11/30/2009 (3:42 pm)

Oil rises after supply report

Filed under: technology |

Crude oil prices rose over $77 a barrel Wednesday, supported by lower-than-expected builds in U.S. oil inventories last week, a weak U.S. dollar and gains on Wall Street.

Crude stocks rose 1.0 million barrels, the Energy Information Administration said, less than the 1.2 million barrel increase forecast.

U.S. crude for January rose $1.94 to settle at $77.96 a barrel.

"The EIA report prompted some modest price support as the 1 million barrel crude stock build was slightly smaller than expectations and well below yesterday’s API guidance," said Jim Ritterbusch, president, Ritterbusch & Associates in Galena, Illinois.

On Tuesday, the American Petroleum Institute released a report showing a 3.3 million-barrel rise in stocks.

Prices were also buoyed when the U.S. dollar fell to a 15-month low after U.S. data on jobless claims, personal consumption and new home sales fed economic optimism.

Consumer spending rose more than expected in the world’s largest economy, while new jobless benefits claims dropped. New U.S. home sales in October rose to their highest level in a year.

Wall Street stocks rose after the data, boosting crude, which has more than doubled from below $33 in December, though far below its record of more than $147 hit in July 2008.

Soft fundamentals

Analysts noted that the EIA data showed demand for crude oil is still weak.

"Fundamentals remain soft … there’s no reason to open the champagne here. Refinery runs are nothing to write home about, under 14 million barrels a day," said Antoine Halff, first vice president, deputy head of research, Newedge Group, New York.

Refinery utilization rates, while up 0.9% from the prior week, were still 5.9% below year-ago levels, according to the EIA data.

Gasoline inventories rose 1 million barrels to 210.1 million barrels, above analyst expectations for a 300,000 barrel rise.

Distillate stockpiles, which includes heating oil and diesel, dropped 500,000 barrels to 166.9 million barrels.

"The (distillate) draw was slightly larger than consensus expectations, but puts only a small dent in the major surplus," said Timothy Evans, energy analyst at Citi Futures Perspective in New York.

U.S. crude was expected to average $75.40 a barrel in 2010, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday, but analysts said ample supplies would keep short-term price growth in check. 

Source

11/28/2009 (8:12 am)

Commercial real estate notes

Filed under: technology |

Solon Gershman Inc. represented parties in these transactions:

— Metro Realty St. Peters LLC in the lease of 3,566 square feet of retail space at 4750 Mexico Road, St. Peters, to The Eye Center, represented by CB Richard Ellis.

— J&J Sales in the lease of 3,264 square feet of retail space at 532 St easy payday loan. Louis Avenue, St. Louis, from Harold Rue.

Source

11/26/2009 (12:48 pm)

Stocks open higher following U.S. consumer data

Filed under: economics, technology |

Some positive American economic data and higher commodity prices pushed the Toronto stock market higher Wednesday.

The S&P/TSX composite index was up 52.8 points to 11,592.4 after across the board weakness pushed the main index down 84 points on Tuesday.

The U.S. Commerce Department reported that consumer spending rose a brisk 0.7 per cent last month, following a 0.6 per cent pullback in September.

Incomes, the fuel for future spending, rose 0.2 per cent for the second straight month.

The Canadian dollar was up 0.98 of a cent to 95.5 cents US. Currency analysts at Scotiabank said the rise was due to news that the Russian central bank is preparing to invest some of its foreign exchange reserves in the loonie. No amount has been confirmed.

The gold sector was the best TSX performer, up almost one per cent as the December bullion contract on the Nymex continued to head higher into record territory, up $13.50 to US$1,179.30 an ounce. Barrick Gold Corp. (TSX: ABX) rose 72 cents to C$46.29.

The base metals sector rose 0.73 per cent amid a three-cent rise in December copper to US$3.14 a pound. Teck Resources (TSX: TCK.B) advanced 38 cents to $36.67.

The financials sector also lent support, up 0.5 per cent. Bank of Montreal (TSX: BMO) rose 41 cents to $53.55 after handing in an earnings report Tuesday that beat expectations.

The energy sector was little changed with the January crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange off two cents to US$76 a barrel after losing ground Tuesday in the wake of soft U.S. economic growth and consumer sentiment data.

The TSX Venture Exchange moved up 19.55 points to 1,427.96.

New York indexes were little changed as investors took in other economic data ahead of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.

The Dow Jones industrial average climbed five points to 10,438.7 after drifting 17 points lower.

The Nasdaq composite index moved 5.4 points higher to 2,174.58 while the S&P index added 0.7 of a point to 1,106.35 as orders for big-ticket factory goods fell unexpectedly by 0.6 per cent in October. But much of the weakness came from an 18.4 per cent drop in orders for goods related to defence. Excluding those, orders for other types of manufactured goods rose 0.4 per cent in October.

Still, the performance was weaker than economists expected. They were forecasting orders for durable goods to grow 0.5 per cent.

Also, the Labour Department said new claims for unemployment insurance fell by 35,000 to 466,000. That's the fewest claims since the week ending Sept. 13, 2008, and was far better than the 500,000 that economists had expected cash advance loans.

Later in the day, the University of Michigan's final report on consumer sentiment for November in expected to be revised up to 67 from a preliminary reading of 66, but will still be below the October reading of 70.6.

Comments from the U.S. Federal Reserve Tuesday also drove investor sentiment as the central bank said the economy's contraction for all of this year won't be as deep as it thought in a forecast released in the summer. Growth next year should turn out slightly better than the Fed previously projected and it also expects slightly lower unemployment.

On the corporate front, farm equipment maker Deere and Co. says big charges and lower sales of farm and construction equipment amid the economic downturn left it with a US$223 million loss for the fourth quarter. Deere says worldwide revenue dropped 28 per cent to US$5.33 billion. Its shares lost 62 cents to US$51.67.

Cossette Inc. (TSX: KOS) is recommending that shareholders reject the latest hostile takeover offer from Cosmos Capital Inc. The Quebec City-based advertising agency says it's not in company's best interests. The amended bid offers $7.87 per Cossette share and is subject to a due diligence condition which Cossette says cannot be satisfied. Its shares were unchanged at $8.02.

QLT Inc. (TSX: QLT) has agreed to pay US$20 million to settle a legal dispute with Massachusetts General Hospital, which had been seeking higher royalty payments from the sale of the Visudyne treatment for age-related blindness. In return for QLT's payment, the Boston-based hospital has agreed to dismiss its claims against the Vancouver-based drug developer. QLT shares ran up 25 cents to $4.23.

Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited (TSX: FFH) said Tuesday that it has received preliminary regulatory approval to establish of a new property and casualty insurance company in Brazil. The company plans to carry out its operations across Brazil, in all lines of commercial business, with a primary focus on property, energy, casualty, surety, marine, financial lines, special risks, hull and aviation. Fairfax shares dipped $1.23 to $373.77.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average advanced 0.4 per cent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index advanced 0.8 per cent, and China's Shanghai benchmark rebounded from a big retreat the day before, closing up 2.1 per cent.

London's FTSE 100 index gained 0.74 per cent, Frankfurt's DAX was up 0.73 per cent and the Paris CAC 40 rose one per cent.

Source

11/25/2009 (6:24 am)

Amex to deal into nation’s card war

Filed under: legal |

On the gift card rack in Shoppers Drug Mart, there are cards for iTunes, movie theatres, Toys `R’ Us and Chapters Indigo. There are even cards for Molly Maid house cleaning services and cards that can be redeemed online at virtual worlds like Habbo Hotel.

Canada’s gift card market, worth roughly $6 billion, has exploded since retailers began issuing plastic cards instead of paper certificates. Now, with gift cards topping the charts as the No. 1 holiday gift, credit card companies are hoping to take a bigger slice of that market.

American Express Co. has struck a partnership with Shoppers to sell its new gift card, which it bills as a "game changer" for the Canadian market.

As the first general-purpose gift card that is completely fee-free for the recipient, Amex says its debut is expected to pressure issuers of rival Visa and MasterCard gift cards to also eliminate back-end fees.

"This is going to force other companies in the gift card space to follow our lead," said Howard Grosfield, vice-president at American Express Canada.

Credit-card gift cards are exempt from Ontario’s 2006 gift card legislation, which banned expiry dates, limited fees and beefed up consumer disclosures on most retail gift cards.

Unlike other general-purpose gift cards, Amex has no after-purchase fees that erode the card’s value over time.

While the purchaser pays an upfront charge, there are no fees to check the balance, no service charges, no costs for card replacement and no expiry date, Grosfield said.

The purchaser’s initial loading price ranges between $4.95 and $6.95, depending on the card’s value of $50, $100 or $200. Grosfield says that pays for Amex to produce the plastic and provide free replacements for lost or stolen cards.

"It is really the back-end fees that really seem to be the big bone of contention in the marketplace, and that’s what’s been completely eliminated on this product," he added.

Rival Visa and MasterCard gift cards have initial loading prices and other service charges that generally apply after six months, along with replacement fees for lost or stolen cards.

Amex says Canadians are now demanding "more transparency" on fees of all kinds, including credit-card gift cards.

While Finance Minister Jim Flaherty introduced new credit-card regulations and a proposed voluntary code of conduct for credit and debit, credit-card gift cards were not mentioned in either document.

Nonetheless, Amex’s focus on fees is extremely timely for Canadians. A recent study by Deloitte and Touche predicted that gift cards and certificates would be the No. 1 Christmas gift for 2009.

"We think it can be a huge market if it is treated in the right way," Grosfield said.

Source

11/23/2009 (10:45 pm)

Banks here try to stanch red ink

Filed under: money |

The banking business has the blahs in St. Louis. Profits are down, fewer borrowers are making their loan payments, and capital levels are slipping.

Banks with money to lend say they can’t find enough borrowers who fit their new, higher credit standards. Troubled banks are cutting back on loans.

That’s the upshot from third-quarter results for St. Louis banks as reported by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Of 78 locally headquartered banks, 19 are running a loss for the year.

The good news is that few seem in danger of failing soon. Only two tiny local banks — WestBridge and Champion — fail to meet the federal standard as "well capitalized." Gateway Bank was also on that worry list until banking regulators took control of the north St. Louis bank and sold it early this month to Central Bank of Kansas City.

Rick Hummell, CEO of WestBridge, said a group of investors has agreed to recapitalize the bank, lifting it out of the worry zone. The deal still needs approval from shareholders and regulators, he said.

Officials of Champion Bank could not be reached for comment.

Other local banks are having significant problems. First Bank, the eighth-largest bank in the region, lost $274 million in the first nine months of this year. The bank’s capital level is slightly above the "well capitalized" level, but its holding company, First Banks, has fallen to the "adequately capitalized" level.

First Banks, owned by Jim Dierberg, was one of the few St. Louis banks with major operations outside the region. It lost heavily on California real estate development loans and on lending around Chicago.

Although a large majority of banks are profitable, the losses at a few are throwing the entire industry average into the red. The 78 banks lost a combined $239 million in the first nine months of this year. Without First Bank, whose losses are concentrated in California, St. Louis-based banks would have made a slight combined profit.

St. Louis bank performance numbers have been heading south for more than a year. The average bank made an annualized 3 cent profit on each $100 of loans and securities in the September quarter, down from 36 cents a year ago. In normal times, most banks earn more than $1 on each $100 in assets.

As of September, 2.7 percent of loans were far behind in payments at St. Louis banks, compared with just 1.7 percent a year earlier. The leverage capital ratio, a measure of capital adequacy, shrank to 9.6 from 10.3 percent. A 5 percent ratio is needed for "well capitalized" status.

That analysis excludes several large banks headquartered in other parts of the country but with major St. Louis market share, such as U.S. Bank and Bank of America. Such banks don’t break out St. Louis lending numbers.

Troubles are moving down banking’s food chain. Early this year, the crisis was concentrated in the nation’s larger financial institutions, suffering from big losses on mortgage-backed securities, derivatives trading, consumer lending and other management flubs payday loans.

Then smaller banks began feeling the heat, as housing developers went bust. Now the recession is hitting commercial real estate owners — bread-and-butter borrowers for many St. Louis banks. Office buildings and shopping centers are losing tenants, and the rent they pay. The situation is worst among suburban strip shopping centers that lack an anchor tenant, said Ron Barnes, chairman of Midwest BankCentre in Lemay, which is profitable.

Local banks have 37 percent of their assets invested in loans secured by commercial property, compared with a national average of about 17 percent.

Many such loans were written in mid-decade when credit standards were lower. As the loans mature, borrowers find they can’t meet banks’ new, higher standards.

"2010 is going to be another tough year in banking as they work through the remainder of their commercial real estate problem," said Julie Stackhouse, chief bank regulator at the Federal Reserve in St. Louis.

The 78 local banks had $1.22 billion in bad loans in September, but half of them were at First Bank. The figure is up $1.05 billion in the June quarter and $723 million in September 2008.

If things aren’t getting better, at least things are not getting a whole lot worse, said Stackhouse. "We’re waiting for some stabilization."

There’s debate about when that might come. "If nothing else really happens dramatically, then I think we’re over the hump," said Robert Witterschein, president of Southwest Bank. At this point, bankers have identified their likely problems and are coping with them, he said.

But that assumes commercial real estate prices will not fall dramatically from here. Others are worried about that assumption.

"This thing is not close to the end," said Leon Holschbach, CEO at Midland States Bank, a profitable operation based in Effingham, Ill., with branches in Chesterfield and the Metro East.

Overall lending remains stagnant. Local banks had $29.4 billion in loans on their books in September, practically unchanged from June, and down from $30.2 billion in September of last year.

But that figure disguises much churning among lenders. Banks facing problems are trying to shrink their balance sheets by selling off assets. Such banks generally can’t lend freely and turn away good customers.

"We had a couple of really good businesses call us and say their lenders told them to take their business elsewhere," said Dennis Melton, district director of the small-business administration. "Some banks are pushing out the future to survive today."

Source

11/22/2009 (6:42 am)

Super Bowl ads are selling out

Filed under: online |

Plummeting advertising sales have severely wounded media companies, but CBS is scoring big with the broadcast of this season’s Super Bowl XLIV.

Months away from the biggest football game of the year, CBS (CBS, Fortune 500) is already nearing a 90% sellout for advertising spots during the game. The network expects to close enough deals to hit that mark before Thanksgiving, said John Bogusz, CBS’s vice president of sports sales and marketing.

CBS hasn’t yet topped the $3 million rival NBC charged for each 30-second spot during the 2009 telecast, according to reports.

So far, CBS’s sales have hovered in the range of $2.5 and $3 million per spot. But with more than two months to go before kickoff, CBS still has time to reel in the big buyers.

Networks typically sell 62 commercials of 30 seconds each for the game. That math means CBS only has a half-dozen or so spots left to sell for the game that airs Feb. 7, 2010. Anheauser-Busch (BUD), Coca-Cola (KO, Fortune 500), PepsiCo (PEP, Fortune 500), and several movie studios and car companies have reportedly already purchased their ad packages for the 2010 game.

For last season’s big match, NBC didn’t reach the 90% benchmark for sales until January, just a month ahead of the telecast.

Bogusz said the pace of sales is ahead of that for the 2007 Super Bowl telecast, the last time CBS televised the event. A majority of the remaining slots are in the second half of the game, he said.

Super Bowl sales can pay off big for the broadcasters that air the game. In 2007, CBS said some advertisers paid more than $2.6 million for their 30-second commercials. The network’s advertising revenue jumped 9% in the first quarter that year thanks to its telecasts of the Super Bowl and the semifinals of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. 

Source

11/20/2009 (11:54 pm)

Geithner: Largest firms need single regulator

Filed under: management |

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Thursday that no financial firms should be able to escape regulation and the largest firms need a single, strong regulator.

“The regulation of the largest, most interconnected firms requires tremendous institutional capacity, clear lines of authority and single-point accountability. This is no place for regulation for council or by committee,” Geithner said in testimony to the congressional Joint Economic Committee cash advance flexible payments.

Geithner also said he expected U.S. economic growth to continue in the fourth quarter and into 2010, but America’s long-term stability and strength could not be ensured without comprehensive regulatory reform.

(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by James Dalgleish)

Read more

11/19/2009 (5:39 pm)

Metro profits and sales grow in latest quarter

Filed under: economics, term |

The country's third-largest supermarket chain said sales and profit both grew in its latest three-month period.

Metro Inc., which operates the former Dominion and A&P stores in Ontario, as well as Metro stores in Quebec, said profit rose 16.4 per cent to $84.4 million while sales grew 2.3 per cent to $2.5 billion.

Both profit and sales beat analysts' forecasts.

The quarter, which is also Metro's year-end, was the fourth in which the company posted record net earnings, president and chief executive officer Eric La Fleche noted in a statement.

“I congratulate all our employees and retailers for their great work,” La Fleche said. “Despite the challenging economic environment, we are confident that we will continue to grow in the coming year.”

For the quarter, Metro said same-store sales grew 2 per cent. The key retail performance measure excludes the impact of new stores.

Sales for the year, which ended Sept. 26, rose 4.4 per cent to $11.2 billion, the company said. Profit grew 21.3 per cent to $354.4 million.

Both the quarter and the year were negatively affected by the non-renewal of a convenience store supply chain contract, the company said bad credit cash loans.

However, the company's profits benefited from its stake in Quebec-based convenience store operator, Alimentation Couche-Tarde. Metro said its share of the profits more than doubled to $11.7 million in the quarter and to $37.4 million for the year.

The grocery retailer also announced the creation of dunnhumby Canada, an exclusive joint venture with dunnhumby, an international consulting and marketing service organization known for converting customer data into business strategies.

The joint venture's mission is to better satisfy customers' needs and improve customer loyalty, Metro said.

Metro's results come a day after the country's leading supermarket operator, Loblaw Cos. Ltd., reported higher profit on flat sales, citing lower inflation as a factor.

Metro's share price closed up 4.5 per cent at $31.60 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday a day ahead of the news.

Source

11/18/2009 (9:45 am)

Gruebel vows to return UBS to profit, in time

Filed under: money |

UBS boss Oswald Gruebel set an ambitious target for annual pretax profit of $15 billion, vowing to rebuild the loss-making bank and win back clients after the subprime crisis and a bitter U.S. tax row.

Chief executive Gruebel told investors on Tuesday his new strategic plan was a “revolution” and reaffirmed his commitment to an integrated banking model twinning traditional wealth management strength with a broad investment banking offering.

But, true to the 65-year-old German’s straight-talking reputation, he did not promise overnight miracles for the Swiss bank.

“A transformation like this is not easy. If it was easy I would not be here,” banking veteran Gruebel, seen as a turnaround guru for reviving Swiss rival Credit Suisse, told UBS’s first strategic presentation since his appointment.

The mid-term target would bring UBS slightly above its pre-crisis performance in 2006, and Gruebel said this would be achieved through a new culture of disciplined risk-taking, strict cost and capital control and adherence to regulation.

“There will be three guiding principles: reputation, integration, execution: this is what we will stand for in the market,” Gruebel told a packed Zurich auditorium. “We want to ensure that what has happened to UBS should not happen again.”

Gruebel’s new targets for the next three to five years also include a cost-to-income ratio of 65 to 70 percent compared to 110 percent now, and return on equity of 15 to 20 percent, compared to negative 16 percent.

“The long time horizon for the turnaround could require a lot of patience and nerves of steel from investors direct lender payday loans.” said Kepler analyst Mathias Bueeler.

UBS shares, which have risen 18 percent this year while the wider DJ Stoxx European banking sector has gained nearly 60 percent, were up 0.23 percent at 17.52 Swiss francs at 1226 GMT, outperforming its peers.

The stock has consistently underperformed rivals in 2009 and fell again after UBS posted a larger-than-expected third quarter net loss on November 3 of 564 million francs, the seventh out of eight straight quarters the Swiss bank has been unprofitable.

UBS has not given any guidance for the full year, but while its investment bank has recovered at an operating level, the bank is seen heading for another loss, albeit much smaller than last year’s pretax loss of almost 28 billion francs.

According to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S data, the bank is seen making a pretax profit of 7.7 billion francs in 2010.

RESTORING CLIENT CONFIDENCE KEY

Gruebel, credited with turning around Credit Suisse during his 2002-2007 tenure there, said he wanted UBS to boost its number one position as banker to the super rich and remain the number one bank in Switzerland, while focusing growth on Asia.

UBS, the world’s No. 2 wealth manager with $1.7 trillion in assets and the leader in the super rich space, is suffering client withdrawals across the board. 

Read more

11/17/2009 (4:03 am)

Sony CEO sees no electronics rebound: report

Filed under: term |

Japan’s Sony Corp has seen no sign of a recovery in the consumer electronics market, Chief Executive Howard Stringer said in an interview published on Sunday.

It was difficult to say if world economies have returned to solid growth, he told Il Sole 24 Ore, Italy’s leading business daily.

Sony posted its fourth consecutive quarterly loss last month but narrowed its full-year loss forecast.

“From my viewpoint, that of Sony and its consumer electronics products the picture for the time being has not improved very much,” Stringer said.

“There hasn’t been that turning point that many had hoped for. We are waiting for a signal that hasn’t arrived.”

In the crucial U.S. market, Sony is waiting for Christmas sales. It will have a better idea about them with Thanksgiving holiday discounts at the end of November, he said.

In Japan, the situation is the same, but with an aggravator.

“We’ve had a double blow. Demand remains weak and with the yen ever stronger, we’ve lost competitiveness with Korea and China. That’s bad for a country used to having exports be the driver for growth.”

The combination of U.S. joblessness, consumer caution and the psychological impact of the financial crisis “makes me think that the recovery will be neither a V nor a W, but an L”, Stringer said. (Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Hans Peters)

Read more

Next Page »