Economic Calendar

Friday, February 24, 2012

Stocks Rise as Oil Gains After Economic Reports Signal Recovery; Yen Drops

By Stephen Kirkland and Rita Nazareth - Feb 24, 2012 10:08 PM GMT+0700

Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Andrew Sullivan, principal sales trader at Piper Jaffray Asia Securities Ltd., talks about the outlook for Hong Kong stocks. He also discusses the dispute within Australia's ruling Labor Party, corporate governance in Japan, and Europe's sovereign debt crisis. He speaks in Hong Kong with Rishaad Salamat, Mia Saini, Zeb Eckert and John Dawson on Bloomberg Television's "Asia Edge." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Scott Wren, a senior equity strategist at Wells Fargo Advisors, talks about U.S. stocks and the nation's economy. The number of Americans filing first-time claims for jobless benefits last week held at a four-year low and consumers became more confident, indicating an improving labor market may boost household spending. Wren also discusses Europe's sovereign debt crisis, China's economy, and concerns about Iran's nuclear program. He speaks with Zeb Eckert on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

A pedestrian looks at an electronic stock board outside a securities firm in Tokyo, Japan. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg


Stocks rose, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index above its highest closing level since June 2008, and oil extended its longest streak of gains in two years as reports bolstered confidence in the global economy. The cost of insuring European government debt fell and the yen weakened.

The S&P 500 (SPXL1) rose 0.3 percent to 1,367.26 at 10:06 a.m in New York and the Dow Jones Industrial Average exceeded 13,000 for the second time since 2008. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 0.3 percent. Oil in New York advanced 0.8 percent. The yen slipped 1.5 percent against the euro, reaching the weakest level of the year. The cost of insuring against a default on European government bonds fell for the first time in four days.

Purchases of new homes in the U.S. exceeded economists’ forecasts in January and a gauge of consumer confidence topped estimates. South Korea’s central bank said consumer confidence jumped to a three-year high. Finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of 20 nations meet tomorrow in Mexico and may discuss committing fresh cash to the International Monetary Fund to defuse the European fiscal crisis.

“The economy is growing, you’ve got good corporate earnings and reasonably inexpensive stock valuations,” Randy Bateman, chief investment officer of Huntington Asset Management in Columbus, Ohio, said in a telephone interview. His firm oversees $14.5 billion. “What’s not to like? If you’d have a psychological barrier that’s broken, you’d maybe see a continuation of a pretty good year for stocks.”

Economic Data

New home sales, tabulated when contracts are signed, fell 0.9 percent to a 321,000 annual pace from a 324,000 rate in December that was stronger than previously reported, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. The median estimate of 77 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a rise to 315,000. The number of homes for sale dropped to a record low.

The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment for February rose to a one-year high of 75.3, topping the median economist projection for a reading of 73.

American International Group Inc. surged 4 percent as the bailed-out insurer said profit jumped 77 percent. Salesforce.com Inc., the largest seller of online customer-management software, climbed 7.9 percent after billings growth topped analysts’ estimates.

European Stocks

Almost two shares climbed for each that dropped in the Stoxx 600. Telecom Italia SpA (TIT) jumped 5.3 percent after posting full-year profit before some items that climbed 7.3 percent and forecasting “broadly stable” earnings and revenue this year. Eiffage SA surged 12 percent for the biggest rally in the Stoxx 600 (SXXP) as Chief Executive Officer Pierre Berger said net income and sales at the French builder will climb in 2012. SAP AG added 2 percent after its board recommended an 83 percent increase to the software company’s dividend.

The euro rose 0.5 percent to $1.3440, appreciating to the highest level since December. The yen weakened against all 16 major peers, falling for the seventh straight day versus the euro.

The yield on the Italian 10-year bond fell nine basis points to 5.45 percent, with the two-year note yield 11 basis points lower. Italy sold 4.5 billion euros ($6 billion) of zero- coupon and inflation-linked bonds, meeting its target for the auction as borrowing costs fell.

The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit- default swaps on 15 governments dropped 3.5 basis points to 344.5.

The S&P GSCI gauge of 24 commodities advanced 0.2 percent to the highest since June 10, led by gains in oil and industrial metals. New York crude rose to $108.69 a barrel, the seventh consecutive gain and the longest streak since January 2010, amid concern escalating tension with Iran will threaten supplies.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) advanced 0.7 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) jumped 1.3 percent, and Russia’s Micex Index climbed 3.7 percent, the most since November. Indonesia’s Jakarta Composite Index (JCI) sank 1.6 percent. BSE India Sensitive Index (SENSEX) dropped 0.9 percent, a third day of losses, on concern oil-price gains may fuel inflation.

To contact the reporters on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net; 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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Apple Signals New Era in Heeding Shareholders

By Adam Satariano and Peter Burrows - Feb 24, 2012 9:47 PM GMT+0700

Enlarge image Apple Signals New Era in Heeding Shareholders

The new approach requires that Apple directors win the approval of a majority of voting shareholders, not simply a plurality -- or the largest grouping of those casting ballots. Photographer: Dale de la Rey/AFP/Getty Images

Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Robert Kaplan, a professor of management practice at Harvard Business School and a former vice chairman at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., discusses the outlook for Apple Inc. Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook told investors yesterday that the company is exploring how to use its $97.6 billion in cash in investments, responding to criticism that its balance sheet holds too big a hoard. Kaplan speaks with Erik Schatzker and Sara Eisen on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." Nick Thompson, a senior editor at New Yorker magazine and a Bloomberg contributing editor, also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook. Photographer: Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images


Apple Inc. (AAPL) Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook, who yesterday told investors they would get more say in picking board members, signaled greater willingness than his predecessor to heed the concerns of his company’s shareholders.

Apple said at its annual shareholder meeting that it would adopt a policy that says a majority -- rather than only a plurality -- of shareholders is needed to elect directors. Cook also reiterated that the company is exploring how to use its $97.6 billion in cash in investments, responding to investors’ criticism that its balance sheet holds too big a hoard.

The shifts, following last month’s decision to open supplier factories to inspections by an independent labor organization, may indicate a new era in Apple’s interaction with investors. Anne Simpson, head of corporate governance for the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, said the changes are befitting of the world’s most valuable company.

“This is setting the stage for a much more open dialogue with investors,” said Simpson, who led a more than two-year effort to persuade Apple to change its stance on board elections. “Apple is entering a new phase. Rethinking capital distribution, its global footprint and corporate governance is something 10 years ago that it wouldn’t have had to consider.”

The meeting was the first since the death of Jobs, who sometimes eschewed interaction with shareholders. Apple’s evolution is natural because Cook’s previous role as chief operating officer made him more involved with investors, said Brian Marshall, an analyst at ISI Group.

About-Face

“It’s not a 180-degree turn,” Marshall said. “This is more a slow, steady progression. No two people are created alike, and that’s the case with Steve and Tim. He’s putting his own mark on the company, slowly but surely.”

Cook said Apple was holding “active discussions” about what to do with its cash and investments, saying the stockpile was “more than we need to run a company.”

“The board and management team are thinking about this very deeply,” said Cook, reiterating earlier comments. As CEO, Jobs had resisted calls for a dividend.

The money pile, which includes short- and long-term investments, has risen more than 63 percent since last year’s annual meeting of shareholders.

“If they want to deploy the cash for the benefit of shareholders, that’s a good thing,” said Charles Elson, director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware. “At least they’re talking about doing something with the cash now.”

Majority Required

Investors at yesterday’s meeting passed a nonbinding measure in favor of the board-election change. A similar initiative was approved at the gathering last year, though it wasn’t adopted by Apple. The company changed its stance after previously saying that the change would cause board members to lose their seats in cases where too few shareholders cast votes.

The new approach requires that directors win the approval of a majority of voting shareholders, not simply a plurality -- or the largest grouping of those casting ballots.

More than 80 percent of companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index already have majority-voting measures, said Robert J. Jackson Jr., an associate professor at Columbia Law School.

“Apple’s move is really just catching up with the best governance practices of other companies of its size and scope,” said Jackson, who studies corporate governance issues.

All of the board members on the slate were elected by a wide majority: Genentech Inc. veteran executive Art Levinson, who serves as Apple’s chairman; Intuit Inc. Chairman Bill Campbell; former U.S. Vice President Al Gore; Walt Disney Co. CEO and Chairman Bob Iger; former head of Northrop Grumman Corp. Ron Sugar; J. Crew Group Inc. CEO and Chairman Mickey Drexler; Avon Products Inc. Chairwoman Andrea Jung; and Cook.

No Stock Split

Apple said it’s not considering a stock split, though it didn’t elaborate on how it might spend cash.

One option is to return part of the amount to shareholders in the form of a dividend. Apple last paid a dividend in 1995, before co-founder Jobs returned as CEO and revived the struggling company. Dividends provide a recurring payment to shareholders, typically each quarter.

The move would provide a long-term boost to Apple’s stock price by bringing in a new class of investors who only buy shares in companies with a dividend, according to Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

Cash Machine

In the years since Apple last offered a dividend, the introduction of the iPod, iPhone and iPad have turned the company into a profit engine, letting it accumulate a stockpile of cash and investments that exceeds the market value of Citigroup Inc. Jobs had long rebuffed calls to return the money to investors.

Shares of Cupertino, California-based Apple rose 0.7 percent to $520.04 at 9:43 a.m. in New York. The shares had climbed 28 percent this year before today.

Investors also voted down a proposal calling for Apple to release a “conflict of interest report” that outlines how board members may financially benefit from company decisions. Another rejected measure would have asked Apple to release a report on its political contributions and expenditures. The company opposed those initiatives.

Responding to a question from a shareholder, Cook said Facebook Inc. (FB), the world’s largest social-networking company, is more of a “friend” than a competitor. Apple and Facebook “could do a lot more together,” he said.

Cook also said Apple was working on new products that will “blow your mind.”

Turning the conversation back to cash, an investor asked whether Apple would consider using its cash to buy Greece, which faces a debt crisis.

“We’ve looked into many things,” but not that, Cook said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Adam Satariano in San Francisco at asatariano1@bloomberg.net; Peter Burrows in San Francisco at pburrows@bloomberg.net

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





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European Banks May Tap ECB for $629 Billion Cash

By Matthew Brockett and Jeff Black - Feb 24, 2012 7:11 PM GMT+0700

Euro-area banks may tap the European Central Bank next week for almost as much three-year cash as they did in December in an operation that could prolong a rally in bond markets.

Financial institutions will ask the ECB for 470 billion euros ($629 billion) in three-year funds for allotment on Feb. 29, the median of 28 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey shows. While that’s less than the record 489 billion euro take-up at the first tender on Dec. 21, it may increase total cash in the system by more than 300 billion euros, said Luca Cazzulani, a senior fixed-income strategist at UniCredit SpA (UCG) in Milan.

“Part of the increase will likely be parked, at least temporarily, in the sovereign-bond market and support mainly the performance of Italian and Spanish bonds,” said Cazzulani. Still, “expectations are at a pretty high level, which creates some room for disappointment,” he said. “Gross demand below 400 billion euros would likely put upward pressure on spreads in the short term.”

Italian and Spanish bonds have risen since the ECB’s first three-year loan, suggesting banks are investing at least some of the money in higher yielding assets. That’s helped ease concern about a credit crunch and won governments time to agree on measures to contain the sovereign debt crisis.

‘Lose-Lose’ Air

The yield on Spain’s two-year bond has dropped to 2.62 percent from 3.88 percent since Dec. 21 and the rate on a similar Italian bond has fallen to 2.87 percent from 5.14 percent. The extra yield investors demand to hold two-year Italian notes over German debt has fallen to 263 basis points from 492 points on Dec 22. That spread was 720 points on Nov. 25, a euro-era high.

The risk is that banks become too reliant on ECB money and fail to take the steps needed to strengthen their balance sheets.

“There is a ‘lose-lose’ air around the ECB’s auction next week,” said Simon Smith, chief economist at foreign-exchange broker FXPro Group Ltd. in London. “If take-up is low then markets are likely to be disappointed. If take-up is high, then although this may give markets a boost, the bigger picture is of markets becoming increasingly reliant on the ever-expanding good nature of central banks. All well and good, but the routes to the exit are that much longer as a result.”

The three-year funds cost the average of the ECB’s benchmark interest rate, currently at a record-low 1 percent, over the period of the loans and banks have the option of repaying them after a year. Forecasts in the Bloomberg survey range from 300 billion euros to 750 billion euros. No further three-year operations are currently scheduled beyond next week.

Stronger Euro

The euro strengthened against the dollar today, rising above $1.34 for the first time since Dec. 9. The 17-nation common currency gained 0.3 percent to $1.3409 at 12:31 p.m. in Brussels. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) was up 0.3 percent to 264.93.

With the economy set to recover “gradually” this year, there are no signs of downside inflation risks that might justify cutting rates to zero, Executive Board member Benoit Coeure said in a speech published by the ECB today.

In Asia, Vietnam is making headway against the region’s fastest inflation as prices rise the least in 11 months, giving the central bank scope to lower rates. Consumer prices climbed 16.44 percent in February from a year earlier, the General Statistics Office said in Hanoi today.

U.S. Recovery

In the U.S., purchases of new homes probably rose in January to a nine-month high, more evidence the housing market is improving, economists said before a report today.

The ECB’s second offering of three-year loans is intended to relieve liquidity strains in the region as officials work to contain fallout from the debt crisis. The central bank has increased the pool of collateral that banks can use to obtain the loans.

Before the December operation, the ECB reduced the rating threshold for certain asset-backed securities. This month, it said seven of the 17 national central banks in the euro area will also accept credit claims, a move that ECB President Mario Draghi estimates will increase the collateral pool by another 200 billion euros. The aim is to give small and medium-sized banks greater access to ECB cash.

While the overall amount allotted next week may be lower than in the first operation, new borrowing should be higher, said Christel Aranda-Hassel, director of European economics at Credit Suisse in London.

New Money

That’s because banks are likely to roll only about 100 billion euros of existing ECB loans into the three-year facility, with the remainder representing new cash.

In the December operation, about 296 billion euros of the 489 billion-euro total was accounted for by old loans, meaning about 193 billion euros was new money, according to Barclays Capital.

The size of the loans prompted German ECB council member Jens Weidmann to warn that the central bank mustn’t “lose sight of its mandate” to control inflation by taking on “excessive risks.”

Those concerns are likely to see the ECB wind down its long-term lending after the second three-year operation, said Deutsche Bank chief economist Thomas Mayer.

ECB council member Ewald Nowotny said today officials will “wait to see the effects” of the loans. “I personally don’t see any further need for action,” he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Matthew Brockett in Frankfurt at mbrockett1@bloomberg.net; Jeff Black in Frankfurt at jblack25@bloomberg.net

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





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S&P 500 Rises to Highest Level Since 2008

By Rita Nazareth - Feb 24, 2012 10:39 PM GMT+0700

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) rose above its highest close since 2008 as better-than-estimated consumer confidence and home sales reports bolstered confidence in the world’s largest economy.

Energy, utility and technology shares had the biggest gains in the S&P 500 among 10 industries. American International Group Inc. (AIG) surged 4.3 percent as the bailed-out insurer said profit jumped 77 percent. Salesforce.com Inc. (CRM), the largest seller of online customer-management software, climbed 7.3 percent after billings growth topped analysts’ estimates. Kroger Co. (KR), the largest U.S. grocery-store chain, added 1.2 percent after Citigroup Inc. recommended buying the shares.

The S&P 500 increased 0.1 percent to 1,365.41 at 10:37 a.m. New York time, paring a gain of as much as 0.3 percent. The benchmark gauge for American equities exceeded its April 2011 peak of 1,363.61, which was the highest level since June 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2.12 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 12,982.57 today.

“We continue to see pretty good growth and that’s good for stocks,” James McDonald, chief investment strategist at Northern Trust Corp. in Chicago, said in a phone interview. His firm manages about $665 billion. “The Dow is flirting with 13,000. While it makes no difference from a valuation standpoint, it can cause some people to say: we’ve had a pretty a big run and I’ll take a bit off the table. From a valuation standpoint, the stock market is still pretty attractive.”

Economic Data

Equities gained as data showed that purchases of new homes in the U.S. exceeded forecasts in January after climbing a month earlier to a one-year high. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment for February rose to 75.3 from 75 at the end of last month. Economists projected a reading of 73 after a preliminary figure of 72.5, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey.

Better-than-estimated economic and earnings reports helped drive the S&P 500 up 4.1 percent in February. The index is poised for a third straight month of gains, the longest streak in a year. Of the 441 S&P 500 companies that reported results since Jan. 9, 298 posted per-share earnings that beat projections, Bloomberg data show. The index is trading for about 14 times reported earnings, compared with the average since 1954 of 16.4 times, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“The economy is growing, you’ve got good corporate earnings and reasonably inexpensive stock valuations,” Randy Bateman, chief investment officer of Huntington Asset Management in Columbus, Ohio, said in a telephone interview. His firm oversees $14.5 billion. “What’s not to like?”

AIG, Salesforce

AIG surged 4.3 percent to $29.18. The jump in earnings was fueled by a tax benefit and an increase in the value of a stake in Asian insurer AIA Group Ltd.

Salesforce.com added 7.3 percent to $141.36. The amount Salesforce invoiced its customers grew 57 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, topping the 31 percent predicted by Brent Thill, an analyst at UBS AG in San Francisco. Billings rose 29 percent in the third quarter.

Kroger gained 1.2 percent to $23.25. The company was raised to buy from neutral at Citigroup Inc. The firm also added the shares to its “Top Picks Live” list.

Gap Inc. (GPS) retreated 4 percent to $22.59. The largest U.S. apparel chain forecast profit this year that was less than some analysts estimated as sales decline at its Old Navy stores. Chief Executive Officer Glenn Murphy failed to boost holiday sales at Old Navy after introducing a new marketing campaign for the more-than-1,000-store chain during the third quarter.

Unexpected Loss

Alpha Natural Resources Inc. (ANR) fell 0.7 percent to $19.68. The coal producer that bought Massey Energy Co. for $7.1 billion in June posted an unexpected fourth-quarter loss and cut its 2012 output forecast as U.S. electricity generators switched to cheaper natural gas.

J.C. Penney Co. dropped 0.8 percent to $41.58. The U.S. department-store chain run by Apple Inc.’s former retail chief posted a fourth-quarter loss on charges to revamp the company. Chief Executive Officer Ron Johnson, who took over in November, is overhauling the retailer’s pricing and store design to revive sales and lure shoppers from Macy’s Inc. and Target Corp.

Stocks are in the midst of a “hope phase” that may be as short-lived as one that occurred a year earlier, according to Albert Edwards, a global strategist at Societe Generale SA.

He compares the S&P 500’s performance since October with its year-ago swings. Last year, the index dropped during the second half of February, rebounded to reach its 2011 high in April, and tumbled in a second-half bout of volatility.

Sustained Growth

This year’s gains reflect anticipation of sustained U.S. economic growth and a so-called soft landing for the Chinese economy, according to Edwards, based in London. He also cited optimism that Greece’s second bailout and the European Central Bank’s moves to ease bank financing will help the euro region.

“Hope still beats in the breast of equity investors,” he wrote. “The market will rip out that hope and consume it in front of investors’ eyes.”

Corporate earnings may be a catalyst for the abandonment of hope, the report said. Edwards noted that estimates for S&P 500 companies as a group are dropping for the first time since late 2007, when the U.S. economy was sliding into a recession.

Edwards reiterated in September that the index will fall to 400, a plunge of about 70 percent from yesterday’s close, before the next bull market begins. He saw the yield on 10-year Treasury notes falling to 1.5 percent. Last year’s low was 1.67 percent.

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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Europe Faces Pressure as G-20 Debates IMF Role

By Alan Crawford and Sandrine Rastello - Feb 24, 2012 10:44 PM GMT+0700

U.S., Chinese and Japanese officials say they will press euro-area countries to do more to merit outside help when the world’s largest economies gather tomorrow for a meeting dominated by Europe’s sovereign-debt woes.

European officials will push fellow Group of 20 nations to commit fresh cash to the International Monetary Fund to help defuse the region’s fiscal crisis, days after backing a second bailout for Greece. The Obama administration says Europe must first strengthen its firewall to prevent debts of countries such as Italy and Spain from becoming unsustainable.

G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors meet in Mexico City four days after euro-area governments sanctioned a 130 billion-euro ($175 billion) aid package for Greece and amid warnings by the IMF that concerns about debt sustainability could drag the world into another recession. While China, Japan, Brazil and Mexico say they are willing to help once Europe acts, the U.S. shows no signs of reaching for its checkbook.

“Europe will implicitly be the main political topic of conversation, in the lens of what will it take to get more contribution to the IMF,” Jacob Kirkegaard, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said in an interview. “The Europeans clearly realize that they have to move first.”

‘Make More Efforts’

With demand from the European Union’s 500 million consumers slowing, China and Japan have signaled a commitment to help resolve Europe’s debt woes. The condition is that Europe “make more efforts to create a bigger firewall,” Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Feb. 20 in Beijing. Japan is considering contributing $50 billion to the IMF’s European rescue package, the Asahi newspaper reported Feb. 23, without saying where it obtained the information.

Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner stepped up U.S. calls for Europe to boost firewall. While European action so far means it’s “much less likely” the debt crisis will trigger global contagion, the U.S. and other nations won’t commit fresh funds to the IMF until Europe makes its backstop more “credible,” he said in an interview on CNBC today.

“What we don’t want to see is the IMF substitute -- and it really cannot substitute -- for a stronger European response,” Geithner said.

European Funds

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who was French finance minister when the crisis surfaced in Greece in late 2009, is looking for an additional $500 billion in lending resources for the Washington-based fund. The 17 euro nations have pledged about $200 billion in new money.

European leaders will meet again in Brussels March 1-2 to review the mechanics of the 500 billion-euro permanent rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism. The fund, which is to be implemented in July, one year earlier than originally planned, was set up to aid European Union member states that need help meeting debt payments.

While some officials and the European Central Bank favor combining the permanent fund with the temporary European Financial Stability Facility to produce a 750 billion-euro firewall, Germany has yet to show its hand and is calling for more IMF help to increase funds available to contain the crisis.

G-20 leaders meeting in the French resort of Cannes in November put off a decision on increasing aid to Europe. Mexican Finance Minister Jose Antonio Meade said Feb. 8 it’s still too soon to expect a deal on additional IMF funding. This weekend’s meeting will lay the ground work for a G-20 heads of state summit to take place in June in the Mexican resort of Los Cabos.

‘Clear Sequence’

“There’s a generalized recognition that having more resources available via the IMF might be something that people are prepared to sign up to provided they feel that Europe is doing enough to help itself,” Malcolm Barr, chief U.K. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London, said in a phone interview. “But there is a clear sequence.”

Fitch Ratings lowered Greece’s credit grade that day by two levels to C from CCC, saying a default is “highly likely in the near term.”

Stocks in Europe rose today, snapping a three-day decline. The rebound came a day after Commerzbank AG, Germany’s second- biggest lender, tumbled 6.6 percent as it and two other banks, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and France’s Credit Agricole SA, booked losses on their Greek government debt.

European Economy

The European Commission, the EU’s executive body, said it expects the region’s economy to shrink this year. A euro-area composite index based on a survey of purchasing managers in services and manufacturing dropped to 49.7 from 50.4 in January, London-based Markit Economics said in an initial estimate Feb. 22, below analysts’ forecasts. In contrast, the Manufacturing & Non-Manufacturing ISM Index, a gauge of manufacturing and non- manufacturing activity in the U.S., rose to 56.5 in January from 52.8 in the previous month.

“There’s a nascent recovery in the U.S.,” said Sony Kapoor, managing director at Re-Define, a London-based firm that advises governments on economic policy. “The biggest risk factor in the global economy is the worsening of the euro crisis,” he said.

Aside from the firewall, policy makers will probably discuss a successor for World Bank President Robert Zoellick, who said last week he would step down when his five-year mandate ends June 30.

Zoellick Successor

The World Bank board has said it expects to select his successor by its spring meetings that start April 20 in Washington, and will accept nominations until March 23.

A U.S. citizen traditionally holds the post under an informal agreement in which a European heads the IMF. While the U.S. has said it planned to nominate its candidate in coming weeks, officials from Brazil and China are pushing for a selection procedure that could yield a president who is not from the U.S.

“I’d be very surprised if you don’t see trial balloons being put forward,” Kirkegaard said. “This is exactly the right forum for the kind of informal discussions about that.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Crawford in Mexico City at acrawford6@bloomberg.net; Sandrine Rastello in Mexico City at srastello@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net.




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Buffett Reveals Warts Preparing Annual Letter

By Andrew Frye - Feb 24, 2012 12:00 PM GMT+0700

Warren Buffett bought oil stocks near the peak of an energy boom, declined to spend $35 million on a growing television station and swapped a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A) stake for a shoe company he later said was worthless.

In each case, shareholders of Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire were charged or deprived of at least $1 billion. And in each case, Buffett apologized in writing.

“A friend once asked me: If you’re so rich, why aren’t you smart?” Buffett, Berkshire’s chairman, said in a letter accompanying the 1996 annual report. The billionaire, describing a bet on USAir, told readers at the time, “You may conclude he had a point.”

Buffett’s self-criticism is part of a leadership style that has helped him build a company with 270,000 workers and draw crowds of more than 20,000 to hear him speak. Buffett, 81, who’s scheduled to release his annual shareholder letter tomorrow, relies on his public persona as well as his record to set standards for Berkshire staff and retain investors in good years and bad.

“He doesn’t hesitate to point this stuff out, and it’s not just for the shareholders,” said James Armstrong, president of Berkshire investor Henry H. Armstrong Associates. “It’s also for the employees and managers of Berkshire. It’s sending the message: Admit your mistakes, don’t pretend they didn’t happen.”

Coca-Cola, Geico

Buffett, a former hedge-fund manager, boosted Berkshire with stock picks like Coca-Cola Co. (KO) and takeovers including insurer Geico Corp. Berkshire shares soared about 38-fold in the last 24 years and Buffett’s fortune surged to third-biggest in the world. The company trades at about 1.2 times book value, indicating that investors believe the firm is worth more than its net assets.

The Class A shares slipped 4.7 percent last year amid a surge in insurance catastrophe costs and questions about Berkshire’s succession planning. Berkshire’s profit declined 16 percent to $7.2 billion in the nine months ended Sept. 30, and Buffett was criticized in the media for his handling of the resignation of former manager David Sokol.

Buffett claimed responsibility for losses when his bet on oil producer ConocoPhillips contributed to more than $3 billion of impairments in 2009. He blamed himself for decades of missed profits because he refused to pay $35 million for a Dallas-Fort Worth NBC station. The cost of his 1993 purchase of shoemaker Dexter rose to $3.5 billion, Buffett said in 2008, because he paid the $433 million price in Berkshire stock.

‘A Big Mistake’

Buffett was pressured into admitting an error last year regarding his oversight of Sokol, who left in April and was subsequently accused by Berkshire of violating the firm’s insider-trading rules.

“I made a big mistake” by not pressing Sokol for details about his Lubrizol Corp. stock trades before Berkshire bought the engine-additives maker, Buffett said at the 2011 shareholders’ meeting. That was a reversal from a statement a month earlier that didn’t include an apology and said he would answer no questions on the matter.

“The initial response was to circle the wagons,” said Meyer Shields, an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co. “To his credit, he does acknowledge some of these issues. But I don’t think we get the entire picture,” Shields said of Buffett’s self-criticism.

Buffett frames the investor discussion with his annual letter, which tends to be about 20 to 25 pages long and has been read by shareholders around the world. Berkshire’s annual 10-K filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, typically released a few days after the letter, gives investors about 100 pages of information.

An Expensive Fiasco

Buffett said two years ago that Geico’s foray into credit- card lending was “a very expensive business fiasco” and his own fault. In 1999, he told shareholders his stock transactions were so bad investors would have been better off if he’d gone to the movies during market hours. Even with a winning bet -- Berkshire’s investment in Coca-Cola in 1988 and 1989 -- Buffett made light of himself for not getting there sooner.

“I believe I had my first Coca-Cola in either 1935 or 1936,” Buffett said in 1990. “I carefully avoided buying even a single share, instead allocating major portions of my net worth to street railway companies, windmill manufacturers, anthracite producers, textile businesses, trading-stamp issuers, and the like.”

Coca-Cola more than doubled in the four years through the end of 1987, and has risen more than 14-fold since. Buffett invested about $1 billion in the world’s biggest soft-drink maker by the end of 1989 and made purchases of almost $300 million in 1994. Berkshire, Coca-Cola’s largest shareholder, has a stake now valued at almost $14 billion.

Buffett’s Record

“Agonizing over errors is a mistake,” Buffett said in 2001. “But acknowledging and analyzing them can be useful, though that practice is rare in corporate boardrooms.”

The assessment of Buffett’s performance may change over time. In 1998, the year he said he would have been better off at the movies because he sold stocks including McDonald’s Corp. (MCD), Buffett was in the process of divesting a holding in Freddie Mac that had climbed to more than $3 billion. Those sales were substantially completed in 2000, eight years before the mortgage-finance company entered government conservatorship. McDonald’s has more than doubled since 1998.

“It’s a humbling business,” said David Rolfe, chief investment officer of Berkshire shareholder Wedgewood Partners Inc. Buffett’s self-criticism “has served him well over the years.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Frye in New York at afrye@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dan Kraut at dkraut2@bloomberg.net.




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Christie Says Obama ’Using’ Buffett

By Elise Young - Feb 24, 2012 1:46 AM GMT+0700

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie said President Barack Obama is “using” such people as billionaire investor Warren Buffett as tools to push his tax policy.

Christie, who has endorsed Mitt Romney for president, also said during a round of television interviews today that the former Massachusetts governor needs to show more emotion if he is to win the Republican primary.

Christie’s comments about Obama came after he said this week that Buffett, who has called for the nation’s wealthiest people to pay more taxes, should “just write a check and shut up.” Buffett, chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., has said he pays 17.4 percent on taxable income. His secretary, Debbie Bosanek, and other staff members pay an average 34 percent rate.

“You’re using this guy, you’re using his secretary --who’s one of the best-paid secretaries in America, apparently --you’re using these people to try to make a point about redistribution of wealth,” Christie, 49, a Republican midway through his first term, said during an interview on “Fox & Friends”.

Obama has called for a minimum rate of 30 percent for those with incomes of $1 million or more and dubbed the idea “the Buffett Rule.” The president has pointed to the different rates of Buffett and his secretary as an example of an unfair tax code, and Bosanek was at his State of the Union address last month. Recent presidents have often had guests at their speeches to make policy points.

Buffett Rule

Carrie Kizer, Buffett’s assistant, didn’t return an e-mail seeking comment on Christie’s statements.

Warren Buffett is widely respected and he is simply expressing his view that a billionaire like him should not pay a lower effective tax rate than his secretary,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said in Miami, where Obama is giving a speech about energy and raising campaign funds. “I guess Governor Christie disagrees with that.”

Christie on Feb. 21 introduced a $32.1 billion spending plan that includes a 10 percent income-tax cut for every New Jersey resident, business-tax reductions and a $1.1 billion pension contribution, the biggest in state history.

Michigan Primary

During today’s media appearances, Christie was asked mostly about national political issues. He said a loss for Romney in Michigan’s Feb. 28 Republican primary would be “bad news” though the candidate wouldn’t be in trouble. Romney’s father was a Michigan governor and chairman of now-defunct American Motors Corp., and his son has criticized the federal bailout of the auto industry, crucial to that state’s economy.

There was no “knockout winner” in the Republican debate last night in Arizona, Christie said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” program. Rick Santorum wasn’t prepared and turned in an “awful” performance, he said.

Romney’s “reserved” nature is not playing well with voters, and he must show his emotions and passion in order to win the primary, Christie told Don Imus.

There is about a 10 percent chance of a brokered Republican nominating convention, said Christie, who added that he was certain the nominee would be Romney. The term refers to a selection process where no clear majority candidate emerges after an initial delegation vote, and the nomination is the result of deals among party leaders.

Christie last year turned down entreaties from party leaders and donors to enter the Republican presidential primary race. He is the top choice of Republicans if the party nominates its presidential candidate at a brokered convention, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released yesterday.

The governor, asked by Imus what he would do if leaders pass on Romney, said he would have “some thinking to do.”

“I don’t have an idea at the moment,” Christie said. “Listen, if it gets to that point, you know me. I’m not a wallflower. I’ll take a position, but I don’t have one now.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Elise Young in Trenton at eyoung30@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Tannenbaum at mtannen@bloomberg.net





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Banks Lobbied to Widen Volcker Rule Before Inciting Foreigners Against Law

By Yalman Onaran - Feb 24, 2012 3:56 AM GMT+0700

U.S. banks pushed regulators to widen proposed restrictions on trading and hedge-fund ownership by foreign firms, then encouraged governments around the world to complain about the rule’s reach.

The two-pronged lobbying strategy resulted in foreign officials joining U.S. lenders to push back against the Volcker rule, named after former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Volcker and incorporated in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act.

“The criticism of foreign governments on behalf of their banks is helping U.S. banks fight the rule,” said Anat Admati, a professor of finance at Stanford University. “It also muddies the water, shifting the debate away from the main issue, which is reducing the risks banks impose on the economy.”

The Volcker rule seeks to prevent deposit-taking firms from making bets with their own capital or owning hedge funds. Last year, U.S. banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and Morgan Stanley lobbied the Fed and other regulators to apply the regulation more broadly to companies based outside the U.S., according to four people with knowledge of the discussions who asked not to be identified because the talks were private.

In a December 2010 phone call, a lobbyist for JPMorgan told Fed officials the Volcker rule would create “a competitive disadvantage” for U.S. banks, according to a document posted on the agency’s website. Seven Morgan Stanley executives met with six Fed staff members last April to express similar concerns, another document said.

‘Extraordinary’ Reaction

Banks and their lobbyists later sent position papers to the Washington embassies of foreign governments and met with officials to warn that sovereign-debt prices would suffer if U.S. banks are barred under the Volcker rule from buying other nations’ bonds for their trading accounts, three of the people said. That led to an outpouring of letters from Canadian, Japanese and European Union officials, as well as from dozens of non-U.S. lenders, urging regulators to overhaul the rule.

“The global reaction has been extraordinary,” said Karen Petrou, managing partner at Federal Financial Analytics, a Washington-based research firm. “If regulators don’t feel like they have enough flexibility to satisfy foreign governments’ demands, they could go back to Congress, which would open the whole rule to revisions.”

298-Page Proposal

In recent months, as regulators sought comments on a 298- page proposal to implement the Volcker rule, the outcry from banks has swelled. Lobbyists have argued that the plan would reduce trading in bond markets and increase borrowing costs for investors and companies. One industry-funded study said the additional expense just for the corporate bond market could be as much as $360 billion.

Complaints from foreign nations and banks center on language in Dodd-Frank exempting U.S. Treasuries from the ban on proprietary trading because they’re deemed safe, as well as on the rule’s attempt to control activities outside the U.S.

The exemption for Treasuries didn’t arouse much opposition until two months ago, after U.S. banks began calling representatives of foreign governments in Washington, warning that sovereign-debt prices would suffer if they weren’t allowed to buy the bonds for their trading accounts, say lobbyists and regulators familiar with the talks.

Banks based outside the U.S. met with their home-country regulators and central bankers, briefing them about the dangers and unfairness of the proposed rules, the people say. Allen & Overy LLP, a law firm representing a dozen non-U.S. lenders, including Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG (DBK) and HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA) in London, said its lawyers, accompanied by bank executives, held meetings with the U.K. Treasury, the European Central Bank, Canada’s finance ministry and German regulators. The law firm wouldn’t say which banks participated at the meetings.

Extraterritorial Reach

The Volcker rule’s extraterritorial reach didn’t become clear until after the Fed, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Securities and Exchange Commission published a draft proposal on Oct. 11. While the Dodd-Frank Act said that U.S. divisions of foreign banks would have to abide by the restrictions, the plan extended that to cover the activities of any bank with a connection to the U.S., even a single branch in one state, according to lawyers and bank executives.

“If you look at the proposed rule’s preamble, it’s clear that the U.S. regulators are trying to level the playing field between their banks and the outsiders,” said Douglas Landy, the New York-based head of the U.S. financial-services regulatory practice at Allen & Overy.

Merkley, Levin

Even U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley of Oregon and Carl Levin of Michigan, who pushed Dodd-Frank’s Volcker rule provision through Congress, said in a Feb. 13 letter to regulators that the proposal goes beyond the bill’s original intent by seeking to prevent non-U.S. banks from owning stakes in private-equity or hedge funds offered to U.S. citizens.

U.S. banks and their lobbying groups held 21 meetings with Fed staff from September 2010 to October 2011 to discuss the Volcker rule, according to the central bank’s website.

The banks started calling on foreign governments and regulators after the draft proposal was released in October, with efforts intensifying in December. That culminated in a flurry of public statements in January and February from high- ranking officials, including Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney and EU Financial Services Commissioner Michel Barnier.

Barnier, speaking at a conference in Washington today, said that it wasn’t “acceptable that U.S. rules have such a wide effect on other nations.” U.K. and Japanese finance ministers also weighed in today, saying that without an exemption from the rule, their governments’ borrowing costs would rise.

Excessive Risk

“At such a vulnerable time in the sovereign debt markets, it would be the wrong prescription,” U.K.’s George Osborne and Japan’s Jun Uzumi wrote in a Financial Times opinion article.

The response from foreign governments and banks “shows the veracity” of the argument U.S. banks have been making since the Volcker rule was proposed in 2009, said Randy Snook, executive vice president of the Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association, which represents the largest U.S. lenders.

“Banks serve a crucial role in government bond markets, and the regulation would restrict that,” Snook, who’s based in New York, said in an interview. “It doesn’t respect the market- making role, either, and would hurt these markets seriously.”

Snook declined to say whether banks had lobbied regulators to extend the Volcker rule’s reach. Spokesmen for Morgan Stanley (MS) and JPMorgan, both based in New York, as well as for the Fed, the FDIC, the OCC and the SEC declined to comment.

July 20 Deadline

The agencies, which are sifting through more than 300 comments on the proposal, face a July 20 deadline when the Volcker rule is scheduled to go into effect.

The rule, designed to keep banks from taking excessive risks, attempts to prevent them from using their own money to make short-term bets while allowing them to buy and hold securities temporarily in anticipation of future customer demand for the trade.

Foreign banks, like their U.S. rivals, will have to prove that their buying and selling amounts to market-making for clients, not proprietary trading. They also can’t own more than a 3 percent stake in any hedge funds or private-equity funds that do business with U.S. residents, which would rule out most such investments, bankers and lobbyists say.

Exporting Volcker Rule

The proposed restriction would, for example, prevent a foreign bank’s London-based trading desk from using the firm’s capital to bet on any security traded on a U.S. exchange, according to the Institute of International Bankers, a New York- based lobbying group for overseas lenders with U.S. operations.

That London unit also can’t make any bets involving investors who are U.S. residents, and the bank’s U.S.-based brokers can’t take part in transactions, even if both the buyer and the seller are outside the U.S., the IIB wrote in a Feb. 13 letter to regulators.

“The proposed version basically exports the Volcker rule to our banks’ home-country operations,” said Richard Coffman, IIB’s general counsel. “The only way they could avoid the rule’s reach is by de-banking from the U.S.”

Senators Merkley and Levin backed restrictions on proprietary trading of sovereign bonds other than U.S. Treasuries in their letter to regulators. They said dabbling in such debt could increase risk for U.S. banks. Greece, whose debt was rated investment grade as recently as 2010, is in the process of swapping sovereign bonds held by banks and hedge funds for new ones worth about 70 percent less as the EU tries to avert a default which could result in even greater losses.

Treasuries Exempted

In their letter, the senators explained that Treasuries were exempted because they’re safe, don’t pose a foreign- exchange risk for U.S. banks holding them and are used for liquidity management by the country’s lenders. That isn’t the case for other sovereign bonds, the senators said.

“For the EU to be treated as safe as U.S. Treasuries is laughable when they’re restructuring one of their member’s debt,” said Simon Johnson, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “The lesson we’ve learned from the EU crisis is that a bank should only consider as safe the debt backed by its own central bank.”

Volcker has said that barring U.S. banks from trading other countries’ bonds won’t hurt liquidity in the market for those securities. The largest banks in Europe, Japan and Canada should be able to pick up the slack, Volcker, 84, wrote in the Financial Times on Feb. 14.

Borrowing Costs

Stanford’s Admati said she doubts restrictions on trading sovereign bonds will raise borrowing costs in any significant way. A study by Thomas Philippon, a professor of finance at New York University, showed that increasing liquidity in financial markets over the past 140 years has made it costlier for companies to borrow or raise capital. More trading activity results in a transfer of economic resources to the financial industry, Philippon wrote in the November paper.

Even if borrowing costs rise when liquidity drops, complaints from foreign governments are akin to asking for a subsidy, Admati said.

“Why should the U.S. taxpayer subsidize other governments’ borrowing costs?” Admati said. “When banks insist they must be the ones providing market-making, they in effect want the U.S. government to subsidize this activity through its safety net. This can reduce the borrowing costs of governments only if you don’t consider the cost to U.S. taxpayers of the safety net.”

Norinchukin Bank

Admati made a similar argument in response to complaints from banks as far away as Singapore that they will have to abide by the Volcker rule in their global operations even though they have only a tiny U.S. presence -- a single branch that helps corporate clients with trade finance. Those banks can receive support from the Fed during a financial crisis, she said.

One example: Norinchukin Bank (NORZ), which pools the resources of Japanese agricultural and fishing cooperatives. It has only one branch office in the U.S. and should be exempt from the Volcker rule, the Tokyo-based lender wrote in a Jan. 25 letter to regulators. Norinchukin borrowed as much as $22 billion of emergency funds from the Fed during the financial crisis, according to data released by the central bank and compiled by Bloomberg News.

While applying the Volcker rule to foreign banks may help level the playing field for U.S. firms, it won’t go far enough in alleviating the burden imposed by new regulations, said Margaret Tahyar, a New York-based partner at Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP who represents some of the largest U.S. banks.

“The Volcker rule was already a 90-degree tilt against U.S. banks in the Dodd-Frank Act, hurting their competitiveness internationally,” Tahyar said. “Regulators have used some discretion to lower that disadvantage, but it’s now a 70-degree tilt -- still pretty steep.”

International Outcry

The international outcry, while it may help U.S. banks make their case for revising the Volcker rule, won’t undermine its basic premise, said Kim Olson, a principal at Deloitte & Touche LLP in New York and a former bank supervisor. A similar global campaign against capital rules proposed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in 2010 didn’t deter regulators from going ahead, she said.

“The big question is whether the merits of the outcry are solid enough to sway the views of the regulators,” Olson said.

MIT’s Johnson said the lobbying strategy could backfire.

“It’s a miscalculation by the banks,” Johnson said. “The lobbyists have backed the regulators into a corner. They can’t give in when all these foreign governments are pressing them. It would look bad before elections to cave in to foreign demands when your public wants you to be tough on banks.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Yalman Onaran in New York at yonaran@bloomberg.net or @yalman_bn on Twitter

To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Scheer in New York at dscheer@bloomberg.net





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Google Said to Pick Own Executive to Replace Jha as Motorola Mobility CEO

By Peter Burrows, Brian Womack and Hugo Miller - Feb 24, 2012 4:33 AM GMT+0700

Google Inc. (GOOG), which won U.S. approval for its acquisition of Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. (MMI), is close to naming Dennis Woodside to run the business when the deal closes, three people familiar with the matter said.

Woodside, who led Google’s ad sales in the Americas before leaving that job to oversee the merger, would succeed Motorola Mobility Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Jha, said the people, who declined to be named because the decision isn’t public.

Google is buying Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, gaining a trove of more than 17,000 patents that will help it fend off legal challenges to its Android mobile-phone software. The company is grappling with competition in smartphones and tablets from Apple Inc. (AAPL), whose software only runs on its own devices, contrasting with Google’s approach of licensing the Android software to multiple manufacturers.


“The main thing he’ll need to figure out is what sort of hardware strategy is needed to offset the assault by Apple,” said Sameet Sinha, an analyst at B. Riley & Co. in San Francisco, who has a buy rating on the stock and doesn’t own it. “It’s an interesting choice.”

Woodside emerged as a favorite from a short list that included Christy Wyatt, Motorola Mobility senior vice president, and Chief Strategy Officer John Bucher, one person said.

Google shares fell less than 1 percent to $606.11 at the close in New York. Motorola Mobility was little changed at $39.73.

Leading Transition

As part of his role leading the transition, Woodside reported to Google CEO Larry Page and Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette. Woodside took over as president of the Americas region in 2009 when Tim Armstrong left Google to become CEO of AOL Inc.

Jill Hazelbaker, a spokeswoman for Mountain View, California-based Google, said the company doesn’t comment on rumor or speculation. The acquisition hasn’t closed, she said. Jennifer Erickson, a spokeswoman for Libertyville, Illinois- based Motorola Mobility, also declined to comment.

“We’re focused on running the business and getting the deal closed and wouldn’t comment beyond that on executive changes,” she said.

International Experience

Since joining Google in 2003, Woodside had served as vice president in charge of the U.K., Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. He also set up direct-sales operations in Eastern Europe. Before that, he worked at McKinsey & Co.

Under Woodside, sales in the U.S. rose to $17.6 billion in 2011 from $10.6 billion in 2008, an increase of about 65 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Earlier this month, U.S. and European Union officials signed off on Google’s plan to purchase Motorola Mobility. Google still needs approval from China for the deal to be completed.

The acquisition -- the largest wireless-equipment deal in at least a decade, according to data compiled by Bloomberg -- makes Google a competitor to other handset makers that build Android devices. In addition to running on Motorola Mobility phones, the software works on handsets made by companies such as Samsung Electronics Co. and HTC Corp.

Google has said that the acquisition won’t mean it favors Motorola Mobility in its dealings regarding Android. The company plans to separately report financial information for Motorola Mobility and Google.

“We’ve been very clear that Motorola is obviously going to remain a licensee of Android, and Android will remain open,” Page said during a call with analysts last month. “We have done a great job managing our partner ecosystem. That’s a difficult thing to do, and I think we do it quite well. And I expect we’re going to continue to do that well with Motorola.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Peter Burrows in San Francisco at pburrows@bloomberg.net; Brian Womack in San Francisco at bwomack1@bloomberg.net; Hugo Miller in Toronto at hugomiller@bloomberg.net




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Dow Average Rises to Highest Since May 2008

By Rita Nazareth - Feb 24, 2012 5:00 AM GMT+0700

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Pimm Fox and Deborah Kostroun report on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average to the highest level since May 2008, amid better-than-estimated housing and jobs market reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Adam Parker, head of U.S. equity strategy at Morgan Stanley, talks about the outlook for U.S. stocks and his investment strategy. He speaks with Adam Johnson, Trish Regan and Lisa Murphy on Bloomberg Television's "Street Smart." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Barton Biggs, managing partner and co-founder of Traxis Partners LP, discusses investment strategy and hedge fund issues. He speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Liam Dalton, chief executive officer at Axiom Capital Management Inc., talks about reasons for favoring Transocean Ltd., Caterpillar Inc. and gold stocks. Dalton speaks with Sara Eisen on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)


U.S. stocks rose, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDU) to the highest level since May 2008, amid better-than-estimated housing and jobs market reports.

International Business Machines Corp. (IBM), which comprises 12 percent of the share-price weighted Dow, added 28 points to the index. Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) rose 3.1 percent as the largest consumer-products company said it will cut 5,700 jobs. PulteGroup Inc. and KB Home advanced at least 4.3 percent to pace gains in homebuilders. Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) soared 19 percent as it plans to raise as much as $770 million by selling 11 store sites and separating some smaller-format businesses.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index increased 0.4 percent to 1,363.46 at 4 p.m. in New York, erasing earlier losses. The benchmark gauge briefly rose above its April 2011 peak of 1,363.61 (SPX), which was the highest level since June 2008. The Dow gained 46.02 points, or 0.4 percent, to 12,984.69. The Russell 2000 Index (RTY) of small companies rallied 1.6 percent to 829.23.

“The recovery is starting to pick up speed,” Tom Wirth, who helps manage $1.5 billion as senior investment officer for Chemung Canal Trust Co., in Elmira, New York, said in a phone interview. “There was so much fear about what was happening in Europe that people couldn’t see through all of that.”

Stocks gained as applications for jobless benefits were unchanged in the week ended Feb. 18 at 351,000, the fewest since March 2008. A report from the Federal Housing Finance Agency showed that a gauge of home prices jumped 0.7 percent in December, beating estimates. The euro rose to the strongest level in more than 10 weeks against the dollar as a report showed German business confidence climbed.

Monthly Gain

Today’s advance extended the S&P 500’s rally in February to 3.9 percent. The index was poised for a third straight month of gains, the longest streak in a year, on higher-than-estimated economic data. Still, it was the second time this week that the S&P 500 failed to hold above its highest close since 2008.

“Sometimes when you’re knocking on the door of a meaningful psychological level you have to knock hard a few times to gain admittance,” David Sowerby, a Bloomfield Hills, Michigan-based portfolio manager at Loomis Sayles & Co., which oversees more than $155 billion, said in a phone interview. “Valuation is compelling. There’s been improvement in the economy. That provides potential for stocks to move higher.”

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, which measures the cost of using options as insurance against declines in the S&P 500, tumbled 7.6 percent to 16.80, the lowest since July. The Dow Jones Transportation Average added 0.7 percent, following a three-day slump. Nineteen out of 30 stocks in the Dow advanced. IBM jumped 1.9 percent, the second-biggest gain in the Dow, to $197.61.

Cost Savings

Procter & Gamble rallied the most in the Dow, rising 3.1 percent to $66.42. The cuts include 1,600 announced in January and will be achieved through attrition and layoffs, Paul Fox, a spokesman, said in an e-mail. The reductions are part of a plan to achieve $10 billion in cost savings by 2016, as detailed today by Chief Executive Officer Bob McDonald and Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller at a conference in Florida.

A gauge of homebuilders in S&P indexes climbed 2.3 percent. KB Home (KBH) added 4.4 percent to $11.75. PulteGroup advanced 4.8 percent to $8.73.

Sears surged 19 percent, the most in the S&P 500, to $61.80. The rights offering to separate the Hometown and Outlet shops and some hardware stores may raise $400 million to $500 million, Hoffman Estates, Illinois-based Sears said today in a statement. The 11 sites will be sold to General Growth Properties for about $270 million, the retailer said.

Almost Doubled

Vivus Inc. (VVUS) soared 78 percent to $18.73 after the company’s pill Qnexa won the backing of a regulatory panel, moving the drug a step closer to gaining U.S. approval as the first new obesity treatment in 13 years.

Target Corp. (TGT) jumped 2.9 percent to $54.50. The second- largest U.S. discount retailer posted fourth-quarter earnings that exceeded some analysts’ estimates, helped by discount card initiatives and grocery sales.

MetroPCS Communications Inc. (PCS) rallied 14 percent to $11.70. The pay-as-you-go U.S. wireless carrier reported fourth-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates.

Apple Inc. (AAPL) rose 0.7 percent to a record $516.39. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook, speaking today at an annual investor meeting, said Apple was continuing “active discussions” about what to do with its $97.6 billion in cash and investments, saying the cash hoard was “more than we need to run a company.”

HP Tumbles

Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) dropped the most in the Dow, slumping 6.5 percent to $27.05. The U.S. computer manufacturer’s fiscal second-quarter profit forecast fell short of analysts’ estimates as consumers curtailed personal-computer purchases.

Solar shares fell after Germany, the world’s biggest market for solar power, plans record reductions in subsidies for the industry as part of a program to rein in a boom in installations. First Solar Inc. (FSLR) declined 8 percent to $37.20. Trina Solar Ltd. (TSL) tumbled 12 percent to $8.63.

Safeway Inc. (SWY) declined 7.6 percent to $20.95. The grocer’s fourth-quarter sales excluding fuel at stores open at least one year increased 1.5 percent, trailing the average 2 percent gain expected by analysts.

The rally in U.S. stocks has pushed a trend measure of the S&P 500 to an “extreme” level not seen since 2004, a sign that the advance may be stalling, according to Sundial Capital Research Inc.

The benchmark gauge’s Average Directional Index, which measures the strength of a trend, climbed to 40.7 yesterday. The last time the indicator was higher following an advance, in November 2004, the S&P 500 was stuck in a 93-point range over the next eight months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The trend is “extended,” Jason Goepfert, president of Sundial in Blaine, Minnesota, wrote in a note yesterday. “Almost every time, by the time the trend becomes this strong, it’s about to become significantly less so.”

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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Dow Average Rises to Highest Since May 2008

By Rita Nazareth - Feb 24, 2012 5:00 AM GMT+0700

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Pimm Fox and Deborah Kostroun report on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average to the highest level since May 2008, amid better-than-estimated housing and jobs market reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Adam Parker, head of U.S. equity strategy at Morgan Stanley, talks about the outlook for U.S. stocks and his investment strategy. He speaks with Adam Johnson, Trish Regan and Lisa Murphy on Bloomberg Television's "Street Smart." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Barton Biggs, managing partner and co-founder of Traxis Partners LP, discusses investment strategy and hedge fund issues. He speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Liam Dalton, chief executive officer at Axiom Capital Management Inc., talks about reasons for favoring Transocean Ltd., Caterpillar Inc. and gold stocks. Dalton speaks with Sara Eisen on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)


U.S. stocks rose, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDU) to the highest level since May 2008, amid better-than-estimated housing and jobs market reports.

International Business Machines Corp. (IBM), which comprises 12 percent of the share-price weighted Dow, added 28 points to the index. Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) rose 3.1 percent as the largest consumer-products company said it will cut 5,700 jobs. PulteGroup Inc. and KB Home advanced at least 4.3 percent to pace gains in homebuilders. Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) soared 19 percent as it plans to raise as much as $770 million by selling 11 store sites and separating some smaller-format businesses.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index increased 0.4 percent to 1,363.46 at 4 p.m. in New York, erasing earlier losses. The benchmark gauge briefly rose above its April 2011 peak of 1,363.61 (SPX), which was the highest level since June 2008. The Dow gained 46.02 points, or 0.4 percent, to 12,984.69. The Russell 2000 Index (RTY) of small companies rallied 1.6 percent to 829.23.

“The recovery is starting to pick up speed,” Tom Wirth, who helps manage $1.5 billion as senior investment officer for Chemung Canal Trust Co., in Elmira, New York, said in a phone interview. “There was so much fear about what was happening in Europe that people couldn’t see through all of that.”

Stocks gained as applications for jobless benefits were unchanged in the week ended Feb. 18 at 351,000, the fewest since March 2008. A report from the Federal Housing Finance Agency showed that a gauge of home prices jumped 0.7 percent in December, beating estimates. The euro rose to the strongest level in more than 10 weeks against the dollar as a report showed German business confidence climbed.

Monthly Gain

Today’s advance extended the S&P 500’s rally in February to 3.9 percent. The index was poised for a third straight month of gains, the longest streak in a year, on higher-than-estimated economic data. Still, it was the second time this week that the S&P 500 failed to hold above its highest close since 2008.

“Sometimes when you’re knocking on the door of a meaningful psychological level you have to knock hard a few times to gain admittance,” David Sowerby, a Bloomfield Hills, Michigan-based portfolio manager at Loomis Sayles & Co., which oversees more than $155 billion, said in a phone interview. “Valuation is compelling. There’s been improvement in the economy. That provides potential for stocks to move higher.”

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, which measures the cost of using options as insurance against declines in the S&P 500, tumbled 7.6 percent to 16.80, the lowest since July. The Dow Jones Transportation Average added 0.7 percent, following a three-day slump. Nineteen out of 30 stocks in the Dow advanced. IBM jumped 1.9 percent, the second-biggest gain in the Dow, to $197.61.

Cost Savings

Procter & Gamble rallied the most in the Dow, rising 3.1 percent to $66.42. The cuts include 1,600 announced in January and will be achieved through attrition and layoffs, Paul Fox, a spokesman, said in an e-mail. The reductions are part of a plan to achieve $10 billion in cost savings by 2016, as detailed today by Chief Executive Officer Bob McDonald and Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller at a conference in Florida.

A gauge of homebuilders in S&P indexes climbed 2.3 percent. KB Home (KBH) added 4.4 percent to $11.75. PulteGroup advanced 4.8 percent to $8.73.

Sears surged 19 percent, the most in the S&P 500, to $61.80. The rights offering to separate the Hometown and Outlet shops and some hardware stores may raise $400 million to $500 million, Hoffman Estates, Illinois-based Sears said today in a statement. The 11 sites will be sold to General Growth Properties for about $270 million, the retailer said.

Almost Doubled

Vivus Inc. (VVUS) soared 78 percent to $18.73 after the company’s pill Qnexa won the backing of a regulatory panel, moving the drug a step closer to gaining U.S. approval as the first new obesity treatment in 13 years.

Target Corp. (TGT) jumped 2.9 percent to $54.50. The second- largest U.S. discount retailer posted fourth-quarter earnings that exceeded some analysts’ estimates, helped by discount card initiatives and grocery sales.

MetroPCS Communications Inc. (PCS) rallied 14 percent to $11.70. The pay-as-you-go U.S. wireless carrier reported fourth-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates.

Apple Inc. (AAPL) rose 0.7 percent to a record $516.39. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook, speaking today at an annual investor meeting, said Apple was continuing “active discussions” about what to do with its $97.6 billion in cash and investments, saying the cash hoard was “more than we need to run a company.”

HP Tumbles

Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) dropped the most in the Dow, slumping 6.5 percent to $27.05. The U.S. computer manufacturer’s fiscal second-quarter profit forecast fell short of analysts’ estimates as consumers curtailed personal-computer purchases.

Solar shares fell after Germany, the world’s biggest market for solar power, plans record reductions in subsidies for the industry as part of a program to rein in a boom in installations. First Solar Inc. (FSLR) declined 8 percent to $37.20. Trina Solar Ltd. (TSL) tumbled 12 percent to $8.63.

Safeway Inc. (SWY) declined 7.6 percent to $20.95. The grocer’s fourth-quarter sales excluding fuel at stores open at least one year increased 1.5 percent, trailing the average 2 percent gain expected by analysts.

The rally in U.S. stocks has pushed a trend measure of the S&P 500 to an “extreme” level not seen since 2004, a sign that the advance may be stalling, according to Sundial Capital Research Inc.

The benchmark gauge’s Average Directional Index, which measures the strength of a trend, climbed to 40.7 yesterday. The last time the indicator was higher following an advance, in November 2004, the S&P 500 was stuck in a 93-point range over the next eight months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The trend is “extended,” Jason Goepfert, president of Sundial in Blaine, Minnesota, wrote in a note yesterday. “Almost every time, by the time the trend becomes this strong, it’s about to become significantly less so.”

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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