Economic Calendar

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Apple, E-Book Publishers Probed by EU Agency

By Aoife White and Erik Larson - Dec 6, 2011 11:05 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Apple, E-Book Publishers Probed by European Union Regulators

The probe will examine deals between Apple and Lagardere’s Hachette Livre, News Corp.’s Harper Collins, CBS’s Simon & Schuster, Pearson’s Penguin and Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck GmbH. Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg


Apple Inc. (AAPL), the world’s biggest technology company, and five e-book publishers are being investigated by European Union antitrust regulators over deals that may restrict sales across the region.

The probe targets the iPad-maker’s deals with Lagardere SCA (MMB)’s Hachette Livre, News Corp. (NWSA)’s Harper Collins, CBS Corp.’s Simon & Schuster, Pearson Plc (PSON)’s Penguin and Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck GmbH’s Macmillan division, the European Commission said in an e-mailed statement. Publishers’ deals with retailers are also under scrutiny.

PricewaterhouseCoopers said in a January report that European e-book sales have been sluggish, partly due to the small range of non-English titles and fixed price agreements between publishers and stores in 13 countries. EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said last month that he wanted to fight “artificial restrictions imposed by some companies to cross-border trade” and was examining the way e-books are distributed.

Today’s probe “will in particular investigate whether these publishing groups and Apple have engaged in illegal agreements or practices that would have the object or the effect of restricting competition,” the Brussels-based authority said.

Amazon Sales

Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), the world’s largest Internet retailer, may sell as many as 5 million e-book readers in the fourth quarter, according to a report from Forrester Research Inc. Amazon sold about half of the 12.8 million e-book readers purchased worldwide last year, IDC said in March. E-books are also sold for media tablets such as the iPad and Samsung Electronics Co.’s Galaxy.

Apple fell 0.3 percent to $391.69 at 10:57 a.m. in New York trading. Amazon declined 1 percent to $194.35.

The probe isn’t Apple’s first encounter with the EU’s antitrust authority. The company settled an EU antitrust case in 2009 by agreeing to reduce prices for U.K. iTunes music downloads and was probed over restrictions on iPhone applications in a case the EU closed last year.

Some European newspapers also protested earlier this year against Apple’s proposed subscription model for the iPad. Apple and Samsung were recently quizzed by the commission over the use of smartphone patents, regulators said last month.

Antitrust Complaint

Apple, based in Cupertino, California, Paris-based Lagardere and Macmillan declined to comment about today’s EU announcement.

French technology news website 01net.com reported in March that Editions Albin Michel SA president Francis Esmenard said raids by regulators on his company and others were triggered by a complaint from Amazon.

Amazon didn’t immediately respond to a call and an e-mail seeking comment.

Britain’s Office of Fair Trading, which opened an investigation in February, said in a statement on its website today that it would drop its probe into e-books to allow EU officials to take the lead.

“Pearson does not believe it has breached any laws, and will continue to fully and openly cooperate with the commission,” the company said in an e-mailed statement.

Harper Collins is “cooperating fully with the investigation,” according to an e-mailed statement from spokeswoman Siobhan Kenny. Simon and Schuster is also cooperating with the probe, spokesman Adam Rothberg said in an e-mail.

To contact the reporter on this story: Aoife White in Brussels at awhite62@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anthony Aarons at aaarons@bloomberg.net.




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French, Spanish Bonds Fall After S&P Rating Warning; U.S. Stocks Fluctuate

By Stephen Kirkland and Rita Nazareth - Dec 6, 2011 10:57 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image U.S. Stocks Fluctuate

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York. Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Timothy Moe, a Hong Kong-based strategist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., talks about the outlook for Asian stocks and Europe's sovereign debt crisis. He speaks from Singapore with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


French, Spanish and Austrian bonds fell after Standard & Poor’s said it may cut the credit ratings of 15 euro nations and the European bailout fund. U.S. equities fluctuated and the euro trimmed most of an earlier loss.

The yield on France’s 10-year bond jumped 11 basis points to 3.23 percent at 10:56 a.m. in New York, with similar- maturity Spanish and Austrian debt increasing at least six points. Rates on notes issued by the bailout fund maturing in July 2016 increased eight points to 2.42 percent after dropping for six straight days. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.1 percent and the S&P 500 was little changed. The euro weakened 0.1 percent to $1.3383 after slumping as much as 0.5 percent. Silver, gold and cocoa led commodities lower.

Germany, France and four other nations may lose their AAA credit ratings depending on the result of a summit of European Union leaders on Dec. 9, S&P said yesterday. S&P said today the rating of the European Financial Stability Facility may also lose its top rating. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will probably cut the benchmark interest rate a quarter point to buoy the economy when policy makers meet Dec. 8, according to 58 economists in a Bloomberg survey.

“The European crisis is an on and off switch,” Alan Gayle, a senior strategist at RidgeWorth Capital Management in Richmond, Virginia, which oversees about $44 billion, said in a telephone interview. “While the market was not overly shocked by the S&P announcements, they do create a sense of urgency for European leaders. The good news is that they are coming up with proposals, but that also raises questions on whether they will be in fact able to deal with them.”

The EFSF risks losing its top credit rating if any of the fund’s six guarantors are downgraded from AAA, S&P said today. The ratings company may affirm the AAA rating on the EFSF and its issues if the ratings on the six guarantors are maintained.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said today that the downgrade warning yesterday will help force Europe to ratchet up efforts to resolve the two-year old fiscal crisis this week.

The extra yield, or spread, investors demand to hold the French securities instead of bunds, Europe’s benchmark government securities, increased 12 basis points. Yields on Dutch 10-year debt increased 2.6 basis points and Austrian rates increased five points. The Portuguese-German spread narrowed 34 basis points, while the yield on Ireland’s October 2020 security fell six basis points.

Bond Risk

The cost of insuring against default on European sovereign debt rose for the first time in seven days, with the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps on 15 governments climbing seven basis points to 327.

The Swiss franc declined 0.6 percent against the euro and slid 0.7 percent versus the dollar after a report showed that consumer prices in the nation fell the most in more than two years last month, led by lower costs for imports, adding pressure on the Swiss National Bank to raise its franc ceiling to protect the economy.

Lower Rates

Australia’s dollar dropped 0.4 percent against the U.S. currency after the nation’s central bank reduced its benchmark interest rate for a second straight month as Europe’s debt crisis threatens to slow exports.

The Stoxx 600 earlier dropped of as much as 0.8 percent. RWE AG, Germany’s second-largest utility, tumbled 7.2 percent after announcing a share sale to raise about 2.1 billion euros ($2.8 billion). Yara International ASA gained 7 percent as the maker of nitrogen fertilizer affirmed its policy of returning cash to shareholders.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) fell 1.4 percent, snapping a six-day, 10 percent rally. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index (HSCEI) slid 1.5 percent after Fitch Ratings said a Chinese property-price correction will lead to worsening loan portfolios while Nomura Holdings Inc. cut its estimate for China’s economic growth next year to 7.9 percent from 8.6 percent.

To contact the reporters on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net; Lynn Thomasson in Hong Kong at lthomasson@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael P. Regan at mregan12@bloomberg.net



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U.S. Stocks Rise on Europe Speculation

By Rita Nazareth - Dec 6, 2011 11:02 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Paul Hickey, co-founder of Bespoke Investment Group, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy and investment strategy. He speaks with Betty Liu and Dominic Chu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop." (Source: Bloomberg)


U.S. stocks were little changed as concern the European Financial Stability Facility may lose its top credit rating tempered optimism about efforts to tame the region’s credit crisis.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and Citigroup Inc. (C) dropped at least 1.3 percent. Darden Restaurants Inc. (DRI), operator of the Red Lobster chain, tumbled 10 percent after cutting its full-year sales and profit growth forecasts. 3M Co. (MMM) added 1.9 percent as revenue may increase as much as 6 percent next year amid a boost from acquisitions. General Electric Co. (GE) rose 2.3 percent as Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. raised its recommendation.

The S&P 500 dropped less than 0.1 percent to 1,256.84 at 11 a.m. New York time. The benchmark gauge gained 1 percent yesterday even as S&P put 15 euro nations on review for possible downgrade. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 35.34 points, or 0.3 percent, to 12,133.17 today.

“The European crisis is an on and off switch,” Alan Gayle, a senior strategist at RidgeWorth Capital Management in Richmond, Virginia, which oversees about $44 billion, said in a telephone interview. “While the market was not overly shocked by S&P announcements, they do create a sense of urgency for European leaders. The good news is that they are coming up with proposals, but that also raises questions on whether they will be in fact able to deal with them.”

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said S&P’s warning will help force European leaders to ratchet up efforts to resolve the crisis. Six nations may lose their AAA ratings depending on the result of a summit of European Union leaders this week, S&P said yesterday. Today, S&P said the European Financial Stability Facility may lose its top credit rating if any of its guarantors have their own debt grade cut.

3M Rallies

3M rallied 1.9 percent to $82.49. Sales may be $30.2 billion to $31.5 billion, according to a presentation on the company’s website, in line with the $30.6 billion average estimate from analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The maker of Scotch-Brite sponges and Nexcare thermometers expects earnings per share of $6.25 to $6.50 next year, also tracking estimates.

GE added 2.3 percent to $16.71. Sanford C. Bernstein raised its recommendation for the Fairfield, Connecticut-based company to “outperform” from “market perform,” citing rising dividends and energy orders starting in 2012.

Toll Brothers Inc. (TOL) added 1.3 percent to $21, pacing a rally in homebuilders. The largest U.S. luxury-home builder reported earnings that beat analysts’ estimates as prices rose and sales improved at its East Coast communities.

Financial stocks had the biggest decline in the S&P 500 among 10 industries, falling 0.4 percent. JPMorgan lost 1.3 percent to $33.06. Citigroup lost 1.5 percent to $29.39.

Better Results

Bank of America Corp. gained 1.1 percent to $5.86. Its trading results have improved in its investment banking unit this quarter, Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan said. Separately, a filing in Manhattan federal court said that Bank of America reached a $315 million settlement with class action plaintiffs who sued its Merrill Lynch unit over claims tied to mortgage-backed securities.

Darden fell 10 percent to $42.74. Full-year earnings per share growth from continuing operations will be 4 percent to 7 percent, down from a previous forecast of 12 percent to 15 percent, the Orlando, Florida-based company said today in a statement. Total sales growth will be 6 percent to 7 percent, reduced from a prior forecast of 6.5 percent to 7.5 percent.

Laszlo Birinyi says he knew it would be hard to make predictions for 2012 in October, when he saw a headline suggesting that markets would rise or fall depending on whether the tiny nation of Slovakia approved a bailout plan for Europe.

Doesn’t Take Much

Birinyi, president of stock market research and money- management firm Birinyi Associates Inc., says markets are so volatile that it doesn’t take much to send them reeling, reports Bloomberg Markets magazine in its January issue.

“There are so many exogenous factors that to try to forecast the market with a degree of confidence is difficult,” Birinyi says.

The best strategy for stock investors, he says, is to stick with iconic brands, such as Apple Inc. (AAPL) or Ralph Lauren Corp. (RL), and with companies that offer “meaningful dividends” of at least 5 percent.

The most widely followed “fear gauge” for stocks sends relatively weak signals most of the time about whether to buy or sell, according to Tobias Levkovich, Citigroup Inc.’s chief U.S. equity strategist.

During the past four months, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, known as the VIX, fell to 27.84 from a second-half peak of 48.00. The readings are based on the prices paid for S&P 500 options.

‘Little Guidance’

“At current levels, the VIX provides little guidance for investing purposes,” Levkovich wrote in a Dec. 2 report. He added that the index “is not that effective as a market-timing tool unless it is at extremes.”

When the VIX was less than 30, the S&P 500 had an average gain of 2.9 percent in the next six months, according to the report. At less than 20, the average climbed to 3.8 percent. Levkovich found a bigger gap at 12 months, when increases averaged 6.9 percent when the index was less than 30 and 10.3 percent at less than 20.

Relatively high readings usually preceded larger gains in stocks, according to the report. When the volatility index was above 40, the S&P 500 rose 14 percent for the next six months and 29 percent for the next 12 months on average.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in Sao Paulo at rnazareth@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net



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Most European Stocks Drop as S&P Puts 15 Euro Nations on Review; RWE Sinks

By Corinne Gretler - Dec 6, 2011 10:26 PM GMT+0700

Most European stocks fell, following two days of gains for the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index, as Standard & Poor’s put 15 euro-area nations on watch for potential rating downgrades.

RWE AG (RWE) tumbled 6.9 percent as Germany’s second-largest utility company sought to sell shares. Metro AG (MEO), Germany’s biggest retailer, plunged 11 percent as it forecast falling sales and earnings this year. Yara International ASA jumped the most since May 2009.

The Stoxx 600 slipped 0.1 percent to 242.41 at 3:23 p.m. in London as more than three stocks fell for every two that rose. The gauge rallied 0.8 percent yesterday as Italy’s Prime Minister Mario Monti introduced a proposal to cut his nation’s debt. The gauge posted its biggest rally since November 2008 last week as central banks lowered the interest rate on dollar funding and China reduced its reserve ratio for banks.

S&P’s statement “is for the most part already priced in the markets; it just confirms the deterioration of the finances of the countries in the region and the political dissensions,” said John Plassard, director at Louis Capital Markets in Geneva. “The downgrade warning can perhaps accelerate the implementation of measures and reforms, but it might already be too late.”

National benchmark indexes dropped in 13 of the 17 western- European markets that were open today. France’s CAC 40 Index (CAC) retreated 0.3 percent and the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index added 0.2 percent. Germany’s DAX Index sank 0.9 percent.

Credit Ratings Review

Germany, France and four other euro-area nations may lose their AAA credit ratings depending on the result of the summit of European Union leaders on Dec. 9, S&P said late yesterday. The ratings company put 15 euro nations on review for possible downgrade.

“Systemic stresses in the euro zone have risen in recent weeks and reached such a level that a review of all euro-zone sovereign ratings is warranted,” S&P said in a statement.

The European Financial Stability Facility, the bailout fund for struggling euro-member countries that has funded rescue packages for Greece, Ireland and Portugal partially through bond sales, may lose its top credit rating if any of its guarantors have their own debt grade lowered, S&P said. If the EFSF has to pay higher interest on its bonds, it may not be able to provide as much funding for the most indebted nations.

Merkel, Sarkozy Statement

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy responded in a joint statement late yesterday that they “took note” of the move by S&P, while both countries “affirm their conviction” that proposals for fiscal union will “strengthen coordination of budget and economic policy and promote stability, competitiveness and growth.”

The rating reviews “will put further pressure on those countries’ financing situation and make things not much easier for them,” said Alessandro Fezzi, senior market analyst at LGT Capital Management in Pfaeffikon, Switzerland. “The good thing about S&P’s warning is that it brought markets back to a more realistic view on the outcome of the upcoming EU summit.”

A measure of German factory orders jumped 5.2 percent in October after a 4.6 percent drop in September, according to a report from report from the Economy Ministry in Berlin. Economists had forecast a 1 percent increase, according to the median of 34 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.

RWE slumped 6.9 percent to 28.26 euros, its biggest drop in a month, as it raised about 2.1 billion euros to cut debt. The utility sold 80.4 million shares at 26 euros apiece.

Utilities Drop

A gauge of European utilities was among the worst performing of the 19 industry groups in the Stoxx 600, losing 1.9 percent. EON AG, Germany’s largest utility, slid 3.9 percent to 17.52 euros, while GDF Suez (GSZ) SA fell 2.1 percent to 20.94 euros.

Metro plunged 11 percent to 32.85 euros, its biggest slide in more than three years, after forecasting that sales and earnings will fall this year following a weak start to the Christmas season. Carrefour SA (CA), the biggest retailer in Europe by sales, retreated 5.8 percent to 19.11 euros.

Banks retreated, with Credit Agricole SA (ACA) sliding 3.4 percent to 4.89 euros and KBC Groep NV (KBC) slumped 3.8 percent to 10.88 euros. Banco Espirito Santo SA (BES), Portugal’s biggest publicly traded lender by market value, sank 12 percent to 1.23 euros, its largest slump since October 1998.

Finmeccanica SpA (FNC), Italy’s biggest arms company, slipped 3.7 percent to 3.43 euros after S&P cut its long-term credit rating to BBB- with a negative outlook, from BBB. The rating company cited lower earnings and restructuring of some of Finmeccanica’s divisions.

Valeo SA (FR) dropped 2 percent to 33.02 euros after France’s second-largest auto-parts maker said it bought the VTES unit from Controlled Power Technologies Ltd.

Air France-KLM (AF)

Air France-KLM fell 3.3 percent to 4.35 euros after La Tribune reported that the company will announce a freeze on salaries and other measures following a board meeting on Jan. 11. The newspaper cited unidentified people. Air France hopes for savings of a few dozen million euros in 2013 as a result of the move, La Tribune said.

Victrex Plc (VCT), a U.K. maker of heat-resistant plastics for the automotive and energy industries, declined 3.1 percent to 1,155 pence as Charles Pick, an analyst at Numis Securities Ltd., cut the stock to “add” from “buy.”

Yara International jumped 7.1 percent to 246.10 kroner after the biggest publicly traded nitrogen-fertilizer maker (YAR) said its cash-return policy remains “firm.” The company expects to return 40 percent to 45 percent of net income to its shareholders measured as the sum of dividends and share buybacks, averaged over the business cycle.

Wolseley Plc (WOS), the world’s largest supplier of heating and plumbing products, gained 3.7 percent to 1,974 pence after reporting a 5 percent increase in first-quarter revenue. The company reduced its debt by 41 percent to 587 million pounds ($917 million) over the 12 months through Oct. 31.

To contact the reporter on this story: Corinne Gretler in Zurich at cgretler1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew Rummer at arummer@bloomberg.net




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S&P Jumps Into Politics Again With EU Warning

By John Detrixhe and Zeke Faux - Dec 6, 2011 11:01 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics, talks about the European sovereign-debt crisis and Standard & Poor's warning that it may downgrade credit ratings across the region. Ryding, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop," also talks about U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's trip to Europe. (Source: Bloomberg)

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Barbara Ridpath, chief executive officer of the International Centre for Financial Regulation, talks about Standard & Poor's review of 15 euro nations' credit ratings, Europe's debt crisis and the outlook for the global banking industry. Ridpath speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Phillip Swagel, a professor of economics at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Policy who was an assistant U.S. Treasury secretary for economic policy in the George W. Bush administration, talks about Europe's sovereign debt crisis. Standard & Poor’s said Germany and France may be stripped of their AAA credit ratings as the debt crisis prompts 15 euro nations to be put on review for possible downgrade. Swagel speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


Standard & Poor’s, rebuked by Warren Buffett in August after downgrading the U.S. over government gridlock, is again injecting itself into the political process, just as European leaders are poised to meet for a summit aimed at ending the region’s sovereign-debt crisis.

The ratings firm put Germany, France and 13 other euro-area nations on review for a downgrade yesterday, saying “continuing disagreements among European policy makers on how to tackle” the region’s debt crisis risk damaging their financial stability. The move came four months after S&P cut the U.S. to AA+, saying “extremely difficult” political discussions over how to reduce America’s more than $1 trillion budget deficit tainted the credit quality of the world’s largest economy.

Bondholders questioned the timing of S&P’s move, with European Union leaders planning to meet Dec. 8-9 in Brussels to end a crisis that led to bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal, and now threatens to engulf Italy. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy had presented a plan earlier in the day to rewrite the EU’s governing treaty to allow tighter economic cooperation.

“S&P should back off,” Anthony Valeri, a market strategist with LPL Financial in San Diego, which oversees $330 billion, said in a telephone interview yesterday. “It complicates the job of the EU leaders to resolve the debt problem.”

$8.1 Trillion

Grades may be lowered by one level for Austria, Belgium, Finland, Germany, Netherlands and Luxembourg, and as many as two steps for the other governments if the summit results don’t satisfy S&P’s criteria, the firm said. More than $8.1 trillion of government debt would be affected if S&P does downgrade all the nations, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Germany and France are rated AAA.

“The crisis in the euro zone has now reached a level that systemic stresses have become more tangible and a bigger threat near term,” Moritz Kraemer, S&P’s head of European sovereign ratings, said today in a conference call with reporters. “It has become a crisis of euro zone governance.”

Kraemer denied that the company was trying to influence politics.

‘Elected Officials’

“Of course we’re not in the business of policy making, that’s the business of elected officials,” he said. “Our role is to assess the risk to capital markets investors and call those risks as we see them developing.”

The yield on France’s 10-year bond jumped 12 basis points as of 9:13 a.m. in New York, with the similar maturity German bund yield reversing an earlier advance to trade little changed. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.3 percent and the euro weakened 0.2 percent to $1.3371.

The move to tie ratings to the outcome of the summit drew criticism from European Central Bank Governing Council member Ewald Nowotny of Austria, who said today at a conference in Vienna that S&P was “politically motivated” with the announcement.

“The timing and the scope of this warning has a clearly political context -- a rating agency has entered the political arena,” he said.

European Central Bank governing council member Christian Noyer lambasted S&P for basing its judgment on politics.

“They changed their methodology and it’s now more linked to political factors and less to fundamentals,” Noyer said today at the Financium conference in Paris. “The rating agencies fueled the crisis in 2008 and we can question whether they’re not doing the same thing in the current crisis.”

S&P Was Right

S&P was right to assess the ability of European policy makers to handle the crisis as politics are now driving economic outcomes, according to Ashok Parameswaran, an emerging-markets analyst at Invesco Advisers Inc.

“S&P’s view is that the political outcome will also drive creditworthiness, and I don’t think anyone in their right mind would dispute this point,” he said today in an e-mail.

Finding a solution to Europe’s debt crisis took on greater urgency last month as yields on Italy’s debt surged past the 7 percent threshold that led Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek aid. Italy has 500 billion euros ($669 billion) of bonds maturing in the next three years, more than the current size of the EU’s rescue fund.

U.S. Downgrade

In a joint statement yesterday, the governments of France and Germany said they “recognize” the move by S&P and “affirm their conviction that the common proposals made today will strengthen coordination of budget and economic policy, and promote stability, competitiveness and growth.”

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said today in Vienna that S&P’s warning will help force European leaders to ratchet up efforts to resolve the crisis this week. The statement will prompt European leaders “to do what we’ve promised, namely to take the necessary decisions step-by-step and to win back the confidence of global investors,” he said.

New York-based S&P, a unit of McGraw-Hill Cos. (MHP), downgraded the U.S. to AA+ on Aug. 5 from AAA, saying the U.S. government is becoming “less stable, less effective and less predictable.”

While the S&P 500 Index of U.S. stocks plunged 6.7 percent on the first trading day after the downgrade, Treasuries rallied, sending yields to record lows. Treasuries due in 10 years or more are 2011’s best-performing sovereign securities, returning 26 percent as of Nov. 30, according to Bloomberg/EFFAS indexes.

The ratings company’s decision on the U.S. was flawed by a $2 trillion error, according to the Treasury Department. S&P disputed the Treasury’s assertions and said using the department’s preferred spending measures in its analysis didn’t affect its credit grade.

EFSF Rating

Buffett, the billionaire chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and the world’s most successful investor, said S&P erred and the U.S. should be rated “quadruple-A.” Buffett is also the largest shareholder of Moody’s Corp. (MCO), the parent of Moody’s Investors Service.

Downgrades of Germany and France would affect the rating of the 780 billion euro European Financial Stability Facility, the bailout fund for struggling euro member countries that has funded rescue packages for Greece, Ireland and Portugal partially through bond sales. The EFSF may lose its top credit grade if any of its guarantors are downgraded, S&P said in a statement today.

If the EFSF has to pay higher interest on its bonds, it may not be able to provide as much funding for indebted nations. Yields on the EFSF’s 3.375 percent bonds due in July 2021 rose 2 basis points at 9:18 a.m. today in New York to 3.62 percent, according to Bloomberg prices.

Proposed Rules

Regulators have tried and failed to rein in credit-rating companies, which the U.S. Congress has said helped fuel the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression by assigning top grades to subprime mortgage bonds, Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, said in a telephone interview.

“Why are they pulling the trigger now?” Rupkey said. “There’s a danger of putting too much power in the hands of these institutions and causing in effect a race to the bottom.”

The EU proposed rules last month to increase regulation of the credit-rating companies while postponing plans to ban them from giving assessments of countries negotiating international bailouts. Michel Barnier, the EU’s financial services chief, said that he didn’t think S&P was retaliating.

‘Just an Opinion’

“It’s just an opinion,” he said in an e-mailed statement from Brussels today. “I don’t think that the agencies are avenging themselves against our proposals. I can’t imagine that.”

S&P also cited “high levels of government and household indebtedness across a large area of the eurozone” and the increased risk of a recession in 2012 as reasons for yesterday’s change in outlook. The firm said economic output in Spain, Portugal and Greece will likely fall next year, and that there’s now a 40 percent chance of a decline for the entire region.

The “negative” outlook on CC rated Greece, which is 10 steps below investment quality, wasn’t changed, as its grade “connotes our belief that there is a relatively high near-term probability of default,” S&P said. The firm kept its “negative” outlook on Cyprus’s long-term rating and placed its short-term rating on “creditwatch with negative implications.”

‘Full Fiscal Union’

Europe may stem its debt crisis by moving to a “full fiscal union” in which all countries assume responsibility for the euro area’s sovereign debt or by “a much larger commitment” by the ECB to support sovereign-debt markets, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said Nov. 30 in a research note.

The threat of a downgrade may make it more difficult for Merkel to convince the German people that supporting peripheral nations is in their interest, Noel Hebert, a credit strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities USA Inc. in New York, said yesterday in a telephone interview.

“If it starts threatening the creditworthiness of the country itself, that’s a much harder row to hoe for Germany,” Hebert said. “It heightens the internal tensions that Merkel has politically.”

Sovereign Issuer:    Ratings Placed on Watch:

Austria AAA
Finland AAA
France AAA
Germany AAA
Luxembourg AAA
Netherlands AAA
Slovenia AA-/A-1+
Slovakia A+/A-1
Portugal BBB-/A-3
Ireland BBB+/A-2
Malta A/A-1
Italy A/A-1
Spain AA-/A-1+
Estonia AA-/A-1+
Belgium AA

To contact the reporters on this story: John Detrixhe in New York at jdetrixhe1@bloomberg.net; Zeke Faux in New York at zfaux@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at dliedtka@bloomberg.net; Alan Goldstein at agoldstein5@bloomberg.net





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GE Investors Await Fed Review for Payment

By Rachel Layne - Dec 6, 2011 8:45 PM GMT+0700

General Electric Co. investors (GE) eager to find out when the finance unit will resume sharing some of its free cash with the parent company, one indicator of renewed health and safety, will have to wait until the Federal Reserve finishes an inaugural review.

Before the financial crisis of 2008, GE Capital paid about 40 percent of its earnings, or as much as $8.6 billion one year, to the parent company. Allowing the internal payment to resume would signal confidence from the Fed, which became the unit’s regulator in July. For now, GE officials say they’re constrained on how much they can disclose at today’s investor meeting.

“I understand why investors want to see either the white or the black smoke coming from the Vatican rooftop,” GE Capital Chief Financial Officer Jeffrey Bornstein said in an interview before the meeting in Norwalk, Connecticut. “I just think, unfortunately, that’s really not the way it’s going to work.”

GE stock has fallen 39 percent since credit markets froze following the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008, raising concerns about risk to the value of GE Capital’s holdings.

Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt responded with a plan to grow the company’s industrial businesses, which investors typically value more highly than finance, and reduce risk by shrinking the portion of overall profit that comes from GE Capital as well as reining in certain kinds of lending.

Dividend Estimates

To preserve cash, GE Capital lowered the internal dividend in late 2008, then suspended it in 2009. Keith Sherin, the parent company’s chief financial officer, said in October the company wants to restart the payment in 2012, a move that would require Fed approval.

The odds of meeting that goal are promising, analysts including Steven Winoker of Sanford C. Bernstein and Co. and Deane Dray of Citigroup Inc. (C) said in notes to investors.

Winoker said the finance unit may send $3.9 billion to the parent company in 2012 and less than $7 billion in 2013. Partly because of that, he raised the target price for GE shares to $21 from $19 and boosted its rating to “outperform” from “market perform.”

The Fed may complete its review in the first six months of next year, Winoker said. GE Capital is positioned to meet capital requirements the Fed set for banks even if it resumes a 40 percent internal dividend next year, Dray said.

Stress Tests

How much company officials can disclose about the regulatory process is limited by law. GE Capital has been preparing for more than a year for the Fed’s arrival, dedicating hundreds of people to work with the agency, Bornstein said.

Regulators are “doing all that due diligence you would expect that they would be doing: what the businesses are, what the products are, what our loss performance has been,” Bornstein said. “They’ve obviously started looking at our stress test routines, and how we think about capital and our capital planning and business planning.” A Fed spokesman declined to comment.

While the agency’s review continues, GE executives will probably focus at today’s meeting on progress in reducing overall lending, growth plans in areas such as loans to midsize companies, the wind-down or sale of some real-estate assets and repayment or refinancing of $81 billion in debt coming due in 2012.

The company plans to shrink the percentage of total profit from finance to about 30 percent, from as high as half before the financial crisis, in addition to curbing lending.

Red vs. Green

At the end of 2008, GE Capital had about $550 billion in ending net investment, a measure of a finance company’s assets. About 20 percent of those were labeled “red,” indicating GE Capital planned to sell or wind them down because they were less profitable after the crisis or in areas where the company lacked expertise or heft.

Three years later, GE Capital expects to meet its goal of shrinking to $440 billion in assets ahead of its 2012 schedule, with red assets making up “at the most, 10 to 15 percent of the pie,” Bill Cary, chief operating officer for GE Capital, said in an interview.

GE Capital funds its operations mostly through debt markets rather than deposits or trading like investment and conventional banks. In advance of next year’s debt maturities, the parent company has amassed a cash pile of about $83 billion and $54 billion in backup bank lines, eclipsing the $41 billion in commercial paper. The commercial-paper balance is about 60 percent lower than its 2007 high.

Market Access

By the end of 2012, GE Capital’s cash balance will be closer to $50 billion, Sherin said in October. GE Capital plans to issue $25 billion to $30 billion in debt this year, and executives have hinted at a similar level in 2012.

For bond investors that kind of debt shows vulnerability at what some refer to as GECC, the acronym for General Electric Capital Corp.

“As long as GECC has access to the market, they’ll be fine,” said Bonnie Baha, portfolio manager at DoubleLine Capital in Los Angeles. “But there’s no guarantee that access will always be there. And that’s the biggest concern. It’s not a concern unique to GECC, it’s a concern to any credit that’s in a liquidity squeeze.”

GE Capital CEO Mike Neal said the unit should fare well if a squeeze occurs. He has attempted to armor the business against potential challenges such as the European sovereign-debt crisis.

‘Strong Enough’

“What we’ve tried to do is, within reason, make this place strong enough to withstand anything that’s kind of reasonable that might come out of this,” he said in an interview. “We do have a lot of cash. We’ve reduced our reliance on short-term borrowings by a lot.”

As GE Capital exits red businesses, it’s redoubled its focus on “green” businesses, those it plans to keep.

The largest of those is lending to midsize businesses with $10 million to $1 billion in revenue, where executives say they have a competitive advantage because of know-how that extends from finance to areas such as consulting contracts, bulk tire purchases and writing software that shaves time off of deliveries.

For private-equity firm Riverside, based in Cleveland, GE’s expertise in evaluating a target company without large traditional assets such as factories and equipment made the lender a logical choice in this summer’s acquisition of Sunless Inc., an Ohio company that makes spray-tanning booths and airbrush equipment.

“It was a competitive situation for us to buy it, and we needed to win that competition,” co-CEO Stewart Kohl said. The purchase was made possible by the willingness of GE Capital lenders “to jump on a plane on a moment’s notice to visit the company with us, to roll up their sleeves to do the work, to come back quickly and say, ‘Here’s what we think we can get done,’ then to deliver on that and do it all in a time frame that would let us prevail.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Rachel Layne in Boston at rlayne@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Ed Dufner at edufner@bloomberg.net




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Dutch Antitrust Investigators Visit KPN, T-Mobile, Vodafone

By Ragnhild Kjetland - Dec 6, 2011 8:11 PM GMT+0700

Royal KPN NV (KPN) is among mobile-phone operators in the Netherlands visited today by the NMa competition authority as part of an investigation into possible antitrust violations.

KPN, the largest Dutch phone company, said in a statement that its headquarters were raided today by the NMa as part of a probe into “concerted practice with regard to mobile telecommunications offerings on the Dutch consumer market,” and “division of independent sales channels.” It said five KPN employees are being questioned and the company is cooperating fully.


T-Mobile is also cooperating fully with the investigation, spokesman Michael Vos said via phone, confirming a visit from the NMa this morning. “We are confident in the result,” he said, while declining to elaborate on the probe. Vodafone (VOD) Group Plc confirmed in a statement that it had been visited by the competition authority.

In October, the regulator lowered fines imposed on KPN, Deutsche Telekom AG (DTE)’s T-Mobile unit and Vodafone in 2002 for colluding on subsidies that they gave retailers on mobile-phone handsets, resulting in more expensive handsets for consumers.

KPN shares fell as much as 1.7 percent and were down 0.8 percent at 9 euros as of 1:38 p.m. in Amsterdam trading. Deutsche Telekom rose 0.1 percent to 9.19 euros in Frankfurt and Vodafone was 0.6 percent higher at 174.1 pence in London.

Paul Trienekens, an NMa spokesman, declined to comment on the details of the investigation.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ragnhild Kjetland in Frankfurt at rkjetland@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kenneth Wong at kwong11@bloomberg.net



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Autonomy Chief Preserves Own Culture Alongside HP ‘Mother Tiger’

By Jonathan Browning and Beth Mellor - Dec 6, 2011 9:32 PM GMT+0700

Autonomy Corp. chief Mike Lynch said the U.K. software maker needs to preserve a “high-speed culture” following its $10.3 billion acquisition by Hewlett- Packard Co.

“Autonomy has a very different culture, a very high-speed culture,” Lynch said at the Bloomberg Enterprise Technology Summit in London today. It’s a company “that needs to be left to do that.”

Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Officer Meg Whitman, who supported the Autonomy purchase, has compared the parent company to a “mother tiger” not rolling on its cub, Lynch said. She told her executives “not to smother” Autonomy, Lynch said in an interview at the same conference.


The purchase of the U.K.’s second-largest software company this year added to pressure on Hewlett-Packard’s then-CEO Leo Apotheker who had announced an overhaul on Aug. 18 that included the Autonomy deal and a possible spinoff of the personal- computer business. A month later, Apotheker was removed by Hewlett-Packard’s board and the company named former EBay Inc. CEO Whitman to succeed him.

Whitman has opted to fix Hewlett-Packard’s existing businesses, while limiting the size of further acquisitions. Lynch, who founded Autonomy in 1996, reports directly to Whitman.

Asked about Autonomy’s future within Hewlett-Packard and the prospect of selling other services, Lynch said that the company now has access to the “toy store” of HP’s hardware.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jonathan Browning in London at jbrowning9@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Simon Thiel at sthiel1@bloomberg.net




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Verizon Wireless Blocks Google Wallet, Citing Security Concerns

By Scott Moritz - Dec 6, 2011 9:25 PM GMT+0700

Verizon Wireless, the largest U.S. wireless carrier, blocked Google Inc.’s mobile-payment system from the new Galaxy Nexus smartphone, citing security concerns.

Verizon Wireless, co-owned by Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) and Vodafone Group Plc (VOD), is working to have “the best security and user experience,” Jeffrey Nelson, a company spokesman, said today in an e-mailed statement. The Basking Ridge, New Jersey- based carrier will allow the Google service, called Google Wallet, “when those goals are achieved.”

The move comes amid intensifying competition between services that let consumers pay for goods with mobile phones. Verizon Wireless and partners AT&T Inc. (T) and T-Mobile USA plan to invest more than $100 million in a joint venture called Isis, which competes with the Google service, people with knowledge of the project said in August.

The Galaxy Nexus, made by Samsung Electronics Co. (005930), runs the latest version of Google’s Android software and will go on sale this month. It is Verizon Wireless’s first Android phone that uses a near-field communications, or NFC, chip that -- through Google Wallet -- can transmit payment information to store registers.

Verizon’s Isis venture plans to start its service in a few markets next year.

Representatives for Mountain View, California-based didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment.

To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Moritz in New York at smoritz6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at pelstrom@bloomberg.net




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U.S. Stocks Little Changed on Europe Concern

By Rita Nazareth - Dec 6, 2011 10:11 PM GMT+0700

U.S. stocks were little changed as concern the European Financial Stability Facility may lose its top credit rating tempered optimism about effort to tame the region’s credit crisis.

Darden Restaurants Inc. (DRI), operator of the Red Lobster and LongHorn Steakhouse chains, tumbled 9.4 percent after cutting its full-year sales and profit growth forecasts. 3M Co. (MMM) added 1.8 percent as revenue may increase as much as 6 percent next year amid a boost from acquisitions. General Electric Co. (GE) and LinkedIn Corp. advanced at least 1.7 percent after analysts raised their recommendations for the shares.

The S&P 500 fell less than 0.1 percent to 1,256.73 at 10:10 a.m. New York time. The benchmark gauge gained 1 percent yesterday even as S&P put 15 euro nations on review for possible downgrade. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 23.80 points, or 0.2 percent, to 12,121.63.

"The European crisis is an on and off switch," Alan Gayle, a senior strategist at RidgeWorth Capital Management in Richmond, Virginia, which oversees about $44 billion, said in a telephone interview. "While the market was not overly shocked by S&P announcements, they do create a sense of urgency for European leaders. The good news is that they are coming up with proposals, but that also raises questions on whether they will be in fact able to deal with them."

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said S&P’s warning will help force European leaders to ratchet up efforts to resolve the crisis. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will probably cut the benchmark rate a quarter point when policy makers meet Dec. 8, according to 58 economists in a Bloomberg survey.

Top Credit Rating

Earlier today, stock futures trimmed gains after S&P said the European Financial Stability Facility may lose its top credit rating if any of its guarantors have their own debt grade lowered. Germany, France and four other nations may lose their AAA ratings depending on the result of a summit of European Union leaders this week, S&P said yesterday.

“If downgrades follow of all or some of the six remaining AAA-rated euro-zone countries, how will the EFSF keep a AAA rating?” Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York, wrote to clients before S&P’s announcement. “It likely won’t, and will it be an effective bailout tool with a subsequent higher cost of capital?”

Laszlo Birinyi says he knew it would be hard to make predictions for 2012 in October, when he saw a headline suggesting that markets would rise or fall depending on whether the tiny nation of Slovakia approved a bailout plan for Europe.

Birinyi, president of stock market research and money- management firm Birinyi Associates Inc., says markets are so volatile that it doesn’t take much to send them reeling, reports Bloomberg Markets magazine in its January issue.

“There are so many exogenous factors that to try to forecast the market with a degree of confidence is difficult,” Birinyi says.

The best strategy for stock investors, he says, is to stick with iconic brands, such as Apple Inc. (AAPL) or Ralph Lauren Corp. (RL), and with companies that offer “meaningful dividends” of at least 5 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in Sao Paulo at rnazareth@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net



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AAA Rated Nations Held Hostage by Crisis Volatility

By Emma Charlton - Dec 6, 2011 4:15 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Timothy Moe, a Hong Kong-based strategist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., talks about the outlook for Asian stocks and Europe's sovereign debt crisis. He speaks from Singapore with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Phillip Swagel, a professor of economics at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Policy who was an assistant U.S. Treasury secretary for economic policy in the George W. Bush administration, talks about Europe's sovereign debt crisis. Standard & Poor’s said Germany and France may be stripped of their AAA credit ratings as the debt crisis prompts 15 euro nations to be put on review for possible downgrade. Swagel speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


Bonds from AAA rated Austria, the Netherlands and Finland are suffering as Europe’s debt crisis increases volatility and erodes their haven status.

Sixty-day volatility on 10-year government debt from the three nations reached euro-era records in November, as investors increased bets the currency bloc may unravel and as yields on Italian and Spanish securities surged. The countries were among 15 put on watch for a rating cut by Standard & Poor’s yesterday. Europe’s leaders will try to fashion a solution to the turmoil this week after the failure of their fourth rescue blueprint sparked concern that the crisis will infect all 17 euro nations.

“Volatility clearly has increased and it makes life a lot tougher for investors,” said Alex Johnson, who helps oversee $47 billion as London-based head of portfolio management at Fischer Francis Trees & Watts. “If you are invested in countries like the Netherlands you can find that what were safe- haven positions have become correlated with what’s going on in the periphery, when actually the economic fundamentals are still very good.”

The extra interest the Netherlands has to pay investors to hold its 10-year bonds instead of Germany’s rose to a two-year high of 68 basis points on Nov. 17 and stood at 40 basis points at 9:06 a.m. London time today, more than triple this year’s low of 13 basis points reached in March. A measure of 60-day volatility on the so-called spread has more than doubled to 103 percent from 49 percent six months ago.

Austrian Spread

“The higher the volatility gets, the more important it becomes for investors,” said Niels From, chief analyst at Nordea Bank AB in Copenhagen. “When volatility levels are high it is more difficult for investors to hold on to positions even in countries that are labeled the inner core” like Austria, the Netherlands and Finland.

Austria’s 10-year spread over bunds swung between 84 basis points and a euro-era high of 192 basis points in November, even as the cabinet signed a draft law to cut its debt level to 60 percent of gross domestic product by 2020. The yield difference was 97 basis points today, compared with an average 23 basis points during the past 10 years.

The Finland-Germany 10-year spread reached a two-year high of 79 basis points on Nov. 25, from a low 7 basis points low on Jan. 12, compared with a 35 basis-points average in the past year.

S&P Warning

The fluctuations show concern that the euro-region debt crisis may deepen is outweighing the safety implied in the nations’ top credit ratings and their economies’ relatively strong fundamentals.

S&P said in a statement yesterday that Germany and France may be stripped of their AAA ratings as the debt crisis prompts 15 euro nations to be put on review for possible downgrade pending the result of a European Union leaders’ summit.

The firm said that ratings could be cut by one level for Austria, Belgium, Finland, Germany, Netherlands and Luxembourg, and by up to two notches for the other governments.

Austria’s economy will probably expand 2.9 percent this year, Finland’s will grow 3.1 percent and the Netherlands’ 1.8 percent, according to the latest European Commission forecasts published last month, all bettering the euro-region’s aggregate of 1.5 percent.

The nations’ debt levels as a percentage of their gross domestic product are better than the euro-region average, the forecasts show, with Austria’s predicted to be 73 percent in 2012, Finland’s 52 percent and the Netherland’s 65 percent. That compares with the 90 percent average for all 17 euro-region countries.

Overseas Investors

About 75 percent of Finland’s bonds are owned by non- Finnish investors, Nordea estimates, which makes them more vulnerable to fluctuations in investor sentiment than their non- euro-region neighbor Sweden, where about 75 percent of the government’s bonds are held by domestic investors.

The yield premium investors demanded to hold Finland’s 10- year debt over that of Sweden reached a euro-era high of 137 basis points on Nov. 24 and was 99 basis points yesterday. That compares with an average difference of 4 basis points since the 17-nation currency was introduced in 1999, according to Bloomberg generic data.

Dutch, Austrian and Finnish bonds also suffered as investors dumped holdings of euro-region securities and pushed the euro down 3 percent against the dollar through November, amid concern that the region’s leaders will struggle to bridge differences on a crisis resolution. Holders of euro-area bonds maturing between one and 10 years lost 2.6 percent last month, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes.

Geithner Meeting

With an EU summit in Brussels scheduled for Dec. 9, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is due in Frankfurt today to prod political leaders. While a deal that safeguards banks, limits damage to Italy and Spain and increases rescue funds may help ease sentiment toward Europe, a fresh test will come next year when the euro-region countries face the challenge of issuing debt that UBS AG estimates at a minimum of 730 billion euros.

“Two weeks ago we had a very big move in the spread of Netherlands versus Germany, a 20 basis-point move in a single day, which is the biggest move I can remember, even before the euro began,” said Justin Knight, a European rate strategist at UBS Ltd. in London. “In a further escalation of the crisis we would see more moves like that. The real problem is that there aren’t enough buyers for Italian and Spanish government bonds and until that is addressed then the crisis will probably continue.”

‘More Wary’

Austria needs to raise 20 billion euros in 2012, the Netherlands 45 billion euros and Finland 10 billion euros, the UBS estimates show. While the amounts are small compared with Germany, which has 184 billion euros to raise, and Italy, which needs 221 billion euros, souring sentiment may cause problems for the three nations, said Eric Wand, a fixed-income strategist at Lloyds Banking Group Plc in London.

“Investors are going to be even more wary, which is going to make all auctions more difficult,” Wand said. “Holland and Austria and the other semi-core nations will probably be charged more going forward regardless of their fundamentals because of the contagion effect.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Emma Charlton in London at echarlton1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Tilles at dtilles@bloomberg.net



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Olympus Faces Tokyo Delisting After Management Hid $1.7 Billion of Losses

By Mariko Yasu - Dec 6, 2011 4:07 PM GMT+0700

Olympus Corp. risks being delisted even if it makes a Dec. 14 deadline to announce earnings, the Tokyo Stock Exchange said after the release of an independent report into false accounting by the Japanese camera maker.

Senior management was “rotten to the core” and corrupted other layers of executives that touched it, according to the report of a panel probing Olympus’s schemes to cover up 135 billion yen ($1.7 billion) in losses and payments to advisers dating back decades. Failings by auditors and aid from banks in Europe and Singapore helped hide the losses, it said.

The exchange’s statement may undermine a rebound in Olympus shares since the company first admitted on Nov. 8 to using inflated takeover costs and advisory fees to hide investment losses dating back decades. Investigators in Japan, the U.S. and U.K. are still probing the transactions amid allegations kickbacks may have gone to organized crime.

“All of the people involved should be taken to court and made to pay for the damage they have done to the regular employees, stockholders,” said Edwin Merner, who helps oversee about $3 billion as Tokyo-based president of Atlantis Investment. “They will probably get off lightly since the politicians and bureaucrats are also mixed up in funny business and feel sympathy for top management since they could very well be next.”

Olympus said in a statement it accepts the panel’s report and that it will make all efforts to ensure it isn’t delisted. The Tokyo exchange said the report showed Olympus would have to restate its financial reports and that this may have a significant impact on the company, a condition for delisting.

No Evidence

The panel said it found no evidence that money was funneled to antisocial forces, a byword for criminal gangs. Masatoshi Kishimoto, 75, who was company president for eight years from 1993, and his successor Tsuyoshi Kikukawa were among former executives at Tokyo-based Olympus involved in the cover-up, according to the report.

The 26-page summary of a larger report stopped short of calling for a wholesale change in management at the company, saying the conspiracy was restricted to a small circle and wasn’t systemic.

Woodford’s Dismissal

The report came seven weeks after the dismissal of former Chief Executive Officer Michael C. Woodford, who questioned $1.4 billion in takeover costs including fees paid to a now-defunct Cayman Islands fund in the $2.1 billion takeover of Gyrus Group Plc in 2008. The 51-year-old British citizen resigned as a director Dec. 1 in the first step of a campaign to take control of the company from the board that fired him Oct. 14.

Shareholders should be given a chance to vote for new management after Olympus admitted Kikukawa and senior aides colluded to cover up losses dating back to the 1990s, Woodford said last week. Southeastern Asset Management Inc., Olympus’s largest overseas stockholder, joined Woodford in calls for a change of management.

Olympus shares, which declined to their lowest in 36 years on Nov. 11, rose 9.1 percent at the 3 p.m. close of trading in Tokyo, before the panel’s report. The stock has declined 52 percent since the dismissal of Woodford.

The company began making financial investments after 1985 as a strong yen hurt operating profit, the panel said. When Japan’s stock-market bubble burst at the end of 1989, the company purchased high-risk products and structured bonds in an effort to recoup the loss. In late 1990, the company had a little less than 100 billion yen of unrealized losses.

Olympus is “cooperating fully with investigators” including the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office, the Tokyo Metropolitan Police and Japan’s Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission, spokesman Tsuyoshi Kitada said Dec. 5, declining to elaborate further.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mariko Yasu in Tokyo at myasu@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Ben Richardson at brichardson8@bloomberg.net




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French Bonds, Euro Fall on Ratings Concern

By Stephen Kirkland and Lynn Thomasson - Dec 6, 2011 8:26 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Peter Chatwell, fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole CIB, discusses the outlook for bonds ahead of the Dec. 9 European leaders' summit. He also discusses Standard & Poor's credit rating warning on the region with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move." (Source: Bloomberg)

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Jonathan Garner, the chief Asia and emerging-market strategist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, talks about the region's stock markets. Garner also discusses Europe's sovereign debt crisis. He speaks with John Dawson on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)


French and German bonds fell after Standard & Poor’s said it may cut the credit ratings of 15 euro nations. Stocks pared losses and U.S. futures rose on speculation the European Central Bank will take more steps to contain the debt crisis.

The yield on France’s 10-year bond jumped 12 basis points at 8:25 a.m. in New York, with the similar maturity German bund yield climbing two basis points. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.2 percent and S&P 500 Index futures added 0.2 percent. The euro weakened less than 0.1 percent to $1.3389, trimming earlier declines, after a report showed German factory orders surged the most in 19 months in October. The Swiss franc slid against all 16 major currencies. Nickel and copper led commodities lower.

Germany, France and four other nations may lose their AAA credit ratings depending on the result of a summit of European Union leaders on Dec. 9, S&P said yesterday. ECB President Mario Draghi will probably cut the benchmark interest rate a quarter point to buoy the economy when policy makers meet Dec. 8, according to 58 economists in a Bloomberg survey.

“The rating action may force the ECB to be more aggressive in inking up the presses if they want to avert a crisis,” Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank AG in London, wrote in a research note. “2012 is looking to us like a year that will be decided by whether the ECB is a very different institution to what it is today.”

The extra yield, or spread, investors demand to hold the French securities instead of bunds, Europe’s benchmark government securities, increased 11 basis points. Yields on Dutch, Finnish, Austrian and Belgian securities increased. The Portuguese-German spread narrowed 14 basis points, while the yield on Ireland’s October 2020 security fell six basis points.

Bond Risk

The cost of insuring against default on European sovereign debt rose for the first time in seven days, with the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps on 15 governments climbing seven basis points to 325.

The Swiss franc declined 0.4 percent against the euro and slid 0.5 percent versus the dollar after a report showed that consumer prices in the nation fell the most in more than two years last month, led by lower costs for imports, adding pressure on the Swiss National Bank to raise its franc ceiling to protect the economy.

Lower Rates

Australia’s dollar dropped 0.4 percent against the U.S. currency after the nation’s central bank reduced its benchmark interest rate for a second straight month as Europe’s debt crisis threatens to slow exports.

The Stoxx 600 earlier dropped of as much as 0.8 percent. RWE AG, Germany’s second-largest utility, tumbled 8.1 percent after announcing a share sale to raise about 2.1 billion euros ($2.8 billion). Yara International ASA gained 9.4 percent as the maker of nitrogen fertilizer affirmed its policy of returning cash to shareholders.

S&P 500 futures expiring in December erased an earlier decline of 0.8 percent. The benchmark equity gauge climbed 1 percent yesterday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose two basis points to 2.07 percent.

Nickel dropped 1.8 percent, copper declined 1.5 percent and lead dropped 1.5 percent.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) fell 1.3 percent, snapping a six-day, 10 percent rally. The Hong Kong Shanghai China Enterprises Index (HSCEI) slid 1.5 percent after Fitch Ratings said a Chinese property-price correction will lead to worsening loan portfolios while Nomura Holdings Inc. cut its estimate for China’s economic growth next year to 7.9 percent from 8.6 percent. Russia’s Micex Index and Taiwan’s Taiex Index (TWSE) slid at least 2 percent.

To contact the reporters on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net; Lynn Thomasson in Hong Kong at lthomasson@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stuart Wallace at swallace6@bloomberg.net



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S&P Says Euro Region’s EFSF May Lose Rating If Any AAA Member Downgraded

By Gabi Thesing - Dec 6, 2011 9:56 PM GMT+0700

The European Financial Stability Facility may lose its top credit rating if any of the bailout fund’s six guarantors face a downgrade from AAA, Standard & Poor’s said.

“We could lower the long-term credit rating on EFSF by one or two notches if we were to lower the AAA sovereign ratings, which are currently on creditwatch, on one or more of EFSF’s guarantor members,” S&P said in a statement today.

At the same time, the ratings company said it “could affirm the AAA ratings on EFSF and its issues if we affirm the rating on all six of EFSF’s guarantor members currently rated AAA.” Germany, France, the Netherlands, Finland, Austria and Luxembourg are the top-rated nations backing the rescue fund.

Stocks, French bonds and the euro fell after S&P said late yesterday that it may cut the debt grade of 15 euro nations, including Germany and France. The decision on whether to do so will depend on the outcome of a European Union leaders’ summit on Dec. 9, the company said.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said today that the downgrade warning will help force Europe to ratchet up efforts to resolve the two-year old fiscal crisis this week.

‘Continuing Disagreement’

“We could also affirm the ratings if we were to lower the current AAA ratings on one or more guarantor members, but had evidence that the EFSF guarantor members were implementing further credit enhancements that were in our view sufficient to mitigate the relevant guarantor members’ reduced creditworthiness,” the S&P said.

The company last night rebuked leaders for their “continuing disagreement” over how to best tackle the crisis that now threatens to tip the global economy into recession.

“The truth is that markets in the whole world right now don’t trust the euro area at all,” Schaeuble said today in Vienna. S&P’s statement will prompt European leaders “to do what we’ve promised, namely to take the necessary decisions step-by-step and to win back the confidence” of investors.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and France’s Nicolas Sarkozy are leading the charge toward the latest crisis fix after agreeing a joint position on automatic penalties for deficit violators and anchoring debt limits into euro states’ constitutions. Investors are looking for such an agreement on closer fiscal cooperation in the euro area to trigger intensified action from the European Central Bank.

‘Somewhat Hesitant’

With EU leaders due to gather in a little over 48 hours, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner arrived in Berlin for talks with Schaeuble after traveling to Frankfurt earlier today to meet with ECB President Mario Draghi and Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann. The ECB holds a policy meeting on Dec. 8.

Moritz Kraemer, S&P’s managing director for European sovereign ratings, said on a conference call from Frankfurt today that the ECB is “somewhat hesitant to engage in full- throttle” quantitative easing and that leaders will have to come up with a “credible” crisis response.

“We’re of the opinion that the confidence crisis that has held the euro zone in its grip for almost two years now has broadened, it has intensified,” Kraemer said. “The summit is of the utmost importance to address this in a more robust and comprehensive way than what we’ve seen so far.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Gabi Thesing in London at gthesing@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net





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Most European Stocks Drop as S&P Puts 15 Euro Nations on Review

By Corinne Gretler - Dec 6, 2011 8:04 PM GMT+0700

Most European stocks fell, following two days of gains, as Standard & Poor’s put 15 euro-area nations on watch for potential rating downgrades. Asian shares declined and U.S. index futures gained.

RWE AG (RWE) tumbled 9.4 percent as Germany’s second-largest utility company sought to sell shares. Metro AG (MEO), Germany’s biggest retailer, plunged 9.7 percent as it forecast falling sales and earnings this year. Yara International ASA jumped the most since March 2009.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 0.2 percent to 242.36 at 1:02 p.m. in London as two shares fell for every one that rose. The gauge rallied 0.8 percent yesterday as Italy’s Prime Minister Mario Monti introduced a proposal to cut his nation’s debt. The gauge posted its biggest rally since November 2008 last week as central banks lowered the interest rate on dollar funding and China reduced its reserve ratio for banks.

S&P’s statement “is for the most part already priced in the markets; it just confirms the deterioration of the finances of the countries in the region and the political dissensions,” said John Plassard, director at Louis Capital Markets in Geneva. “The downgrade warning can perhaps accelerate the implementation of measures and reforms, but it might already be too late.”

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) slid 1.3 percent today, while Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures added 0.2 percent.

Credit Ratings Review


Germany, France and four other euro-area nations may lose their AAA credit ratings depending on the result of the summit of European Union leaders on Dec. 9, S&P said late yesterday. The ratings company put 15 euro nations on review for possible downgrade.

“Systemic stresses in the euro zone have risen in recent weeks and reached such a level that a review of all euro-zone sovereign ratings is warranted,” S&P said in a statement.

Downgrades of Germany and France would affect the rating of the European Financial Stability Facility, the bailout fund for struggling euro-member countries that has funded rescue packages for Greece, Ireland and Portugal partially through bond sales. If the EFSF has to pay higher interest on its bonds, it may not be able to provide as much funding for the most indebted nations.

Merkel, Sarkozy Statement

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy responded in a joint statement late yesterday that they “took note” of the move by S&P, while both countries “affirm their conviction” that proposals for fiscal union will “strengthen coordination of budget and economic policy and promote stability, competitiveness and growth.”

The rating reviews “will put further pressure on those countries’ financing situation and make things not much easier for them,” said Alessandro Fezzi, senior market analyst at LGT Capital Management in Pfaeffikon, Switzerland. “The good thing about S&P’s warning is that it brought markets back to a more realistic view on the outcome of the upcoming EU summit.”

A measure of German factory orders jumped 5.2 percent in October after a 4.6 percent drop in September, according to a report from report from the Economy Ministry in Berlin. Economists had forecast a 1 percent increase, according to the median of 34 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.

RWE slumped 9.4 percent to 27.50 euros, its biggest drop since August, as it raised about 2.1 billion euros to cut debt. The utility sold 80.4 million shares at 26 euros apiece.

Utilities Drop

A gauge of European utilities underperformed the other 18 industry groups in the Stoxx 600, losing 2 percent. EON AG, Germany’s largest utility, slid 3.2 percent to 17.60 euros, while GDF Suez (GSZ) SA fell 2.1 percent to 20.94 euros.

Metro plunged 9.7 percent to 33.40 euros, the biggest drop in more than three years, after forecasting that sales and earnings will fall this year following a weak start to the Christmas season.

Banks retreated, with Credit Agricole SA (ACA) sliding 3.1 percent to 4.90 euros. KBC Groep NV (KBC) slumped 3.9 percent to 10.87 euros, while Banco Espirito Santo SA (BES), Portugal’s biggest publicly traded lender by market value, sank 7.6 percent to 1.29 euros.

Finmeccanica SpA (FNC), Italy’s biggest arms company, slipped 2.3 percent to 3.48 euros after S&P cut its long-term credit rating to BBB- with a negative outlook, from BBB. The rating company cited lower earnings and restructuring of some of Finmeccanica’s divisions.

Valeo SA (FR) dropped 2.7 percent to 32.77 euros after France’s second-largest auto-parts maker said it bought the VTES unit from Controlled Power Technologies Ltd.

Victrex Falls

Victrex Plc (VCT), a U.K. maker of heat-resistant plastics for the automotive and energy industries, declined 3.1 percent to 1,155 pence as Charles Pick, an analyst at Numis Securities Ltd., cut the stock to “add” from “buy.”

Yara International jumped 9.1 percent to 250.90 kroner, for the best performance in the Stoxx 600, after the biggest publicly traded nitrogen-fertilizer maker (YAR) said its cash-return policy remains “firm.” The company expects to return 40 percent to 45 percent of net income to its shareholders measured as the sum of dividends and share buybacks, averaged over the business cycle.

Wolseley Plc (WOS), the world’s largest supplier of heating and plumbing products, gained 4.2 percent to 1,983 pence after reporting a 5 percent increase in first-quarter revenue. The company reduced its debt by 41 percent to 587 million pounds ($918 million) over the 12 months through Oct. 31.

To contact the reporter on this story: Corinne Gretler in Zurich at cgretler1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew Rummer at arummer@bloomberg.net




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