Economic Calendar

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Samsung Probed by EU Antitrust Regulator for Abuse of Mobile-Phone Patents

By Aoife White - Jan 31, 2012 6:48 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Samsung Probed by EU Antitrust Regulators Over Mobile Patent

Samsung today lost a bid to overturn a German sales ban on its Galaxy 10.1 tablet computers obtained by Apple Inc. in an intellectual property dispute. Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg

Apple Inc. and Samsung have filed lawsuits against each other in at least 10 countries, according to Samsung. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg


Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) is being probed by European Union antitrust regulators over licensing of patents to other mobile-phone manufacturers.

The European Commission said it will investigate whether Samsung broke a 1998 commitment to license any standard essential patents for phones on “fair, reasonable and non- discriminatory terms.” It acted after Samsung claimed last year in European courts that rivals infringed its patents, the EU said in a statement.


Regulators have increased scrutiny of intellectual property rights, with EU antitrust chief Joaquin Almunia saying last month that he wanted to ensure patents weren’t used to block rivals’ expansion. He is also probing Honeywell International Inc. and DuPont Co. over chemical patents and is looking into standards in the banking industry.

The commission “has opened a formal investigation to assess whether Samsung Electronics has abusively, and in contravention of a commitment it gave to the European Telecommunications Standards Institute, used certain of its standard essential patent rights to distort competition in European mobile device markets,” the Brussels-based agency said in an e-mailed statement today.

James Chung, a spokesman for Samsung in Seoul, Korea, declined to immediately comment.

November Quizzing

The EU said in November that it was quizzing Samsung and rival Apple (AAPL) Inc. over the use of patents. Both companies were sent requests for information about “the enforcement of standards-essential patents in the mobile-telephony sector,” the EU said at the time.

Alan Hely, a spokesman for Apple in London, declined to comment. Cupertino, California-based Apple said in a U.S. court filing in October that Samsung faced an EU probe into its “egregious” misuse of patents.

Apple and Samsung have filed intellectual property lawsuits against each other in at least 10 countries, according to Samsung. The legal battle between Apple and Samsung, its closest competitor in tablet computers, has intensified as consumers use devices such as tablets and smartphones to surf websites, play games and download music.

Samsung today lost a bid to overturn a German sales ban on its Galaxy 10.1 tablet computers obtained by Apple in an intellectual property dispute.

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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Facebook’s Sandberg Friends Gaga to Obama En Route to IPO: Tech

By Douglas MacMillan - Jan 31, 2012 12:37 PM GMT+0700

Facebook Inc.’s Sheryl Sandberg recently threw a fundraiser for President Obama, dining with Lady Gaga and the president himself. Last week, she was a highly visible co-chair of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

As Facebook prepares to raise $10 billion in the largest- ever technology initial public offering, Sandberg, the company’s chief operating officer, is about to be thrust even further into the limelight.

Since joining in 2008, she’s become the public face of the Menlo Park, California-based social media company, forging ties with advertisers, policymakers and partners. With the IPO, likely to be heralded by a regulatory filing this week, Sandberg will be taking on a larger function helping senior management represent the company to a broadening investor base and to Wall Street analysts.

“She’s going to play a crucial role in everything that happens over the next few months,” said Matt Cohler, a special adviser to Facebook and general partner at Benchmark Capital in Menlo Park. “She is very deeply connected” in political and business circles, said Cohler, who served as a Facebook vice president from 2005 to 2008.

At 42, Sandberg serves as the outgoing and more seasoned foil to Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg, a 27-year-old coder who sets the company’s strategy even as he shuns publicity. During a career that has spanned Google Inc. (GOOG), McKinsey & Co. and the U.S. Treasury Department, Sandberg has honed what friends, colleagues and former employees say is a penchant for brokering alliances, fostering loyalty and setting priorities.

‘Credibility, Experience’

“She brings an enormous amount of credibility and experience,” said Anupam Palit, research head at GreenCrest Capital LLC in New York. “She knows how a public technology company works, she knows what investors are looking for with these types of companies, and, more importantly, she knows how to successfully deliver against those expectations.”

Sandberg declined to comment for this story.

Her role as Facebook’s ambassador-in-chief was in full display last week at Davos, where she served as one of six co- chairs of the forum. She participated in such panels as “Women as the Way Forward” and collected business cards from attendees who stood in long lines for a moment of her time.

As Zuckerberg focuses on the technology that has helped Facebook amass more than 800 million users, Sandberg has trained her attention on the advertisers whose aim to reach social-media consumers propelled sales to an estimated $4 billion in sales in 2011.

Saturday With Sandberg

She traveled to Bentonville, Arkansas, on two occasions last year to persuade Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) to devote more of its ad budget to social media. Thousands of employees showed up on a Saturday to hear Sandberg talk about interacting with customers through the social network.

“She was wise to commit as much as she did to that because it helped me internally to get people on board with a lot of the programs we are doing with Facebook,” Wal-Mart Chief Marketing Officer Stephen Quinn said in an interview. “Our best partners have made the trek to Bentonville. It is unusual to do it several times a year.”

Sandberg, who has played a key role in boosting Facebook’s staff to more than 3,000 employees, also spends much of her time grooming top deputies, according to people who work with her. The list includes advertising head David Fischer; human resources head Lori Goler; vice president of partnerships Dan Rose; and Elliot Schrage, vice president of global communications, marketing and public policy.

Lessons From Google

“What makes her unique, even in her peer group, is that she is deeply committed to investing in people,” said Bryan Schreier, a venture capitalist at Menlo Park-based Sequoia Capital who previously worked under Sandberg at Google. “When she’s investing in you, it feels like she only has time to do that for one person, but she can actually do that for dozens.”

After growing up in a middle-class Miami suburb, Sandberg studied economics at Harvard University. There she met Larry Summers, with whom she later worked at the World Bank and the Treasury Department.

Sandberg spent seven years at Google, where she eventually ran global ad sales. Her experience with Google’s stock-market debut, in 2004, will help prepare for the offering at Facebook, said Lise Buyer, an IPO consultant who worked on the Google deal.

Obama’s Council

“Having observed what Google did right about educating employees on the wide variety of topics associated with an IPO would certainly be really helpful,” said Buyer, who now runs the Portola Valley, California-based Class V Group. “Equally, having observed some of the nuanced errors where Google did not get it right will also be very helpful.”

Sandberg’s ties to Washington would benefit Facebook as it attempts to press a political agenda while contending with regulatory scrutiny, said Steve Case, the former CEO of AOL Inc. who now runs Revolution LLC, a venture capital firm.

Since being appointed to the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness in February 2011, Sandberg has been vocal in meetings with Obama on issues of immigration and the growing skills gap among U.S. workers. During one session in Pittsburgh in October, Sandberg relayed the plight of a foreign Facebook engineer who was unable to get a visa to stay and work in the U.S., said Case, a fellow council member.

‘Non-Goal’ Setting

“Bringing the issue of highly-skilled immigration to life by putting a face on it was useful,” Case said.

As she prepares for the IPO, Sandberg has done some priority setting of her own. Starbucks Corp. said in December that she decided not to stand for re-election to the board.

The Facebook COO also leads an annual ritual that challenges the company to set “non-goals,” Sandberg said in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek last year.

“Non-goals are things that are really good ideas” but that the company chooses not to pursue right away because it has to “ruthlessly prioritize,” Sandberg said in May.

While Sandberg is said to maintain a strong relationship with Zuckerberg, the two have disagreed over such issues as whether to expand the business into China, people told Bloomberg Businessweek last year. Sandberg is wary about the compromises Facebook would have to make to do business there, the people said.

As Sandberg’s importance grows within Facebook, so does concern that the company will some day have to operate without her.

Moving to Menlo

A highly sought-after executive whose wealth will skyrocket after Facebook’s offering, Sandberg could choose to run another company or return to politics, said Ray Valdes, a research director at Gartner Inc.

“She’s still relatively young, and it’s likely that Facebook is not going to be her final career point,” said Valdes. “It’s possible that she may go down the path that Meg Whitman did of moving into a wider arena,” he said, referring to the former EBay Inc. CEO who ran for California governor in 2010 and went on to become CEO of Hewlett-Packard Co.

Even with a strong bench of potential successors, people close to Sandberg expect her to remain at the company well after it goes public. One sign of her commitment: Sandberg and her husband, Dave Goldberg, recently purchased a new home in Menlo Park.

If serving the public is her chief interest, Sandberg couldn’t easily find a better job, said Michael Lazerow, CEO of Buddy Media Inc., a developer of advertising software for Facebook.

“The change which she can bring to the world is much more powerful as the head business person at Facebook than anything else she can do today,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Douglas Macmillan in New York at dmacmillan3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net




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U.S. Stock-Index Futures Rise on EU Pact

By Rita Nazareth - Jan 31, 2012 9:14 PM GMT+0700

U.S. stock futures rose, indicating the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index will cap the best January since 1997, as most countries in Europe agreed to tighter budget controls and Greece made progress on debt talks.

Bank of America Corp. and Morgan Stanley increased at least 1.1 percent, following gains in European lenders. Eli Lilly & Co. rallied 2.1 percent as the drugmaker’s profit beat projections. Archer Daniels Midland Co., the world’s largest grain processor, slumped 3.2 percent amid disappointing results.

S&P 500 futures expiring in March added 0.5 percent to 1,315.40 at 9:13 a.m. New York time. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose 50 points, or 0.4 percent, to 12,652.

“Most market participants will raise their glasses to usher out what has proved to be a decent January for performance, data and sentiment,” said Jim Reid, a global strategist at Deutsche Bank AG in London.

Global stocks rose today as European Union leaders, meeting in Brussels yesterday, completed a fiscal-discipline treaty that speeds sanctions on high-deficit states. Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said he’s “strongly committed” to reaching a debt-swap pact with bondholders. Residential real estate prices fell more than forecast in November, showing distressed properties are hampering improvement in the U.S. housing market.

Stocks fell yesterday, sending the S&P 500 lower for a third day, as European leaders sparred with Greece over a second rescue program. The decline followed a four-week rally, which was driven by the Federal Reserve’s plans to keep interest rates low through at least late 2014 and better-than-estimated earnings. Of the 184 S&P 500 companies that reported results since Jan. 9, 123 posted per-share earnings that beat projections, Bloomberg data show.

Banks Rally

American banks rallied following gains in European lenders. Bank of America added 1.1 percent to $7.15. Morgan Stanley (MS) increased 1.3 percent to $18.44.

Eli Lilly advanced 2.1 percent to $40.06. Higher sales of its depression and diabetes medicines helped to counter a 44 percent plunge in revenue from the schizophrenia drug Zyprexa.

Archer Daniels Midland slumped 3.2 percent to $28.75. Earnings adjusted for inventory and impairment charges were 51 cents, lower than the 76-cent average of 12 estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales rose 11 percent to $23.3 billion from $20.9 billion. “It was a tough quarter,” ADM Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Patricia Woertz said in a statement.

U.S. financial stocks are hardly a bargain as they wrap up their best start to a year since the 1990s, according to Brian Belski, Oppenheimer & Co.’s chief investment strategist.

Don’t Be Fooled

“Longer-term investors should not be fooled by what appear to be attractive valuations for financials,” Belski wrote in a Jan. 27 report. Anyone looking ahead three to five years ought to invest less money in these stocks than their S&P 500 weight would suggest, he added. They account for about 14 percent of the index’s value.

The financial index was valued at 12.4 times earnings yesterday. The ratio was about twice as high two years ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“Most of these companies operate in a ‘whole new world’ of increased scrutiny and regulation,” wrote Belski, based in New York. He added that more restrictive capital requirements, imposed as part of that shift, will hurt profitability.

This month’s gains in the shares resulted largely from buying to capitalize on a rising stock market, he wrote. S&P’s industry indicator swung by an average of 1.4 percent for every 1 percent move in the S&P 500 during the past 12 months, based on Bloomberg’s data. This reading, known as beta, was higher for financials than for any of the index’s nine other main industry groups.

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

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





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Billionaires Row London Home Offered for More Than $158 Million

By Chris Spillane - Jan 31, 2012 5:19 PM GMT+0700

A luxury home in the U.K.’s most expensive neighborhood is being offered for more than 100 million pounds ($158 million), according to Aylesford International, the broker that’s handling the sale.

The neo-classical house at 6 Palace Green in Kensington is on one of the city’s few private roads where no passing traffic can enter, Managing Director Louise Hewlett said. The 16,000- square-foot (1,486-square-meter) home is owned by Tamzen Ltd., a closely held company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands, according to the U.K. Land Registry.

“This is considered the best address in Europe, not just London,” Hewlett said in an e-mail. While Hewlett declined to disclose the value of the property or the owner, she said it would be sold for more than 100 million pounds.

Palace Green is on the southern section of Kensington Palace Gardens, one of two West London streets known as Billionaires Row. Luxury-home prices in the neighborhood have gained about 110 percent since 2004, said Grainne Gilmore, head of U.K. residential research at Knight Frank LLP.

Noam Gottesman, chairman of hedge-fund manager GLG Partners Inc., is listed in the Land Registry as a previous owner of 6 Palace Green. Gottesman sold a property on Palace Green to Lakshmi Mittal, chief executive officer of steelmaker ArcelorMittal, the London Evening Standard reported in 2008. The price was 117 million pounds, the newspaper said.

Mittal bought 18-19 Kensington Palace Gardens in 2004 for 57.1 million pounds, according to the Land Registry. The property is on the same street as the Russian and Nepalese embassies.

An unidentified Russian buyer purchased the U.K.’s most expensive home for about 140 million pounds, the Financial Times reported in August, without saying where it got the information.

To contact the reporter on this story: Christopher Spillane in London at cspillane3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew Blackman at ablackman@bloomberg.net.




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Stocks Rise as Euro Strengthens on Greek Debt Talks; Commodities Advance

By Claudia Carpenter - Jan 31, 2012 9:03 PM GMT+0700

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Sean Darby, global head of equity strategy at Jefferies Group Inc., talks about U.S. and emerging market stocks. He also discusses Europe's sovereign debt crisis and the U.S. economy. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television's "Asia Edge." (Source: Bloomberg)

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Gao Ting, chief China strategist at UBS AG, talks about China's economy growth and stock market. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Koji Endo, an auto analyst at Advanced Research Japan, talks about the nation's auto industry. Honda Motor Co. President Takanobu Ito forecast last week that business results at Japan’s third-biggest carmaker will climb to the highest in at least five years, led by sales of Accord sedans and Civic compacts in North America. Endo speaks from Tokyo with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


Stocks (MXWD) climbed around the world, heading for the best start to a year since 1994, the euro strengthened and commodities gained after most countries in Europe agreed to tighter budget controls and Greece made progress on debt talks.

The MSCI All-Country World Index (MXWD) rose 0.6 percent at 9 a.m. in New York, taking its monthly gain to 6 percent. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures added 0.4 percent. The euro appreciated 0.2 percent to $1.3173, set for its first monthly advance since October. The Portuguese 10-year bond yield dropped 109 basis points after reaching a euro-era record yesterday, with the equivalent maturity Italian yield declining seven basis points. Oil jumped 1.3 percent and copper 0.7 percent.

European Union leaders, meeting in Brussels yesterday, completed a fiscal-discipline treaty that speeds sanctions on high-deficit states. Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said he’s “strongly committed” to reaching a debt-swap pact with bondholders. U.S. consumer confidence strengthened this month and home prices in 20 U.S. cities fell at a slower pace in the year to November, economists said before reports today.

“The market was reassured overnight that Greece is making progress and the European Union is moving forward with financial sustainability,” said Sebastian Galy, a strategist at Societe Generale SA in London. “Central banks will continue to put more money into the financial system, which is a positive for most financial assets.”

Stoxx Europe

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index climbed 1 percent, extending this month’s gain to 4.3 percent. ARM Holdings Plc, whose chip designs are used in Apple Inc.’s iPad, rallied 4.9 percent after fourth-quarter revenue climbed. British Sky Broadcasting Group Plc advanced 3.3 percent as first-half operating profit topped analyst estimates.

The gain in S&P 500 futures indicated the U.S. equities gauge will snap a three-day decline. The S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values in 20 cities declined 3.7 percent from November 2010 after decreasing 3.4 percent in the year ended in October, the group said today in New York. Economists projected a 3.3 percent drop, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey.

The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index in January climbed to the highest level since February 2011, another report may show.

United Parcel Service Inc., the world’s largest package- delivery company, climbed 1.1 percent after forecasting a 2012 profit that exceeded analysts’ estimates as shipping demand increases. Exxon Mobil Corp. lost 1.2 percent after the world’s largest energy company reported fourth-quarter sales that trailed estimates as oil and natural-gas production declined.

Belgian Notes

The German 10-year bund yield rose two basis points, snapping a four-day decline, while the yield on the Greek 10- year bond yield jumped 26 basis points to 34.29 percent. The two-year Belgian note yield declined three basis points, dropping for the fifth consecutive day, after the government sold 2.58 billion euros of treasury bills.

The cost of insuring against a European sovereign default fell for the first time in three days. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps on 15 governments dropped 0.3 basis point to 335.4.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) gained 1.4 percent, heading for its best January since 2001. The index has risen 11 percent this month after falling 20 percent in 2011. The BSE India Sensitive Index (SENSEX), or Sensex, climbed 1.1 percent. Benchmark indexes in Russia, South Africa and Taiwan added more than 0.9 percent. In Taiwan, global funds bought $1.7 billion more stocks (MXWD) than they sold in January, the most in three months, exchange data showed.

Japan’s Production

Japan’s factory production rose 4 percent in December as manufacturers made up for disruptions caused by Thailand’s worst floods in 70 years, according to a trade ministry report today. The median estimate of 30 economists surveyed by Bloomberg was for a 3 percent gain.

Oil increased 1.3 percent to $100.02 a barrel in New York. Copper climbed to $8,500 a metric ton, set for a 12 percent jump for this month. Silver jumped 21 percent this month, the most since April.

The 17-nation euro strengthened 0.1 percent against the yen, after sliding to less than 100 yen yesterday for the first time in a week. The Dollar Index, which tracks the U.S. currency against those of six trading partners, fell for the fourth time in the past five days. The New Zealand dollar appreciated against all 16 major peers monitored by Bloomberg after a report showed home-building approvals rebounded.

To contact the reporter on this story: Claudia Carpenter in London at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net

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




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Apple Names Browett to Lead Retail Business

By Adam Satariano - Jan 31, 2012 8:46 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Apple Names Browett to Lead Retail Business

The Apple Store and logo are seen through a window in San Francisco. Photographer: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

John Browett will start at Apple in April as senior vice president, the Cupertino, California-based company said in a statement today. Source: Dixons Retail Plc via Bloomberg


Apple Inc. (AAPL) named the chief executive officer of the largest U.K. consumer-electronics retailer to run its stores, ending more than seven months of searching for an executive to oversee international expansion.

John Browett, 48, will start at Apple in April as senior vice president, the Cupertino, California-based company said in a statement today. The hiring marks the first outside senior- executive appointment by Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook. Browett replaces Ron Johnson, who left the world’s most valuable technology company last year to become CEO of JC Penney Co.

Browett, who had been CEO of Dixons Retail Plc (DXNS) since 2007, will lead Apple’s 361-store business as it builds more sites outside the U.S. Of the company’s 40 new locations this year, 30 will be abroad. Apple is using the stores to fuel an expansion in China, where outlets in Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong are among the company’s most trafficked locations. The company had 36,000 retail employees at the end of its last fiscal year.

“Retail is very important to Apple as a large proportion of their shipments, especially the iPad, is going through their own retail stores,” said Tim Coulling, an analyst at U.K. researcher Canalys. Browett has the necessary experience with Apple products as Dixons Retail is a “critical reseller of Apple equipment,” he said.

Booming Retail Sales

The U.K. retailer said in a separate statement that Browett would be replaced by Sebastian James, who has been with the company since 2008, most recently as group operations director.

Dixons declined as much as 13 percent to 13.25 pence in London trading, the steepest drop since June 9. Apple rose as much as 0.3 percent to the equivalent of $456.53 in Frankfurt trading today. In the U.S., the stock yesterday gained 1.3 percent to $453.01.

Apple, which opened its first retail outlets more than a decade ago, now generates more sales per square foot than luxury chains such as Tiffany & Co. The stores had $6.1 billion in sales in the quarter ended Dec. 31, up 59 percent from the year- earlier period.

“Our retail stores are all about customer service, and John shares that commitment like no-one else we’ve met,” Cook, who succeeded Apple co-founder Steve Jobs as CEO in August, said in the statement.

Retail Career

Browett joined DSG International Plc, which later became Dixons, in 2007 from the U.K.’s biggest supermarket chain Tesco Plc where he was operations development director. The Cambridge graduate, who previously also worked for The Boston Consulting Group, had been touted as a possible Tesco CEO, analysts at Teather & Greenwood said at the time.

Browett, who had been at Tesco since 1998, boosted the supermarket’s online operations and helped expanding into new markets such as South Korea with groceries, consumer electronics, books and CDs.

“He was well regarded at Tesco,” Nomura food analyst Nick Coulter said, adding that Browett was perceived to be a “rising star.”

At Dixons, Browett expanded the company’s Internet business and installed in-store electronic touch screens to offer customers information about new products. He started Dixons’ so- called KnowHow service desks that provide technical after-sales support and help with computer-software installation and laptop repairs.

Troubleshooting

Apple’s so-called Genius Bar, which Johnson created, gives customers free troubleshooting help when their gadgets fail. The service is one reason Apple is consistently rated among the top companies in customer satisfaction. Apple’s retail division has helped fuel sales of iPhones, iPads, Macs and iPods, with customers lining up for hours to buy the newest devices.

Dixons shares have dropped 81 percent since Browett became CEO, including a 57 percent drop in 2011. Apple has more than doubled in that period. Still, Dixons had gained 55 percent this year until yesterday, after the retailer said profitability improved as it sold more products at full price over the Christmas period.

During Browett’s tenure at Dixons, the company secured an exclusive agreement to sell Apple’s first iPad for several weeks before rival U.K. retailers offered the tablet, spokesman Mark Webb said. The U.K.’s largest electronics chain, which runs the PC World and Currys stores, is probably the biggest seller of Apple products in the U.K. outside of Apple, he said.

“It’s not surprising that they found someone from outside the U.S., given that they’re going for quite significant growth in Europe and Asia-Pacific,” said James Cordwell, an analyst at Atlantic Equities Service in London.

Fifth Avenue, Louvre

Since Johnson announced he would be joining JC Penney in June, Apple has relied on his main deputies, including Jerry McDougal, the vice president of retail; Steve Cano, global head of store personnel; and Bob Bridger, who is in charge of choosing store locations.

In addition to its existing team, Apple has connections to the retail industry. Mickey Drexler, the chairman and CEO of J. Crew Group Inc., serves on Apple’s board.

Part of Apple’s strategy in expanding outside the U.S. will be to keep putting stores in heavily trafficked areas, even if it means paying the highest real-estate prices. Its stores on Fifth Avenue in New York, near the Louvre in Paris and on Regent Street in London attract hundreds of people who line up for introductions of new iPads or iPhones.

Record Sales

Store traffic reached 110 million visitors in the holiday period -- almost equivalent to the population of Mexico.

The success can have its drawbacks. Apple faced angry crowds at one of its Beijing locations after shoppers grew restless waiting for the new iPhone 4S to go on sale. Some people threw eggs at the store when it didn’t open.

Apple reported quarterly profit last week that more than doubled to $13.1 billion, boosted by record holiday sales of the iPhone, iPad and Mac. The results helped push the stock to a record.

In other management moves, Cook promoted Eddy Cue to senior vice president last year. The executive oversees iTunes and the App Store. The company also hired Todd Teresi to lead its iAd mobile-advertising network and report to Cue.

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Satariano in San Francisco at asatariano1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net



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Samsung Fails to Overturn Apple’s German Ban on Sales of Galaxy Tab 10.1

By Karin Matussek - Jan 31, 2012 4:46 PM GMT+0700

Samsung Electronics (005930) Co. lost a bid to overturn a German sales ban on its Galaxy 10.1 tablet computers obtained by Apple Inc. (AAPL) in an intellectual property dispute.

The Higher Regional Court in Dusseldorf backed the ban in a ruling today. While Apple can’t rely on a European Union design it used to win the sales ban, the order is justified under German competition rules, Presiding Judge Wilhelm Berneke said.


“Samsung wrongfully takes advantage of the enormous reputation and prestige of the iPad,” Berneke said. “Samsung unfairly imitates the iPad with its tablet.”

The legal battle between Cupertino, California-based Apple and its closest competitor in tablet computers is intensifying as an increasing number of consumers use devices such as tablets and smartphones to surf websites, play games and download music.

After the initial victory in Germany last year, Apple has faced several setbacks over the design issue. A Dutch appeals court ruled on Jan. 24 that Samsung can continue to sell the tablet in the Netherlands. Apple also lost similar rulings in Australia and California in December.

10.1N Tablet

The ruling has little relevance because of the new Galaxy Tab 10.1N, Samsung said in an e-mailed statement after the ruling. The decision doesn’t apply to a suit Apple filed over that model, which is being reviewed by a lower court in Dusseldorf, the company said.

The court today said the sales ban also applies to the Galaxy 8.9., so a separate ruling on that device, requested by Apple, isn’t necessary.

In today’s case both sides were appealing a Sept. 9 sales ban issued by the lower court. Samsung sought to overturn the ban, while Apple wanted it extended to cover all EU countries. The court said today that the ban only applies in Germany.

Today’s cases are: OLG Dusseldorf, I-20 U 175/11 and I-20 U 126/11.

To contact the reporter on this story: Karin Matussek in Dusseldorf via kmatussek@bloomberg.net

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



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EU Nears Greek Confrontation Amid Fiscal Pact

By James G. Neuger and Jonathan Stearns - Jan 31, 2012 3:50 PM GMT+0700

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Mark Matthews, Singapore-based head of research for Asia at Bank Julius Baer & Co., talks about the European sovereign debt crisis and its implications for global markets. Matthews speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho says the country's debt is "perfectly sustainable." David Tweed reports on Bloomberg Television's "Countdown." (Source: Bloomberg)


European governments moved toward a confrontation over a second rescue package for Greece, just as a dimming fiscal outlook in Portugal opened a new front in the debt crisis.

Bargaining with Greece over a debt writedown and its economic management came as European Union leaders signed off on key planks of the strategy to end the financial crisis. They agreed to accelerate the setup of a full-time 500 billion-euro ($659 billion) rescue fund and endorsed a German-inspired deficit-control treaty. Stocks and the euro rose.

Euro leaders left a Brussels summit late yesterday with no accord over how to plug Greece’s widening budget hole and German Chancellor Angela Merkel voicing frustration with the Athens government’s failure to carry out an economic makeover.

“Greece’s debt sustainability is especially bad,” Merkel told reporters. “You have to find a way through more action by the Greek government, more contributions by private creditors, for example, in order to close this gap.”

The summit was the 16th in the two years since the Greek debt emergency provoked a Europe-wide drama, leading to unprecedented aid packages for Greece, Ireland and Portugal and shattering European faith that the common currency was indestructible.

After the gathering of leaders, EU President Herman Van Rompuy convened a smaller group, including Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and European Central Bank Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen, to weigh the next steps on Greece.

‘On Track’

Van Rompuy spoke of the need “to put the current program back on track” and said finance ministers will try to hammer out the follow-up plan -- in the works since July -- in coming days. Greece is counting on aid to meet a 14.5 billion-euro bond payment on March 20 to escape default.

“The timeline is tight, but we are absolutely focused on the target of bringing the negotiations to a successful conclusion by the end of the week,” Papademos told reporters at 1:30 a.m. today.

The Euro Stoxx 50 Index advanced as much as 0.9 percent today and the euro strengthened 0.3 percent to $1.3180 at 9:35 a.m. in Brussels, its sixth gain in seven days.

Yet, Papademos said “some difficulties” beset the debt- swap talks and hinted that donor governments may have to put up more money.

Merkel’s comments indicated that governments are loath to boost an October offer of 130 billion euros of loans in a second package, forcing investors to absorb net-present-value losses on Greek bonds that go beyond the 69 percent now on the table.

Greek Feuds

In turn, Greece’s feuding political parties face pressure to deliver more savings and to verify in writing that the austerity program will be carried out, no matter who wins elections to replace Papademos’s interim Cabinet.

Germany’s proposal for an EU-appointed overseer of the Greek budget prompted consternation in Athens and led to a rejection by other European governments that warned against stigmatizing Greece.

“Greece is a sovereign nation and must enact the promises it’s made,” said French President Nicolas Sarkozy. “Surveillance of Greece’s progress is normal, but there was never any question of putting Greece under guardianship.”

Investors were seized by fresh doubts about the economic health of Portugal. Concern that the EU would break a promise not to restructure Portugal’s debt pushed 10-year yields up by 2.17 percentage points to 17.39 percent yesterday, a euro-era record. The bonds rebounded today, sending the yield down to 16.89 percent.

‘Sustainable’ Portugal

Portugal’s debt has been judged “perfectly sustainable” by the EU and International Monetary Fund, Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho said. Asked if there is a risk of writedowns on Portuguese bonds, he said: “No, there is not.”

The Greek standoff and Portugal’s tottering market punctured the start-of-year crisis respite that had been nourished by 489 billion euros in three-year loans infused by the ECB into the banking system.

ECB loans enabled most bond markets to withstand the impact of credit rating downgrades by Standard & Poor’s. Ten-year yields in Italy, with debt estimated at 120.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2011, last week dipped below 6 percent for the first time since Dec. 6.

Italian Cash

While Italian yields went back up to 6.09 percent yesterday, the government stockpiled cash for the year’s biggest bond redemption by selling 7.5 billion euros of debt, close to its maximum target. The yield was 6.02 percent today.

Leaders completed the fiscal-discipline treaty, which speeds sanctions on high-deficit states and requires euro countries to anchor balanced-budget rules in national law. Eight countries outside the euro backed the pact, which was shunned by Britain and the Czech Republic.

ECB President Mario Draghi said the fiscal compact “certainly will strengthen confidence in the euro area,” calling it “the first step toward the fiscal union.”

One potential hiccup emerged when Sarkozy said that ratification of the fiscal treaty in France will likely be delayed until after elections in April and May that polls show he will lose. The front-runner, Socialist Francois Hollande, has vowed to renegotiate the treaty, saying it is biased toward austerity and would put an additional squeeze on the economy.

With an eye toward Ireland, Germany pushed through provisions that only countries ratifying the fiscal compact will be eligible for aid from the permanent bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, now set to go into operation on July 1, a year ahead of schedule.

Bond Clauses

The permanent fund requires governments to put collective action clauses into new bond issues as of January 2013, five months later than previously planned. The clauses are common in U.S. and U.K. law, enabling a debt restructuring to go ahead by a vote of a supermajority of bondholders, denying a veto right to solitary investors.

“Collective action clauses shall be included, as of 1 January 2013, in all new euro area government securities, with maturity above one year, in a way which ensures that their legal impact is identical,” according to the text.

While the clauses leave the door open for restructurings, the fund’s statutes deem write-offs “exceptional” and subject to IMF standards, the text says. It tones down language on “private sector involvement” -- code for forcing bondholders to take losses on governments that fall too deeply into debt.

Leaders sidestepped mounting pressure to raise the ceiling on rescue lending from 500 billion euros once the permanent fund goes on line, sticking with plans to handle that question at the next summit on March 1-2.

Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, Europe’s longest-serving leader and the head of the panel of euro finance ministers, summed up two years of crisis-fighting: “If I wasn’t optimistic you could have reported about my suicide months ago.”

To contact the reporters on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net; Jonathan Stearns in Brussels at jstearns2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net




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European Stocks Rise as Most Nations Back Budget Pact; ARM Gains

By Peter Levring - Jan 31, 2012 5:02 PM GMT+0700

European stocks rose, heading for their best start to a year since 1998, as most countries in the region agreed to tighter budget controls. U.S. index futures and Asian shares also advanced.

BP Plc and Royal Dutch Shell Plc tracked gains in crude prices. ARM Holdings Plc (ARM) jumped 4.8 percent after fourth-quarter revenue topped estimates. European Aeronautic Defense & Space Co. gained 1 percent after UBS AG advised buying the shares.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.8 percent to 254.61 at 10:01 a.m. in London, rebounding from two days of declines. The benchmark gauge has rallied 4.1 percent this month, the biggest January gain since 1998. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 0.5 percent today. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index increased 0.8 percent.

“Markets are in a risk-on mood and may just continue rising when events, such as the summit, reveal no new risks,” said Alexander Kraemer, a cross-asset strategist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. “European leaders may have learned they have to address problems and cannot put their head in the sand and hope problems go away.”

European Union leaders, meeting in Brussels yesterday, agreed on a fiscal-discipline treaty that allows for sanctions on high-deficit states and requires members to enact laws to limit budget shortfalls. Britain and the the Czech Republic refused to sign the pact.

The policy makers also decided to bring the region’s permanent bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, into operation on July 1, a year before schedule.

Bull Market

The Stoxx 600 rallied 20 percent from its most-recent low on Sept. 22 through Jan. 26, entering a bull market as per the common definition by analysts, as the U.S. economy maintained its recovery and speculation grew that the euro area will contain its sovereign-debt crisis.

Greece aims to complete debt-swap talks with bondholders this week. Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told reporters after summit that he is “strongly committed” to reaching a deal.

German unemployment dropped more than economists forecast to a two-decade low in January. The number of people out of work fell a seasonally adjusted 34,000 to 2.85 million, the Federal Labor Agency said. That’s the biggest drop since March. Economists had forecast a decline of 10,000, the median of 32 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. The adjusted jobless rate slipped to 6.7 percent from 6.8 percent.

Portugal’s Debt

Portuguese borrowing costs declined from a euro-era high after Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho said his country’s debt has been judged “perfectly sustainable” by the EU and International Monetary Fund and that there is no risk of writedowns on the bonds.

BP, Europe’s second-largest oil producer, gained 2.8 percent to 471.1 pence. Shell and Total SA gained 1.3 percent to 2,257.5 pence and 1.5 percent to 40.41 euros, respectively.

Oil gained after the December industrial output rose more than forecast in Japan, the third-biggest crude consumer.

ARM Holdings jumped 4.8 percent to 626 pence. The maker of processors for Apple Inc.’s iPads and iPhones said fourth- quarter revenue climbed 21 percent as the company increased the number of licenses sold for smartphones and tablet computers.

EADS, which makes Airbus and eurofighter jets, advanced 1 percent to 25.65 euros after UBS raised its recommendation on the shares to “buy” from “neutral.”

BSkyB, Repsol

British Sky Broadcasting Group Plc (BSY) gained 3.3 percent to 687.5 pence after first-half operating profit rose 16 percent, topping analysts’ estimates, as the U.K.’s biggest pay-TV broadcaster sold more broadband products to its subscribers.

Repsol YPF SA (REP), the biggest oil company in Spain, fell 2.8 percent to 20.90 euros in Madrid after Pagina/12 newspaper said Argentine officials had discussed a takeover of its YPF unit, the South American country’s biggest oil producer, without saying where it obtained the information.

Vestas Wind Systems A/S (VWS), the world’s biggest maker of wind turbines, climbed 3.4 percent to 64.05 kroner after winning its first order in China.

To contact the reporter on this story: Peter Levring in Copenhagen at plevring1@bloomberg.net

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



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Diamond May Join Gulliver of HSBC in Dodging Hester’s No-Bonus Fate at RBS

By Ambereen Choudhury and Howard Mustoe - Jan 31, 2012 4:56 PM GMT+0700

Barclays Plc (BARC)’s Robert Diamond, Britain’s top-paid bank chief executive officer, will probably receive his bonus even as his counterparts at state-backed lenders are forced to forgo theirs, analysts and investors say.

Diamond is the next executive likely to face scrutiny as Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc CEO Stephen Hester waived his 963,000-pound ($1.5 million) bonus after the payout sparked a political and public backlash. RBS Chairman Philip Hampton also abandoned his 1.4 million-pound stock award.

“The pressure will probably stop at the government- controlled banks,” said Guy de Blonay, a London-based fund manager at Jupiter Asset Management Plc, which holds RBS shares. “Hester has taken a sensible decision in waiving his award. It will allow him to continue to focus on his job.”

Unlike RBS and Lloyds Banking Group Plc (LLOY), where the U.K. taxpayer is also the biggest shareholder, the government has no stakes in Barclays, HSBC Holdings Plc or Standard Chartered Plc, making it difficult for the state to exert bonus restrictions. Institutional shareholders also have different priorities than the government and the public, fund managers and analysts said.

‘The Larger Question’

“We tend to focus this debate on the top people whose pay is made public,” said George S. Dallas, a director of corporate governance at F&C Management Ltd. in London, which holds shares in all five of the U.K.’s largest banks. “Attention needs to focus on that, but in banks the larger question is what is happening below the boardroom -- the people whose names we don’t see?”

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron said yesterday banks must show “proper regard” in limiting bonuses. “What needs to happen is a sense of restraint,” Cameron told reporters in Brussels after a meeting of European leaders. “They need to do a better job of demonstrating how pay is related to performance,” he said. “What I care about is the taxpayer going to get the money back.”

The CEO of Britain’s second-biggest government-aided bank, Lloyd’s Antonio Horta-Osorio, said on Jan. 13 that he also won’t take a 2011 bonus following his nine-week absence for exhaustion. The payment could have been as much as 2.39 million pounds, according to company filings.

Bonus Pool Declines

London bankers are expected to receive 4.2 billion pounds in bonuses for 2011, the lowest in almost a decade as financial- services firms face tougher regulations and post “weak” earnings, the Centre for Economics & Business Research Ltd. said in October.

“It looks like Barclays is next on the list, but it’s the same for all the banks,” said Oliver Roethig, regional secretary of UNI-Europa, a federation of European labor unions, including Britain’s Unite and Accord. “The decision-making system to decide on bonuses is murky. We are all talking about market systems and if you look at how these bonuses have grown compared with everyone else’s this is a hint to market failure.”

Diamond, 60, was awarded a 6.5 million-pound bonus for 2010 and a further 2.25 million pounds depending on the lender’s performance, London-based Barclays said in March. His base salary rose to 1.35 million pounds from 250,000 pounds after he became CEO on Jan. 1 last year.

HSBC (HSBA) CEO Stuart Gulliver received a 2.9 million-pound bonus for 2010, less than the 6.5 million-pound bonus Barclays gave Diamond for the same year.

Gulliver’s Compensation

HSBC, Europe’s largest bank, sought backing from investors to pay Gulliver as much as 13.3 million pounds for 2011, including 1.25 million pounds base salary, a bonus of as much as three times his base salary and a long-term incentive payment equal to six times his salary, two people with knowledge of the talks said in March. If awarded, it would make Gulliver the top- paid bank chief for 2011.

Spokesmen for Barclays and HSBC in London declined to comment on bonus awards yesterday.

Barclays is due to report 2011 results on Feb. 10 and will disclose pay proposals of its senior management with its annual report in March. The bank is expected to post a pretax profit of 5.87 billion pounds for 2011, down 3 percent from a year earlier, according to the median estimate of 10 analysts.

The Association of British Insurers, which represents investors with about 1.5 trillion pounds of assets, wrote to banks in December warning them to reduce pay.

Bank Shares Down

“We made clear in our letter to the U.K. banks in December remuneration costs as a proportion remain too high, particularly in an environment where we can expect lower returns from banks in the medium term,” the ABI said last week. “Failing to deal with this issue will affect the investment case for banks.”

The share price of Lloyds fell 61 percent last year while RBS declined 48 percent and Barclays 33 percent. HSBC dipped 25 percent and Standard Chartered (STAN) about 18 percent.

Ultimately, shareholders will decide if senior executives among the private banks deserve their pay, especially after the government’s proposal to empower shareholders to block compensation deals, said Tom Powdrill, a spokesman for adviser Pensions Investment Research Consultants Ltd. in London.

“The question is, do shareholders have the same kind of views on these issues as the public, as the taxpayer,” he said by phone yesterday. “In the case of Barclays, HSBC or Standard Chartered, decisions are mediated through asset managers, and reality is asset managers have quite a different view of the world to the public.”

The group has advised opposing the pay proposals of Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC and RBS for the last two years.

Labour’s Gambit

RBS’s Hester waived his bonus after the U.K.’s opposition Labour Party said it would ask Parliament to vote on the award. His decision, should not be “just a one-off episode” Labour leader Ed Miliband said in Glasgow, Scotland, yesterday.

“If we don’t deal with this systematically, if we don’t deal with the issue of bankers’ bonuses in a proper way, then this sort of thing is going to reoccur,” he said.

Cameron’s government is trying to respond to political pressure triggered by the bonuses bankers are being paid, starting this month, at a time that voters face pay freezes and unemployment at a 17-year high. U.K. Business Secretary Vince Cable this month outlined measures to make companies more transparent about top pay and give shareholders more power to vote on it. Cameron also said a knighthood awarded to former RBS chief Fred Goodwin may be revoked.

Political Storm

“This will stop at the government controlled banks,” said Tom Kirchmaier, a fellow in financial-markets group at the London School of Economics. “However, the political mobbing of Hester over the last few days allowed the government-owned bank to renege on its own promises” on bonuses. “This raises a number of questions about the governability of state-owned banks bank, something we should be very concerned about”

Hester, 51, has been at the center of a political storm over executive pay since the announcement on Jan. 27 that he would receive 3.6 million shares on top of his 1.2 million-pound salary. The Edinburgh-based bank has risen 33 percent this year to about half what the government paid for its stake.

“Only government-run banks have the ability to put pressure on their banks to control pay,” said Jason Kennedy, CEO of Kennedy Group, a London recruitment firm. “In the private sector, it’s not going to happen. They provide a bonus structure where if their employees get paid, so should the CEO.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Ambereen Choudhury in London at achoudhury@bloomberg.net; Howard Mustoe in London at hmustoe@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at eevans3@bloomberg.net




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Toshiba Cuts Annual Goal on Yen, Floods

By Naoko Fujimura - Jan 31, 2012 2:17 PM GMT+0700

Toshiba Corp. (6502), the world’s second- largest maker of flash memory chips, cut its profit forecast 54 percent, citing a stronger yen, floods in Thailand and concerns about European economies.

Net income may total 65 billion yen ($852 million) for the year ending March 31, compared with Toshiba’s earlier estimate of 140 billion yen, the Tokyo-based company said in a statement today. That lagged behind the average 119 billion-yen profit estimate of 21 analysts tracked by Bloomberg. Toshiba also cut its sales forecast to 6.2 trillion yen from 7 trillion yen.

The maker of Regza televisions, aerospace components, nuclear reactors and notebook computers, cut production of single-function chips last quarter to meet lower demand from the economic slowdowns in the U.S. and Europe. Toshiba and other Japanese exporters have been hurt as the yen strengthens against the dollar and euro, reducing the value of repatriated revenue.

Toshiba fell 1.8 percent to 323 yen in Tokyo trading before the earnings announcement.

A stronger yen and the impact from Thailand’s worst floods in almost 70 years contributed 40 billion yen each to lowering the forecast operating profit, Makoto Kubo, executive vice president at the company, told reporters in Tokyo.

Global Computer Shipments

Honda Motor Co. (7267), Japan’s third-largest carmaker, also lowered its full-year profit forecast after the Thailand disaster idled Southeast Asian output. The floods also disrupted production for Toyota Motor Corp.

Toshiba is reorganizing production of less-profitable discrete semiconductors, which are used for single functions such as transistors. The company will shut three factories that make discrete chips in Japan and transfer about 1,700 workers by the end of September, it said in November.

Toshiba had a loss of 10.6 billion yen in the three months ended Dec. 31, compared with a profit of 12.4 billion yen, the company said in a statement today.

Worldwide PC shipments declined 1.4 percent to 92.2 million units in the three months ended Dec. 31, Gartner Inc. said earlier this month, citing sluggish consumer demand. Prices for 32-gigabit NAND (DRFL32ML) flash dropped about 47 percent during the past year, according to data from Taipei-based Dramexchange Technology Inc.

To contact the reporter on this story: Naoko Fujimura in Tokyo at nfujimura@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Tighe at mtighe4@bloomberg.net





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Facebook’s Sandberg in Spotlight En Route to IPO

By Douglas MacMillan - Jan 31, 2012 12:37 PM GMT+0700

Facebook Inc.’s Sheryl Sandberg recently threw a fundraiser for President Obama, dining with Lady Gaga and the president himself. Last week, she was a highly visible co-chair of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

As Facebook prepares to raise $10 billion in the largest- ever technology initial public offering, Sandberg, the company’s chief operating officer, is about to be thrust even further into the limelight.

Since joining the company in 2008, she’s become the public face of the Menlo Park, California-based social media giant, forging ties with advertisers, policymakers and partners. With the IPO, likely to be heralded by a regulatory filing this week, Sandberg will be taking on a larger function helping senior management represent the company to a broadening investor base and to Wall Street analysts.

“She’s going to play a crucial role in everything that happens over the next few months,” said Matt Cohler, a special adviser to Facebook and general partner at Benchmark Capital in Menlo Park. “She is very deeply connected” in political and business circles, said Cohler, who served as a Facebook vice president from 2005 to 2008.

At 42, Sandberg serves as the outgoing and more seasoned foil to Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg, a 27-year-old coder who sets the company’s strategy even as he shuns publicity. During a career that has spanned Google Inc. (GOOG), McKinsey & Co. and the U.S. Treasury Department, Sandberg has honed what friends, colleagues and former employees say is a penchant for brokering alliances, fostering loyalty and setting priorities.

‘Credibility, Experience’

“She brings an enormous amount of credibility and experience,” said Anupam Palit, research head at GreenCrest Capital LLC in New York. “She knows how a public technology company works, she knows what investors are looking for with these types of companies, and, more importantly, she knows how to successfully deliver against those expectations.”

Sandberg declined to comment for this story.

Her role as Facebook’s ambassador-in-chief was in full display last week at Davos, where she served as one of six co- chairs of the forum. She participated in such panels as “Women as the Way Forward” and collected business cards from attendees who stood in long lines for a moment of her time.

As Zuckerberg focuses on the technology that has helped Facebook amass more than 800 million users, Sandberg has trained her attention on the advertisers whose aim to reach social-media consumers propelled sales to an estimated $4 billion in sales in 2011.

Saturday With Sandberg

She traveled to Bentonville, Arkansas, on two occasions last year to persuade Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) to devote more of its ad budget to social media. Thousands of employees showed up on a Saturday to hear Sandberg talk about interacting with customers through the social network.

“She was wise to commit as much as she did to that because it helped me internally to get people on board with a lot of the programs we are doing with Facebook,” Wal-Mart Chief Marketing Officer Stephen Quinn said in an interview. “Our best partners have made the trek to Bentonville. It is unusual to do it several times a year.”

Sandberg, who has played a key role in boosting Facebook’s staff to more than 3,000 employees, also spends much of her time grooming top deputies, according to people who work with her. The list includes advertising head David Fischer; human resources head Lori Goler; vice president of partnerships Dan Rose; and Elliot Schrage, vice president of global communications, marketing and public policy.

Lessons From Google

“What makes her unique, even in her peer group, is that she is deeply committed to investing in people,” said Bryan Schreier, a venture capitalist at Menlo Park-based Sequoia Capital who previously worked under Sandberg at Google. “When she’s investing in you, it feels like she only has time to do that for one person, but she can actually do that for dozens.”

After growing up in a middle-class Miami suburb, Sandberg studied economics at Harvard University. There she met Larry Summers, with whom she later worked at the World Bank and the Treasury Department.

Sandberg spent seven years at Google, where she eventually ran global ad sales. Her experience with Google’s stock-market debut, in 2004, will help prepare for the offering at Facebook, said Lise Buyer, an IPO consultant who worked on the Google deal.

Obama’s Council

“Having observed what Google did right about educating employees on the wide variety of topics associated with an IPO would certainly be really helpful,” said Buyer, who now runs the Portola Valley, California-based Class V Group. “Equally, having observed some of the nuanced errors where Google did not get it right will also be very helpful.”

Sandberg’s ties to Washington would benefit Facebook as it attempts to press a political agenda while contending with regulatory scrutiny, said Steve Case, the former CEO of AOL Inc. who now runs Revolution LLC, a venture capital firm.

Since being appointed to the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness in February 2011, Sandberg has been vocal in meetings with Obama on issues of immigration and the growing skills gap among U.S. workers. During one session in Pittsburgh in October, Sandberg relayed the plight of a foreign Facebook engineer who was unable to get a visa to stay and work in the U.S., said Case, a fellow council member.

‘Non-Goal’ Setting

“Bringing the issue of highly-skilled immigration to life by putting a face on it was useful,” Case said.

As she prepares for the IPO, Sandberg has done some priority setting of her own. Starbucks Corp. said in December that she decided not to stand for re-election to the board.

The Facebook COO also leads an annual ritual that challenges the company to set “non-goals,” Sandberg said in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek last year.

“Non-goals are things that are really good ideas” but that the company chooses not to pursue right away because it has to “ruthlessly prioritize,” Sandberg said in May.

While Sandberg is said to maintain a strong relationship with Zuckerberg, the two have disagreed over such issues as whether to expand the business into China, people told Bloomberg Businessweek last year. Sandberg is wary about the compromises Facebook would have to make to do business there, the people said.

As Sandberg’s importance grows within Facebook, so does concern that the company will some day have to operate without her.

Moving to Menlo

A highly sought-after executive whose wealth will skyrocket after Facebook’s offering, Sandberg could choose to run another company or return to politics, said Ray Valdes, a research director at Gartner Inc.

“She’s still relatively young, and it’s likely that Facebook is not going to be her final career point,” said Valdes. “It’s possible that she may go down the path that Meg Whitman did of moving into a wider arena,” he said, referring to the former EBay Inc. CEO who ran for California governor in 2010 and went on to become CEO of Hewlett-Packard Co.

Even with a strong bench of potential successors, people close to Sandberg expect her to remain at the company well after it goes public. One sign of her commitment: Sandberg and her husband, Dave Goldberg, recently purchased a new home in Menlo Park.

If serving the public is her chief interest, Sandberg couldn’t easily find a better job, said Michael Lazerow, CEO of Buddy Media Inc., a developer of advertising software for Facebook.

“The change which she can bring to the world is much more powerful as the head business person at Facebook than anything else she can do today,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Douglas Macmillan in New York at dmacmillan3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net




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Asian Stocks Advance on Greek Debt Deal Talks, Japan Industrial Production

By Jonathan Burgos - Jan 31, 2012 1:55 PM GMT+0700

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Sean Darby, global head of equity strategy at Jefferies Group Inc., talks about U.S. and emerging market stocks. He also discusses Europe's sovereign debt crisis and the U.S. economy. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television's "Asia Edge." (Source: Bloomberg)


Asian stocks rose, with a regional benchmark index headed for its second-biggest monthly rally since September 2010, as Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said major progress was made in debt-swap talks and Japan’s industrial production grew faster than economists estimated.

Fanuc Corp. (6954), Japan’s top maker of factory robots, added 1 percent. Sumitomo Mitsui Financial (8316) Group Inc., Japan’s second- largest lender by market value, rose 1.5 after saying it will meet its full-year profit forecast. Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co., the world’s third-biggest shipyard, jumped 6.5 percent after winning a $560 million contract to supply tankers to Kuwait Oil Tanker Co.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) added 0.4 percent to 122.56 as of 3:51 p.m. in Tokyo, having swung between gains and losses at least eight times. The measure has risen 7.6 percent so far this month, the second-biggest such advance since September 2010, amid bets China will ease lending curb, the U.S. economy is improving and Europe is containing its debts crisis.

“We’ve seen some positive signs in Europe,” said Angus Gluskie, who oversees about $350 million as managing director at White Funds Management in Sydney. “We’re on a cusp of a Greek bond restructuring. They will agree on it but there will be some debate in the meantime.”

Greece aims to complete debt-swap talks with bondholders by the end of this week, Papademos told reporters after the European Union summit in Brussels. Papademos said he is “strongly committed” to reaching a deal. The country faces a 14.5 billion-euro bond payment ($19 billion) on March 20.

U.S. Futures

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 0.1 percent. South Korea’s Kospi Index and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index both gained 0.8 percent. China’s Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) were little changed. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index lost 0.2 percent.

Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced 0.2 percent today. The gauge slid 0.3 percent in New York yesterday as a report showed U.S. consumer spending stalled in December.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 7.2 percent this year through yesterday, compared with increases of 4.4 percent by the S&P 500 and 3.3 percent by the Stoxx Europe 600 Index. Stocks in the Asian benchmark are valued at 1.3 times book value. That compares with 2.1 times for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index in the U.S. and 1.4 times for the Europe Stoxx 600 Index in Europe.

A gauge of manufacturing shares led the advance among the 10 industry groups in the MSCI Asian gauge. Japanese machinery makers rallied as the nation’s factory production rose 4 percent in December from the previous month, the biggest increase in seven months.

Fanuc gained 1 percent to 12,810 yen in Tokyo. Hitachi Construction Machinery Co., which makes bulldozers and crawler cranes, climbed 2.9 percent to 1510 yen. Komatsu Ltd. (6301), Japan’s biggest maker of construction equipment, rose 1 percent to 2,149 yen.

‘Good Position’

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial added 1.5 percent to 2,425 yen. The lender yesterday maintained its full-year earnings forecast of 500 billion yen ($6.6 billion) and said it will buy back as much as 80 billion yen of stock.

“The bank is in a relatively good position now where it can selectively offer loans to companies and projects outside of Japan to improve lending profitability,” said Yoshinobu Yamada, a Tokyo-based analyst at Deutsche Bank AG.

State Bank of India (SBIN) climbed 3 percent to 2,044.9 rupees in Mumbai as the nation’s biggest lender by assets said it will receive a 79 billion-rupee ($1.6 billion) capital infusion from the government.

Advantest Corp. (6857), the world’s largest maker of memory-chip testers, surged 7.10 percent to 875 yen, the biggest gain on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. Daiwa Securities Group Inc. raised the stock’s rating to “neutral” from “underperform.” saying the company may return to profit on rising demand from South Korea and Taiwan.

Australian Retailers

Daewoo Shipbuilding jumped 6.5 percent to 27,850 won in Seoul. The company said it won an order to build four 317,300- ton very large crude carriers and one product vessel for Kuwait Oil Tanker.

Australia’s electronics retailers rallied as plans by Woolworths Ltd. (WOW) to sell its Dick Smith chain stoked speculation of industry consolidation. Woolworths will sell its consumer electronics unit after receiving unsolicited approaches for the business, Australia’s largest retailer said today.

JB Hi-Fi Ltd. (JBH), Australia’s second-biggest electronics retailer, climbed 6.6 percent to A$12.60. Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd., the largest, added 0.5 percent to A$2.06. Woolworths rose 1.4 percent to A$24.79.

Biggest Decline

Among stocks that fell, Angang Steel Co., the largest Hong Kong-traded steelmaker, tumbled 12 percent to HK$5.53, the biggest decline in the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. The Liaoning province, China-based company said it will post a net loss of 2.15 billion ($340 million) for 2011, compared with a profit of 2.04 billion yuan the year before.

Canon Inc. (7751), the world’s No. 1 camera maker, sank 4.2 percent to 3,290 yen after forecasting annual profit that missed analyst estimates and saying it Tsuneji Uchida will resign as president and chief operating officer.

Fujifilm Holdings Corp. (4901), which makes cameras, printers and medical devices, declined 6.9 percent to 1,807 yen, after cutting its estimate for annual operating profit. Separately, the company yesterday proposed combining its X-ray and ultrasound technology with the medical businesses of scandal- rocked Olympus Corp.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jonathan Burgos in Singapore at jburgos4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Gentle at ngentle2@bloomberg.net



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Japan’s Jobless Rate Rises Unexpectedly as Strong Yen Squeezes Companies

By Andy Sharp - Jan 31, 2012 6:38 AM GMT+0700

Japan’s unemployment rate unexpectedly rose last month as the strong yen continues to squeeze manufacturers.

The jobless rate was 4.6 percent in December, the statistics bureau said in Tokyo today. The median forecast of 30 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for the rate to remain at 4.5 percent.

The government has approved four supplementary budgets worth about 20 trillion yen ($262 billion) to stoke demand and rebuild after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Those funds are helping support the labor market, offsetting planned job reductions at manufacturers including NEC Corp. (6701)

“Labor offers in the devastated areas have been quite strong, and this will continue to support the labor market.” Kiichi Murashima, chief economist at Citigroup Global Markets Japan Inc. in Tokyo, said before the report. “Manufacturers have become cautious about hiring people in the context of global growth, the yen’s appreciation and uncertainty surrounding electricity supply” stemming from the shutdown of nuclear reactors since the disaster, he said.

Exporters are struggling with a yen hovering around a record high against the dollar, which caused Japan to last year post its first annual trade deficit since 1980. NEC said Jan. 26 it would eliminate 10,000 jobs, with 7,000 of those positions in Japan.

The job-to-application ratio, which Murashima said he sees as a “better” indicator given Japan’s aging population, improved to 71 positions open for every 100 candidates from 69 in November, the government said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andy Sharp in Tokyo at asharp5@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net




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Holiday Buyers Picked IPhone Over Android

By Adam Satariano - Jan 31, 2012 12:01 PM GMT+0700

Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) was the only smartphone maker partnering with Google Inc. (GOOG) that found holiday cheer competing against Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s iPhone.

Apple led the smartphone market in the fourth quarter after unveiling the iPhone 4S in October. Of the 9.4 million devices activated by AT&T Inc., the second-largest U.S. wireless carrier, 7.6 million were iPhones. Verizon Wireless, the largest provider, said 56 percent of its 7.7 million smartphones were iPhones. Samsung was No. 2 in shipments.

Apple sold a record 37 million iPhones globally in the three months ended Dec. 31, dispelling speculation that demand might be eroded by the dozens of devices using Google’s Android operating system. Instead, Apple’s dominance may serve as a signal that rivals such as HTC (2498) Corp. would do better to act like Hollywood studios, which hold back movies to avoid competing against the debut of a sure-bet blockbuster.

“For the Android smartphone vendors to come out with something, they need to be very brave,” said Ramon Llamas, a senior analyst at market-research company IDC. “It was Apple’s Christmas.”

Samsung found success with its Galaxy line of smartphones. Though the Suwon, South Korea-based company -- also one of Apple’s biggest parts suppliers -- came in just behind Apple for the quarter, it was the largest vendor for all of 2011, according to Strategy Analytics, a research company.

“They are clearly the winners,” said Nehal Chokshi, a senior analyst for Technology Insights Research LLC in New York.

Motorola, HTC, LG

As Apple and Samsung together sold more than 70 million smartphones in the fourth quarter, companies such as Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. (MMI), HTC and LG Electronics Inc. (066570) were left to fight for the remaining customers.

The fallout for Apple and Samsung’s competitors can be seen in their financial results. On Jan. 6, HTC, maker of the Sensation and Incredible smartphones, reported its first quarterly profit decline in two years. Motorola Mobility, maker of the Razr and Droid devices, also said earlier this month that it expected to report results that were lower than forecast in part because of the challenging market. LG, scheduled to release results on Feb. 1, has reported two consecutive quarterly losses.

Some companies are taking a cue from Apple, whose iPhone is its only smartphone. HTC and Motorola have announced shifts in strategy to focus on fewer models instead of a swath of variations.

Different Approaches

Google licenses the Android operating system to multiple hardware makers, while Apple’s iOS software is available only on its own products. The rising popularity of devices running Android has been seen by investors as a long-term threat to Apple’s market-leading profit margins. Chokshi said a similar example is the difficulty Apple’s Mac personal-computer business had competing against Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system, which runs on PCs from various vendors.

Apple’s performance during the holiday quarter should ease those concerns, said Brian White, a former analyst at Ticonderoga Securities LLC, which closed last week. Sales in China will help the iPhone remain the leading smartphone, he said. Morgan Stanley estimates Apple could sell as many as 40 million iPhones in China by 2013.

“The biggest mobile Internet opportunity in the world is just a baby,” White said. “Just think about when that explodes and Apple’s exposure there.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Satariano in San Francisco at asatariano1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net




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