November election, after which President George W. Bush and his cabinet will step down.

The Treasury chief, who says he has visited China more than 70 times, will leave behind the worst housing slump since the Great Depression and an economy that may be shrinking.

Yuan gains won't help the U.S., said Zuo Xiaolei, chief economist in Beijing at China Galaxy Securities Co., the nation's biggest brokerage.

“The U.S. has no reason or justification to push for further appreciation,'' he said. “The U.S. needs money to clean up the collapse of its housing market and that will require a stronger dollar to lure back investors.''

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August 9, 2008

Fannie Mae takes $2.3 billion loss, slashes dividend

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Moon @ 6:57 am

Continued credit problems pushed Fannie Mae to a $2.3 billion second-quarter loss, prompting it to cut its dividend to 5 cents a share, the company announced Friday.

Losses at Washington, D.C.-based Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM), the largest buyer of home mortgages in the U.S., totaled $2.54 cents a share, while analysts polled by Thomson Financial were expecting losses of only 69 cents a share. Last year, the company posted a $1.83 billion profit, or $1.86 a share, in the second quarter.

Losses were driven largely by $5.3 billion the company spent on credit-related expenses, including $3.7 billion which was added to combined loss reserves. Fannie predicted 2008 will be the peak year for credit-related expenses.

"Our second-quarter results reflect challenging conditions in the housing and mortgage markets that began in 2006 and have deepened through 2007 and 2008," said Daniel Mudd, president and CEO in a statement. "We have already undertaken a series of initiatives, including raising more than $7 billion in additional capital in the second quarter, to help us manage through the most difficult U.S. housing market in more than 70 years."

While Fannie said it is well capitalized with $47 billion in the coffers, it announced a series of initiatives to conserve capital cashadvance.com fast cash online. By slashing its dividend to 5 cents a share from 35 cents a share, the company will preserve $1.9 billion in capital through 2009. It also will reduce its annual operating costs by 10 percent by the end of 2009 and increase its guarantee fees by a quarter of a percent, the company said.

Revenue at the mortgage giant was $4 billion, up 46 percent from 2007 and up 5 percent from the first quarter 2008.

Earlier this week, Fannie's government-sponsored rival Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) also posted higher than expected losses and cut its dividend to a 5 cents a share.



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