Lenon’s main business news

February 28, 2010

Marriott International opens on American Indian reservation

Filed under: management — Tags: , , — Moon @ 1:51 pm

Marriott International Inc. has signed a management contract with Salt River Devco, a development company run by the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community in Arizona, to operate a Courtyard by Marriott-branded hotel on reservation property.

It is Marriott’s first hotel on U.S. tribal land. It is located just outside of Scottsdale, Ariz.

The hotel, owned by Salt River Devco, is part of a 108-acre development it manages which currently includes six commercial buildings with plans for eight more.

“It is a great example of Marriott’s diverse ownership program, which currently has more than 500 diverse-owned hotels,” said Eric Jacobs, senior vice president of lodging development for Marriott cash advance to savings account.

The 156-room hotel is scheduled to open in 2012. Courtyard is Marriott’s (NYSE: MAR) largest brand, with 860 properties now and another 150 in development.

Source

February 23, 2010

Dollar turns mixed

Filed under: online — Tags: , — Moon @ 9:33 am

The dollar turned mixed Friday afternoon, with the euro recovering from steep losses, as U.S. stocks gained and traders continued to mull the Federal Reserve’s decision to raise its discount lending rate.

What prices are doing: The dollar fell 0.6% against the euro to $1.3609, after climbing to a nine-month high earlier in the day. But it gained 0.4% against the British pound at $1.5465. Against the Japanese yen, the dollar fell 0.3% to ¥91.82.

The dollar index (DXY), which measures the greenback against a basket of major rival currencies, rose 0.2% to 80.54.

What’s moving the market: The dollar rallied throughout the morning on expectations that the Federal Reserve could move to tighten monetary policy sooner than expected.

But the euro recovered in the afternoon as traders gravitated towards higher yielding assets. Stocks ended a choppy session higher, marking the fourth straight day of gains.

Some analysts said the euro’s rebound was due to a "short squeeze," which occurs when traders rush to unwind bets that a currency will fall.

"The price action in the forex markets is clearly indicative of a short squeeze," said Kathy Lien, director of currency research at trading firm GFT. "The recovery in the euro poses little threat to the dollar’s rally because fundamentally, the Eurozone is in worse shape than the U.S."

Meanwhile, investors continue to digest the Fed’s decision to increase its discount rate, which is what banks pay to borrow directly from the Fed, to 0.75% Thursday.

The increase is not expected to impact the price of consumer loans — such as mortgages and credit card rates — because the discount rate is what the Fed charges banks for emergency short-term borrowing.

The Fed left its benchmark lending rate, which has a bigger impact on the price of consumer loans, near zero. And given the sluggish labor market and tepid economic recovery, the closely watched rate will remain near its historic low for the foreseeable future.

Still, the increase in the discount rate is a small sign that the Fed thinks the market can begin to stand on its own. That confidence helped boost the dollar earlier in the day.

What analysts are saying: "Although the Fed went out of their way to say that this does not equate to a change in their monetary policy outlook, action speaks louder than words," Lien said. "Their decision to begin normalizing rates before the next central bank meeting indicates how hawkish they must be and how serious they are about tightening monetary policy."

Lien added that that the rate hike is a "game changer for the foreign exchange market" and will boost the dollar because it signals that the Fed is beginning to implement an exit strategy, which is not the case for other central banks.

Though the Fed’s action and strong U.S. economic data will continue to make the dollar a more attractive investment, Lien said the buck will also gain ground as investors focus on Europe’s debt crisis.

"At the end of the day, the U.S. dollar is still a safe haven currency, which means that as long as investors remain nervous, the dollar should hold onto its gains." 

Source

February 21, 2010

Taiwan Economy Probably Exited Deepest Recession, Survey Shows

Filed under: money — Tags: , , — Moon @ 3:21 pm

Taiwan’s economy probably exited the deepest recession on record last quarter as the global recovery spurred demand for the island’s semiconductors and mobile phones, according to a survey of economists.

Gross domestic product increased 7.1 percent in the three months through December from a year earlier, the median of the Bloomberg News survey’s nine estimates shows, after contracting for the previous five quarters. The report will be released on Feb. 22 at 1:30 p.m. in Taipei.

The emergence of the world economy from the worst slump since World War II spurred businesses in Taiwan, where exports equal half of GDP, to boost production and hire more workers. President Ma Ying-jeou is negotiating a trade accord with China that would cut import duties on Taiwanese goods in the world’s fastest growing major economy and help cement the recovery.

“Taiwan is ‘out of the woods’ for as long as the global economy is — and is particularly benefitting from a surge in growth in China,” said Dariusz Kowalczyk, chief investment strategist in Hong Kong at SJS Markets Ltd. “Since inflation in bound to return, we expect the central bank to begin raising rates in April, with 50 points of tightening likely in 2010.”

Taiwan’s exports to China, its biggest trading partner and No. 1 overseas investment destination, soared 187.8 percent in January from a year earlier, after a 96.7 percent gain in December. Shipments to the U.S., the second largest export market, rose 13.7 percent after increasing 4 percent in December.

Surging Profits

Stronger demand for electronics helped Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and United Microelectronics Corp., the world’s largest makers of custom chips, post fourth-quarter profits that beat analysts’ estimates and boost capital spending this year.

The economy is emerging from the worst recession since records began in the 1950s. Central Bank Governor Perng Fai-nan kept interest rates unchanged at a record-low 1.25 percent on Dec. 24, after slashing them by 2.375 percentage points from September 2008 to February 2009 to revive the economy.

The unemployment rate fell for a third month in December after reaching a record 6.09 percent in September. Taiwan Semiconductor, the island’s biggest company by market value, said it plans record spending this year and will add more than 3,000 engineers.

“Local exporters have been reporting good sales figures in the fourth quarter because of rising demand from overseas,” said Lee Ming-han, an economist at Sinopac Bank in Taipei. “Domestic consumption also improved on a falling jobless rate and gains in the stock markets.”

China Accord

President Ma’s administration has been pushing for the trade agreement with China to prevent Taiwan from being “marginalized” after a Chinese accord with the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations took effect this year.

China and Hong Kong combined is Taiwan’s largest overseas market, accounting for 40 percent of the island’s $203.7 billion of exports last year. Overseas shipments of flat screens, computer chips and other electronics goods made up about 28 percent of the total. Asean, which represents a quarter of the world’s population, accounts for 15 percent of Taiwan’s exports.

The government estimates the so-called Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement with China would increase GDP by 1.65 to 1.72 percentage points annually, spurring exports and creating more than 260,000 jobs. Exports would rise as much as 5 percent a year and imports by 7 percent, it says.

Opposition Rally

The opposition is against signing the accord and is calling for a public referendum. The Democratic Progressive Party on Dec. 20 rallied 100,000 people into the streets of Taichung city to protest Ma’s China policies, on concern that they will erode the island’s sovereignty.

China and Taiwan have been ruled separately since Nationalist troops fled to the island after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong’s Communist forces in 1949. China has threatened to invade Taiwan if it declares formal independence, and in 2006 carried out a weeklong series of missile tests near the island.

The risks to Taiwan “are centered around the global outlook, which is strong only in the short term,” Kowalczyk of SJS said. “By late 2010 and early 2011 we see a double dip in G-3 economies, which will trigger a slowdown. This is bound to hit Taiwanese exports and reduce its growth rate in 2011.”

Taiwan’s currency climbed 0.3 percent to close at NT$32.1 against the U.S. dollar on Feb. 12, the last trading before the Lunar New Year holiday, according to Taipei Forex Inc. The benchmark Taiex index gained 1.1 percent, after surging 78 percent last year, the best performance since 1993. Taiwan’s financial markets will resume trading on Feb. 22.

Export Growth

Taiwan is aiming for 22 percent growth in exports in 10 markets this year, including China, India, Japan, Russia and Brazil, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said last month. The island’s statistics bureau forecast in November that exports would increase 15.4 percent this year.

Nanya Technology Corp. last month reported NT$211 million ($6.6 million) profit in the fourth quarter, after posting losses in the previous 10 quarters, as demand for computers rebounded and prices of semiconductors rose. Smaller rival Powerchip said Jan. 20 that its fourth quarter profit exceeded NT$1.6 billion.

Taiwan Semiconductor, the island’s biggest company by market value, plans record spending of $4.8 billion on equipment and factories this year after reporting fourth-quarter profit more than doubled to NT$32.7 billion.

Prime View International Co., the screen supplier to Sony Corp.’s Reader and Amazon.com’s Kindle e-book readers, plans to triple its capacity in the U.S. and China this year on rising orders, Chairman Scott Liu said in an interview last month.

Source

February 17, 2010

U.K. Jobless Rate Would Be Almost Double in Euro, CEBR Says

Filed under: finance — Tags: , , — Moon @ 6:48 am

The U.K.’s unemployment rate would be almost double and its recession would have been deeper if Britain had joined the euro, according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research.

Gross domestic product would have contracted 7 percent last year and unemployment would currently be 15 percent if the nation had signed up to the single currency, CEBR’s Chief Executive Officer Douglas McWilliams said today in an e-mailed statement. The economy shrank 4.8 percent last year.

At 7.8 percent, the U.K. jobless rate is below that of the U.S. and the average of the euro region, which are both at 10 percent. Prime Minister Gordon Brown decided to keep Britain out of the European single currency when he was finance minister in 2003 after an assessment of the potential benefits of joining. Many euro members have struggled, McWilliams said personal business card.

“Most European economies have found keeping up with a German-inspired exchange rate a problem,” he said. “For those European countries that have a propensity to borrow, a single interest rate, kept low by frugal Germany, was a step too far and they over borrowed. Ireland and Spain are the most spectacular examples, but Portugal and Greece also had interest rates that were far too low for their economic circumstances.”

If the U.K. had joined the euro in 1998, economic growth would have been “slightly higher” and inflation would have been faster by about 0.6 percent through 2006, McWilliams said.

Source

February 15, 2010

Fed Seeks Help From Money Funds to Drain $1 Trillion

Filed under: finance — Tags: , , — Moon @ 1:03 am

The Federal Reserve is in talks with money-market mutual funds on agreements to help drain as much as $1 trillion from the financial system as policy makers prepare for the first interest-rate increase since June 2006, according to a person familiar with the discussions.

The central bank is looking to the money-market mutual fund industry which manages $3.2 trillion in assets because the 18 so-called primary dealers that trade directly with the Fed have a capacity limited to about $100 billion, estimates Joseph Abate, a money-market strategist at Barclays Capital in New York.

Money-market funds may welcome the opportunity to trade with the Fed after the financial crisis reduced the supply of safe assets in which they can invest. In one example of demand for such assets, auctions on four-week Treasury bills have attracted an average of $5.47 in bids for every dollar sold this year, compared with an average of $3.77 last year, according to Bloomberg data. Yields on the four-week bill were quoted at four basis points at 3:47 p.m. in New York trading from 18 basis points a year ago.

“There are lots of great credit stories, but the option of going with the Fed and the government — it takes away part of the risk,” said Deborah Cunningham, a chief investment officer at Federated Investors Inc. in Pittsburgh, which manages $318 billion in money-market investments. Conversations with the Fed “seem pretty positive,” she said, adding that the Fed and the industry should be in a position to conduct operations before the end of the year.

Fannie, Freddie

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke yesterday charted ways the Fed might withdraw record monetary stimulus pumped into the economy to fight the recession. Among the central bank’s tools are reverse repurchase agreements, in which the Fed sells securities with the intention of repurchasing them at a later date.

The Fed is also considering reverse repurchase agreements with mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, said the person familiar with the discussions. Freddie Mac spokeswoman Sharon McHale declined to comment. Fannie Mae spokesman Brian Faith also declined to comment.

“To further increase its capacity to drain reserves through reverse repos,” Bernanke said, the Fed is “in the process of expanding the set of counterparties with which it can transact” beyond primary dealers of government securities.

The primary dealers, which are required to bid at auctions of Treasury notes and trade directly with the New York Fed’s markets desk, include BNP Paribas Securities Corp., Banc of America Securities LLC and Goldman Sachs & Co.

‘Extended Period’

Bernanke repeated yesterday that while interest rates are likely to stay low for an “extended period,” the Fed in “due course” will need to “begin to tighten monetary conditions to prevent the development of inflationary pressures paydayloan.”

The central bank has created more than $1 trillion in excess reserves in the banking system through its purchases of $300 billion of Treasury debt and $1.25 trillion of mortgage- backed securities. To put upward pressure on the federal funds rate, the Fed may need to drain as much as $800 billion, Abate estimates.

One potential tightening tool is the interest rate on reserves that commercial banks keep on deposit at the Fed. By raising that rate, the central bank “will be able to put significant upward pressure on all short-term interest rates,” Bernanke said.

The Fed can also use reverse repos to shrink the quantity of reserves, which in turn gives it “tighter control over short-term interest rates,” he said.

Risk for Fed

Fed officials face the risk that when they start to tighten policy by raising the rate they pay banks on reserves, other market rates may not follow. That would keep monetary conditions too loose in an expansion.

“They still seem nervous that they might not be able to control short rates, and if they can’t control short rates, how do they tighten?” said Mark Spindel, chief investment officer at Potomac River Capital LLC, which manages $200 million in Washington.

The Fed has sought to keep the benchmark rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent since December 2008. The federal funds rate is now 0.13 percent, even though banks can earn 0.25 percent by keeping their money on deposit at the Fed.

One reason for the discrepancy is that Fannie and Freddie have become “significant sellers” of funds in the overnight market and aren’t eligible to place cash on deposit at the Fed, according to a December research paper by the New York Fed.

Some hurdles remain in the Fed’s efforts to secure bigger repo capacity. Fed officials and mutual-fund industry representatives are working on a structure that would allow funds to invest in relatively liquid assets that can be sold in seven days, while allowing the central bank to avoid having to renew billions of dollars in transactions each week.

“There needs to be liquidity,” said Cunningham of Federated. “A reverse repo contract is not considered to be liquid in the context of anything beyond seven days.”

Source

February 11, 2010

Chicago company to acquire All-Pak

Filed under: news — Tags: , — Moon @ 4:15 am

Chicago-based Berlin Packaging said Monday it will acquire All-Pak Inc., a packaging supplier based in Bridgeville, near Pittsburgh.

Berlin Packaging describes itself as a "full-service supplier of plastic, glass and metal containers and closures." All-Pak evolved from the former Cunningham Glass Co., which has been in the Pittsburgh area for some 50 years.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed Monday, and it was not clear whether any Pittsburgh-area layoffs would result from the acquisition.

According to a news release, the combined company, which will be headquartered in Chicago, will have annual revenue approaching $500 million. All-Pak will maintain a "significant operational presence at all of its geographical locations," according to the release.

The acquisition is expected to close by the end of February, according to the release.

Source

February 7, 2010

Trichet Struggles to Convince Investors of Euro-Area Solidity

Filed under: online — Tags: , , — Moon @ 7:24 am

European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet is struggling to convince investors that the euro region shouldn’t be punished for Greece’s budget problems.

As the Greek government tries to control its record deficit and the country’s bonds slide, Trichet yesterday said the economy of the 16-nation euro area is solid and its budget shortfall will probably be smaller than those of the U.S. and Japan this year. The euro nevertheless fell more than half a cent against the dollar and Spanish and Portuguese stocks dropped on concern they are in a similar predicament to Greece.

Trichet “did not convince me,” said Stuart Thomson, who helps manage $100 billion at Ignis Asset Management in Glasgow, Scotland. “Where does he think the Greek, Spanish and Portuguese economies will be three years from now? Their austerity measures will weigh on the euro area as a whole.”

Trichet has been forced to fend off questions about the survival of the euro as investors doubt Greece’s ability to cut its deficit from 12.7 percent of gross domestic product to below the European Union’s 3 percent limit. As concern spreads to Spain and Portugal’s rising debt burdens, Trichet will try to stress the need for fiscal prudence without inflaming skepticism that it can be achieved.

“Something has to happen to turn credibility around,” said Paul Mortimer-Lee, head of Market Economics at BNP Paribas in London. “The market’s just saying it’s not believable. It might have to get worse before it gets better.”

Markets Shudder

Spanish stocks dropped the most in 15 months yesterday and Portugal led declines in government bonds. The euro fell to $1.3728, its lowest level against the dollar since last May. It has dropped more than 9 percent since Nov. 25.

Greek bonds have tumbled in the past two months, pushing the yield on the country’s 10-year debt above 7 percent, the highest since 1999, the year the euro was introduced. The premium investors charge to hold Greek 10-year bonds over the benchmark German bund has widened to 356 basis points, about 10 times what it was two years ago.

The ECB yesterday left its benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent and Trichet signaled the bank is in no rush to raise borrowing costs as the economy recovers gradually from its worst recession since World War II.

Still, Trichet said the “solidity” of the euro area “is not necessarily very well known” and its situation compares “very flatteringly with a number of other industrialized countries.”

Gradual Recovery

The euro-area economy will grow 0.8 percent this year and 1.2 percent in 2011, according to the ECB’s December forecasts. It contracted 4 percent last year, the European Commission estimates.

“Trichet is still trying to persuade markets that they should be looking at the euro area as a whole, which does not look that bad, rather than at individual countries, some of which look extremely fragile,” said Marco Annunziata, chief economist at UniCredit SpA in London.

Spain’s public debt will rise to 74 percent of GDP by 2011 from 54 percent last year, according to European Commission forecasts. Greece’s debt will increase to 135 percent of GDP from 113 percent, and Portugal’s will increase to 91 percent from 77 percent, the EU estimates.

Greece’s consolidation plans, which call for about 10 billion euros ($13.7 billion) of spending cuts and revenue increases this year, are more ambitious than any budget reduction achieved by euro-region countries since the 1970s, according to ING Group.

Greece’s biggest union yesterday approved a second mass strike this month to protest the spending cuts and tax collectors began a 48-hour walkout, illustrating the difficulty Prime Minister George Papandreou faces in implementing his plan.

“We expect and we are confident that the Greek government will take all the decisions that will permit them to reach that goal,” Trichet said. Additional proposals announced by Greece this week to freeze public-sector wages and revamp the pension system “are steps in the right direction,” he said.

Source

February 2, 2010

Consumer Spending in U.S. Increases for Third Month

Filed under: money — Tags: , , — Moon @ 12:48 pm

Spending by U.S. consumers increased in December for a third consecutive month, signaling the biggest part of the economy will contribute more to growth in coming months.

The 0.2 percent increase in purchases was less than anticipated and followed a 0.7 percent gain in November that was larger than previously estimated, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. Incomes climbed 0.4 percent, exceeding expectations.

Retailers such as Amazon.com Inc. are posting profits on increased sales as Americans spent more this past holiday season than the year before. Employment is key to propelling bigger gains in spending, one reason the Obama administration is proposing a fiscal 2011 budget today that calls for $100 billion in additional stimulus focusing on jobs.

“Consumers have the wherewithal to support good spending, however they are going to be reticent until they see a few good months of job gains,” said Craig Thomas, a senior economist at PNC Financial Services Group Inc. in Pittsburgh, who correctly forecast the gain in spending. “2010 is lined up to be a moderately good year.”

Stock-index futures held earlier gains following the report. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 0.6 percent to 1,076.5 at 9:10 a.m. in New York. Treasury securities fell.

The median estimate of 65 economists surveyed called for a 0.3 percent increase in spending, after an originally reported gain of 0.5 percent the prior month. Projections ranged from no change to 0.7 percent.

Income Gains

The gain in incomes followed a 0.5 percent increase in November and exceeded the 0.3 percent median estimate in the Bloomberg survey. Wages and salaries climbed 0.1 percent in December after increasing 0.4 percent the prior month.

Today’s report showed prices were stabilizing. The inflation gauge tied to spending patterns rose 2.1 percent from December 2008, less than the survey median forecast.

The Fed’s preferred price measure, which excludes food and fuel, climbed 0.1 percent in December from the previous month and was up 1.5 percent from a year earlier.

Adjusted for inflation, spending climbed 0.1 percent following a 0.4 percent rise the prior month.

Because the increase in spending was smaller than the gain in incomes, the savings rate rose to 4.8 percent from 4.5 percent the prior month.

Disposable income, or the money left over after taxes, increased 0.4 percent.

Better Sales

Amazon, the world’s largest Internet retailer, posted profit and sales that beat analysts’ estimates and said revenue growth may accelerate this quarter as consumers start spending more following the recession. Sales may rise as much as 43 percent to $7 billion in the first quarter, more than last year’s 18 percent growth, the Seattle-based company said last week in a statement. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had estimated sales of $6.42 billion.

Inflation-adjusted spending on durable goods, such as autos, furniture, and other long-lasting items, climbed 0.2 percent in December after rising 2.3 percent the prior month.

Purchases of non-durable goods decreased 0.8 percent, and spending on services, which account for almost 60 percent of all outlays, increased 0.4 percent.

The economy grew at a 5.7 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, exceeding the median forecast of economists surveyed, figures from the Commerce Department showed last week. Consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of the economy, climbed at a 2 percent pace, also exceeding expectations.

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