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Monday, October 27, 2008

Dennis Gartman Sees Baby Boomers Looming as `Large Sellers of Stock'

The following is audio file of interview Dennis Gartman, an economist and editor of the Gartman Letter, in Suffolk, Virginia, talks with Bloomberg's Ken Prewitt and Tom Keene about the Japanese economy, global equities and Federal Reserve policy.

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Related Posts :
  1. This is de-leveraging. This is a forced liquidation
  2. Nouriel Roubini: the coming global stagnation, recession plus deflation
  3. Dennis Gartman Predicts Corn Ethanol Producers Bankruptcy
  4. Dennis Gartman's Rules of Trading
Sources :
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

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US Comm Paper rate rise as the Fed starts to support

Nearly two weeks after the Federal Reserve announced it would step in to support commercial paper, investors are still uncertain whether it will be enough to jump-start the $1.45 trillion dollar debt market.

The Federal Reserve's facility, which becomes operational on Monday, Oct. 27, will allow highly rated companies to tap the government for three-month loans that are crucial to their daily operations. This is good news for cash-strapped companies that have been struggling for more than a month to find financing for longer than just one day.

Yields on commercial paper rose as the Federal Reserve began buying the debt directly from companies, showing the central bank's efforts to unfreeze short- term credit markets have yet to take hold.

Rates on the highest-ranked 30-day commercial paper, which many corporations use to finance their day-to-day operations, jumped 25 basis points to 2.88 percent, according to yields offered by companies and compiled by Bloomberg.

We'll see how rates react to this new facility.

Click the image to enlarge

The Fed's facility is primarily aimed at financial companies, which have been hardest hit by the credit seizure. Financial companies are paying an average of 3.25 percent to issue 90-day paper as of Oct. 24, according to the Fed. That compares with 1.91 percent for non-financial borrowers.

The Fed on Oct. 21 committed to provide $540 billion in loans to relieve pressure on money-market funds, the biggest buyers of the debt, its third action to unfreeze the commercial paper market. The measure supplements the Fed's СPFF plan, which was first announced on Oct. 7.

American Express (AXP) registered to issue $14.7 billion of commercial paper to the Fed and may begin selling some as soon as this week, said Joanna Lambert, a spokeswoman for the company.


Related Posts :
  1. Total the second round banks injection is $31.36 bln
  2. This is de-leveraging. This is a forced liquidation
  3. US mulls buying stakes In US Insurers
  4. Fed loses 9% in Bear Stearns Portfolio
Sources :
  1. Bloomberg: U.S. Commercial Paper Rates Rise as Fed Starts Buying the Debt, October 27, 2008 12:14 EDT
  2. The Wall Street Journal: Commercial Paper Market Looks to Fed for Healing, October 24, 2008 2:32 PM ET
  3. Econompic Data: Commercial Paper Freeze Up, October 27, 2008
Please Note!
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Total the second round banks injection is $35 bln (Update 2)

According to Bloomberg, at least 19 regional U.S. banks, including SunTrust Banks Inc (STI) and Capital One Financial Corp (COF), accepted $35 billion in government cash as the Treasury rolled out the second half of its $250 billion package to shore up lenders and thaw frozen credit markets.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is doling out cash to recapitalize struggling lenders and jump-start takeovers in an industry suffering from the worst housing crisis since the Great Depression. SunTrust, Capital One, KeyCorp and PNC Financial Services Group Inc. are among regional lenders that have taken cash so far by selling preferred shares to the government.

The latest U.S. banks to benefit from the government's Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, spanned the nation, ranging from City National Corp., in Beverly Hills, California, to First Niagara Financial Group Inc., based in upstate New York near Niagara Falls. The banks may be joined by life insurance companies, some of which are now in talks with the government about potential Treasury investments, said Jack Dolan, spokesman for the American Council of Life Insurers in Washington.

Dolan declined to say which companies are involved in the talks. Spokesmen for MetLife Inc. the biggest U.S. life insurer, and No. 2 Prudential Financial Inc. declined to comment today. Most U.S. property and casualty insurers won't participate, according to a statement today from Evan Greenberg, chief executive officer of Ace Ltd. and chairman of the American Insurance Association.

Other financial firms participating in the program included State Street Corp., the world's largest money manager for institutions, which is selling a $2 billion stake. Northern Trust Corp., a custody bank that oversees $3.53 trillion, plans to sell the government a $1.5 billion stake.

Following are banks that have announced participation in the Treasury program:

FIRST ROUND :

Citigroup $25 billion
Wells Fargo $25 billion
JPMorgan Chase $25 billion
Bank of America $15 billion
Merrill Lynch $10 billion
Goldman Sachs $10 billion
Morgan Stanley $10 billion
Bank of New York $3.0 billion
State Street $2.0 billion

TOTAL $125 billion

SECOND ROUND :

PNC $7.7 billion
Capital One $3.6 billion
SunTrust $3.5 billion
Regions Financial $3.5 billion
Fifth Third $3.4 billion
BB&T $3.1 billion
KeyCorp $2.5 billion
Comerica $2.25 billion
Northern Trust $1.5 billion
Huntington $1.4 billion
First Horizon $866 million
City National $395 million
Valley National $330 million
Washington Federal $230 million
UCBH Holdings $298 million
First Niagara $186 million
Old National $150 million*
HF Financial $25 million
Redding Bank $17 million
Provident --**

TOTAL $34.93 billion (35.18)

Related Posts :
  1. This is de-leveraging. This is a forced liquidation
  2. US Gov injects $9.5 bln into 3 regional banks
  3. The Treasury to announce the second round banks injection as soon as today
Sources :
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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This is de-leveraging. This is a forced liquidation

This read below is from Credit Writedowns. It answers properly about recent global panic selling, global fund redemption, rising USD and Japanese Yen:
    The recent movement in global markets has me scratching my head a bit. You have people dumping gold and the Swiss Franc in order to invest in the U.S. dollar and Treasury securities. Everyone says it is a flight to quality. I do not agree. Logic has it that the U.S., as a debtor nation which is spending hundreds of billions to prop up an ailing financial sector, is not quality. It is anti-quality. So what gives?

    My take is that this is a flight to liquidity. The U.S. Dollar and U.S Treasury securities are liquid markets that one can reasonably expect to invest in without worrying about liquidity concerns. To my mind, what has precipitated this flight to liquidity is the need by hedge funds to liquidate holdings as redemptions come due.

    People are taking their money and going home, so the leveraged financial community is being forced to sell everything in all markets. They are unwinding all of their leveraged bets: Australian Dollar over Japanese Yen. Brazilian and South Korean bonds over Treasuries. Puts on the US Dollar. Everything.

    Fight to quality? Hardly. This is de-leveraging. This is a forced liquidation.

Related Posts :
  1. The global financial storm rolled across the Persian Gulf
  2. Nouriel Roubini: the coming global stagnation, recession plus deflation
  3. Nouriel Roubini: Stay away from 'risky' assets
  4. Citadel Denies Rumors of Trouble
  5. Why the dollar is rising? (10/26/2008 - Analysis for the next week)
Sources :
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

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Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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The global financial storm rolled across the Persian Gulf

Photo courtesy of WSJ

According The Wall Street Journal, The global financial storm rolled across the Persian Gulf on Sunday, as Kuwait's central bank guaranteed bank deposits and cobbled together a hasty bailout for one of the country's largest banks.

By Oil prices down more than 50% from their July highs, The Gulf now looks suddenly vulnerable at the same time as international and local investors are pulling back sharply after the Gulf had seemed relatively immune to the current crisis.

High oil prices have allowed state and private investors across the Gulf to funnel billions of dollars into property markets, infrastructure projects and, more recently, foreign-exchange speculation. In particular, many foreign and local investors earlier in the summer made speculative currency trades, betting that regional governments would drop their currency pegs with the dollar to help tame rising domestic inflation.

International investors -- many of whom simply opened up local bank accounts in anticipation of a strengthening of regional currencies if they abandoned their peg to the dollar -- rushed out of those trades late in the summer and early last month when it was clear governments weren't going to act.

Chart courtesy of WSJ

That left many banks strapped for cash, and scrambling for ways to make new loans. When international borrowing seized up last month, the region found itself stuck in its own credit crunch.

But it was currency trades -- not bad loans -- that plunged Kuwait into a banking bailout on Sunday. Gulf Bank said defaults by counterparties on bad euro-dollar derivatives contracts forced the bank to seek government intervention.

The bailout further roiled Kuwait's stock market, which fell 3.5%, adding to losses that have pushed the country's main market index down 19% this year. Other regional markets fell sharply as well.

Companies, banks and individuals have been burned by sharp moves in global currency markets as fears of economic distress prompt an unwinding of trades that have depended on borrowed money. The dollar and the yen have both soared against nearly every other global currency over the past month as investors became convinced that a world-wide recession was looming. This has been particularly problematic because investors have bet heavily on emerging-market currency positions.

Several governments even took dramatic pre-emptive moves, funneling billions of dollars of cash into their relatively small but liquidity-starved banking systems. Earlier this month, Saudi Arabia promised $40 billion in lending facilities to banks that needed cash. The United Arab Emirates pledged a sweeping three-year guarantee on domestic bank accounts and promised to back up interbank lending.

Much of the Gulf has budgeted for much lower oil prices. Gulf states, on average, need prices above $47 a barrel to keep from running budget deficits. But some states are more vulnerable than others: Bahrain's so-called break-even price is $75 a barrel, compared with Saudi Arabia's $49 and Kuwait's $33, according to the International Monetary Fund. The speed of crude's tumble -- to about $64 a barrel -- has unnerved officials despite the apparent cushion. At an emergency meeting on Friday, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries hastily decided to cut output by 1.5 million barrels a day, the biggest single cut in almost eight years.

Real-estate markets in Dubai is now a clear slowdown. Speculators, especially those who were financing their property investment, have largely fled the market.

Gulf Bank Customers Rush for Deposits After Currency Losses

According to Bloomberg today, Customers rushed to withdraw money from Gulf Bank KSC, Kuwait's second-biggest bank, after clients defaulted on currency contracts and the central bank was forced to guarantee deposits. In the first signs of a bank run in the Persian Gulf, some Gulf Bank customers demanded money in a panic.

Gulf Bank may have losses of as much as 200 million dinars ($746 million) on the trades, Ibrahim Dabdoub, chief executive officer of National Bank of Kuwait SAK, said yesterday. Gulf Bank had assets of 5.09 billion dinars at the end of March and deposits of 3.2 billion dinars, according to Bloomberg data. It has 44 branches across Kuwait, its Web site says.

Central Bank Governor Sheikh Salem al-Sabah said yesterday that Gulf Bank lost money on currency derivatives after the euro declined against the dollar, state news agency KUNA reported. Gulf Bank will absorb the losses until it can work out an agreement with clients.

Related Posts :
  1. Ukraine and Hungary to get IMF Loan
  2. South Korea slashed interest rate by 75bp to bolster markets
  3. Ukraine asks for IMF bailouts along with Hungary and Belarus
  4. Swiss banking collapse is going to be one biggest domino to fall
  5. US Credit Crunch Hits South Korea
Sources :
  1. Bloomberg: Gulf Bank Customers Rush for Deposits After Currency Losses, October 27, 2008 05:50 EDT
  2. The Wall Street Journal: Financial Storm Hits Gulf, October 27, 2008
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
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10/27/2008 - Upgrade & Downgrade (Update 3)

Upgrade :
    Merril upgrades developers Developers Diversified Realty (DDR) to buy from neutral

    Merrill Lynch analyst Steve Sakwa says, unlike other over-leveraged real estate investment trusts, Developers Diversified Realty (DDR) is taking a number of steps to reduce its leverage, including a 45% cut in its 2009 dividend; acceleration of asset sales and joint-ventures; curtailment of new development activity.

    Sakwa ways these steps should help repay maturing debt in late 2008 and 2009 and fund any remaining development.

    Despite the upgrade, he cuts estimates and price target due to some changes to his model. He lowers $3.90 2008 estimate to $3.24, and $4.10 for 2009 to $2.93; $18 target is cut to $14.

    Fortress (FIG) was upgraded at Citigroup to Hold from Sell.

    Prudential (PUK) was lifted to Overweight from Neutral at JP Morgan.

    Keefe Bruyette upgraded Franklin Resources (NYSE: BEN) to Outperform from Market Perform and added shares to their Best Ideas List on valuation as they see an attractive risk/reward at current levels.

    UBS upgraded ASML Holding (ASML) to Buy from Neutral on valuation as they believe the company remains a market leader.

    Oppenheimer raised Seattle Genetics (SGEN) to Outperform from Perform on valuation following the recent weakness as they expect positive clinical news flow beginning in December.

    Deutsche Bank upgraded PepsiCo Inc. (PEP) to buy from hold, saying recent weakness in the share price has overshot the earnings risk from the economic slowdown and currency fluctuations. Deutsche Bank added that the company could also benefit from lower input costs, which were a major headwind in 2008, and a better relationship with bottlers than rival Coca Cola . "Pepsi and its bottlers appear to be playing much nicer together than Coke and Coca-Cola Enterprises at present," Deutsche Bank said.

    Goldman Sachs upgraded bottlers Coca Cola Enterprises(COKE) and Pepsi Bottling (PBG) to neutral from sell, citing easing comparisons, a more benign commodity outlook and improved take-home profitability.

    Chip maker SanDisk Corp. (SNDK) was upgraded to neutral from underperform at Cowen & Co., which said fundamentals remain challenging, but the weak environment is fully reflected in the stock price. "SanDisk is approaching levels where, absent a significant worsening of already horrific fundamentals or a failure of restructuring actions, many investors could reasonably see valuation support," Cowen & Co. said. The broker added it wouldn't be a buyer of the stock until fundamentals in the memory chip market improve and there is evidence that SanDisk's operating initiatives are effective, which will likely be mid-2009 at the earliest.

Downgrade :
    Cowen downgrades Savient Pharmaceuticals (SVNT)

    Cowen analyst Rachel McMinn says she is downgrading Savient Pharmaceuticals (SVNT) to underperform from outperform on her lack of conviction that Puricase will receive first-pass FDA approval, and her view that the market opportunity for Puricase is significantly smaller than current Street expectations.

    McMinn believes high rates of cardiovascular adverse events, discontinuations due to infusion reactions, and anaphylaxis like reactions complicate the risk-reward profile of the drug, although admittedly the refractory patient population it aims to treat is extremely ill.

    RBC cuts target for Thoratec (THOR)

    RBC analyst Ryan Bachman says Thoratec (THOR) initiated a "corrective action" for HeartMate II LVAS - overtime, wear and fatigue could interrupt pump function and result in injury or death.

    After talking to management, Bachman believes the near-term financial impact is not so bad and the company recognizes revenue from replacement sales. He says the real commercial opportunity for HeartMate II lies in Destination Therapy (DT). The big question is what impact, if any, this will have on referring doctors who are gatekeepers of DT patient population; this uncertainty could weigh on share multiple.

    He cut his price target to $18.

    UBS downgraded U.S. Steel (NYSE: X) to Sell from Buy and lowered its target to $30 from $60 citing deteriorating U.S. conditions and concerns about the company's high fixed costs in a falling steel price environment.

    China Unicom (NYSE: CHU) was lowered to Underweight from Neutral at JP Morgan.

    Merriman downgraded Rick's Cabaret (NASDAQ: RICK) to Neutral from Buy to reflect the tough economic environment, potential weakness in Las Vegas and potential delays in acquisitions.

    B. Riley cut Cache (CACH) to Neutral from Buy and lowered its target to $3.40 from $11 on concerns that comp declines have accelerated in October and will not get better for the holiday season.

    Old Second Bancorp (OSBC) was cut to Underperform from Market Perform at Keefe Bruyette.

    Standard & Poor's said Friday that it may downgrade the ratings of PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (PNC) on the bank's $5.5 billion offer for National City Corp. (NCC) . S&P has an A+ rating on PNC. At the same time, S&P said it may upgrade the A- ratings of National City. "The CreditWatch negative action on PNC reflects the size of this transaction, which comes amidst the current credit crisis -- an external operating environment that presents significant challenges for banks' financial performances," said John Bartko, an S&P credit analyst, in a statement. "The transaction materially increases PNC's exposure to residential mortgage-related loans in some of the weaker banking markets in the Midwest and Florida."

    Credit Suisse downgraded Royal Dutch Shell to underperform from neutral and recommended a switch into rival BP or BG Group . Credit Suisse cited risks to Shell's third-quarter earnings, due Thursday, as well as recent outperformance to peers. "Shell has historically attained lower E&P earnings per barrel than its peers and this becomes more of an issue at a lower oil price," the broker noted.

    UBS downgraded Nortel Networks(NT) to neutral from buy and upgraded Riverbed Technology to neutral from sell as part of a broader note on the communications equipment industry in which it notes dramatic slowing in Europe and emerging markets. On Nortel, UBS sees tougher end-market fundamentals and is increasingly worried about liquidity, and on Riverbed, it said it's more appropriate to value the stock on 2010 earnings per share once growth resumes.

    Goldman downgraded Boston Beer (SAM) to sell from neutral on a weaker volume outlook and a full valuation.

Initiation :
    B. Riley initiated EnerSys (ENS) with a Buy rating and $16.50 target. The firm believes the company's core business is gaining strength due to product innovation and continued expansion into new commercial and renewable energy applications.

    Oppenheimer believes Syniverse (SVR) is well positioned with rising mobile services penetration given its leverage to roaming and data. Shares were assumed with an Outperform rating and $19 target.

    MAG Silver (MVG) and Northern Dynasty (NAK) were initiated with Speculative Buy ratings at Canaccord.

Related Posts :
  1. 10/24/2008 - Upgrade & Downgrade
  2. 10/23/2008 - Upgrade & Downgrade (Update 2)
Sources :
  1. Fox Business
  2. Marketwatch
  3. Blogging Stocks: Analyst calls: PEP, FIG, PUK, BEN, ASML, X, RDS.A, CHU, SVR ..., October 27, 2008 10:13 AM
  4. Business Week - Standard & Poor's Equity Research: Analyst Actions: Savient Pharmaceuticals, Thoratec, Developers Diversified Realty, October 27, 2008, 12:14PM EST
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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US Gov injects $9.5 bln into 3 regional banks

According to CNN Money, KeyCorp, Fifth Third and Capital One - have announced their participation in the federal government's $700 billion Wall Street bailout, adding a total of $9.5 billion in capital.

KeyCorp (KEY, Fortune 500), based in Cleveland, said Monday it has been approved "to bolster its capital position" with $2.5 billion from the Treasury's Capital Purchase Program.

Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB, Fortune 500), based in Cincinnati, said late Sunday that it applied for $3.4 billion from the program, and that it expects "our application will be approved shortly by Treasury."

Capital One Financial Corp. (COF, Fortune 500) said Monday it received approval from the Treasury to sell $3.55 billion in stock to the government.


Related Posts :
  1. Total borrowing over the Fed's emergency lending window is around $105 bln per day
  2. US mulls buying stakes In US Insurers
  3. Rumors: The Fed is visiting some midwest hedge fund
Sources :
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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10/27/2008 - Global markets brutal sell-off continues

A man walks past a display showing stock prices at a brokerage
firm in Hong Kong Monday, Oct. 27, 2008. Asian stocks swung mostly lower
in choppy trade Monday as investors braced for more volatility
after last week's massive sell-off. The Hang Seng index closed
the morning session down 532 points, or 4.22 percents at 12,086.38 points.
(AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

World stock markets slumped again Monday with the Nikkei index in Japan closing at its lowest in 26 years as the financial crisis drove up the yen, piling the pressure on the country's exporters.

Tokyo's Nikkei 225 index closed down 6.4 percent to 7,162.90—the lowest since October 1982. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index tumbled 12.7 percent to 11,015.84, its lowest close in more than four years and biggest daily decline since 1991.

Elsewhere in Asia, the KOSPI in Seoul, South Korea, was the lone bright spot, closing up nearly 1%. The index rallied after South Korea's central bank slashed its key interest rate Monday by three-quarters of a percentage point - its largest cut ever - in an effort to fend off the global financial turmoil.

In Japan, worries about the impact of the surging yen on Japanese export earnings have hit the Nikkei hard. investors reacted with disappointment to government efforts to bolster the economy. Japan's finance minister verbally intervened in the market by suggesting the government is willing to counter the strengthening yen.

Mounting concerns about the yen and the effect of the financial crisis on currency markets prompted the world's seven leading industrial nations to issue a statement Sunday warning about the "recent excessive volatility" in the value of the Japanese currency, which is rising against the U.S. dollar towards the 90 yen level and near 13-year highs.

People look at stock prices in downtown Tokyo Monday, Oct. 27, 2008.
Japan's stock market had a miserable and manic Monday, with
the key stock index plunging more than 6 percent to its lowest close
in more than a quarter century. The Nikkei 225 index shed 486.18 points,
or 6.36 percent, to 7,162.90 _ the worst closing level since October 1982.
(AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara)

The G7 said that they continue to monitor markets closely, and cooperate as appropriate. The statement has raised the prospect of coordinated intervention to stem the yen's appreciation. A stronger yen can hurt the competitiveness of Japanese exports by driving up the price of that country's goods.

European markets followed Asia lower, with benchmarks in Britain, Germany and France trading down more than 4 percent in early trading.

In the U.S. on Monday, the Federal Reserve has tried to get credit flowing by announcing plans to lend perhaps $1 trillion or more to major businesses through the use of commercial paper, the primary form of borrowing large companies use to fund their day-to-day operations. US futures point to falls on Monday.Futures tumble as turmoil sweeps markets worldwide.

Charts courtesy of Reuters (Click the image to enlarge)




Related Posts :
  1. Ukraine and Hungary to get IMF Loan
  2. South Korea slashed interest rate by 75bp to bolster markets
  3. 10/24/2008 Market Recap - Global Investors Retreat (Update 2)
Sources :
  1. CNN Money: Wall Street ready for another drop, October 27, 2008 6:21 AM ET
  2. CNN Money: Global stocks suffer brutal losses, October 27, 2008 6:18 AM ET
  3. Reuters: Stock Market News & Stock Quotes, October 27, 2008
  4. Breitbart: World markets slump; Nikkei at 26-year low, October 27, 2008 6:26 AM ET
  5. The Wall Street Journal: Asian Shares Decline in Volatile Session , October 27, 2008 07:12 AM ET
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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Ukraine and Hungary to get IMF Loan

Markets are braced for another turbulent week as Ukraine added to
growing fears about the world’s economic health after securing a $16.5bn (£10.4bn)
emergency loan from the International Monetary Fund yesterday.
( A stockbroker waits nervously in Frankfurt Photo: AP )

The International Monetary fund (IMF) has offered a $16.5bn (£10.4bn) emergency loan to Ukraine and agreed a rescue package with Hungary. It's 24-month loan will be used to ensure stability in the former Soviet state and rebuild confidence among investors. The IMF remains in discussion with Belarus, Hungary and Pakistan.

Ukraine became the second European nation to receive a bail-out after Iceland secured $2.1bn from the IMF last week. Hungary turned to the IMF for help in order to help shore up its falling currency and financial markets and shield the country from the global financial crisis.

The loan - the terms are not yet known - is conditional on Hungary adopting "strong policies" and will be drawn from the IMF, the EU, and some individual European governments, together with regional and other multilateral institutions. Internal political turmoil has delayed economic development in Ukraine and the IMF loan depends on the ex-Soviet state being able to balance its budget and make reforms to its banking sector.

Easy credit and a property boom have seen Ukraine's capital Kiev expand rapidly but the global downturn has seen investors and those willing to offer loans withdraw. Ukraine also relies heavily on steel, but prices have collapsed and its currency, the hryvnia, has fallen sharply in the past two weeks.

The IMF remains in discussion with Belarus and Pakistan. This morning the prime minister of Iceland was reported as saying the island needs $4bn more in funding to help stabilise its ailing economy.

"It's hard to give an exact figure, but the situation would be good if we would get $4bn more," Geir Haarde was quoted as saying in Finland's largest daily Helsingin Sanomat. The deal still needs to be approved by the IMF board and Mr Haarde said on Friday he expected it would take about 10 days for the review to take place.

Related Posts :
  1. South Korea slashed interest rate by 75bp to bolster markets
  2. Nouriel Roubini: the coming global stagnation, recession plus deflation
  3. Nouriel Roubini: Stay away from 'risky' assets
  4. Ukraine asks for IMF bailouts along with Hungary and Belarus
  5. IMF loans US $2 bln to Iceland
Sources :
  1. Telegraph.co.uk: Markets braced as Ukraine gets IMF bail-out, October 27, 2008
  2. Telegraph.co.uk: IMF aid for Ukraine and Hungary, October 27, 2008
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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South Korea slashed interest rate by 75bp to bolster markets

Bank of Korea Governor Lee Seong-tae presides
over the Monetary Policy Committee meeting
at the bank in Seoul October 27, 2008.
South Korea's monetary policy board holds
an unscheduled meeting on Monday morning at
which analysts expect it to cut interest rates
and announce plans to buy bonds from local banks
to pump liquidity into the squeezed economy. (Reuters Pictures)


The Bank of Korea slashed interest rates by a record at an emergency board meeting in an attempt to bolster markets as the nation faces its biggest crisis since requiring an International Monetary Fund bailout 10 years ago.

Governor Lee Seong Tae cut the seven-day repurchase rate 75 basis points to 4.25 percent, the central bank said in a statement in Seoul today. The rate cut was larger than expected, according to Reuters. In Seoul, the Kospi rose 0.9% to 947.58 after the rate cut announcement. The bank also broadened the type of bonds it will accept as collateral in money-market operations, giving lenders access to more funds. The central bank said it considered buying up to 10 trillion won, or $6.9 billion, in bonds issued by local commercial banks to provide extra liquidity for the cash-starved banking sector.

What the market needed is stabilization of the currency and a drop in risk premiums paid to investors when local companies raise funds overseas. The interest rate cut doesn't directly cover such issues. Rather, it will trigger a further decline of the won's value against the dollar. According to the Bank of Korea, large cut was called for in order to guard securely against the possibility of a sharp contraction of real economic activity. The Bank of Korea will likely cut rates again at their monthly rate-setting meeting next week.

The South Korea's Government has said its currency reserves of about $240 billion and generally sounder fundamentals mean it is not looking to the IMF for help this time.

Related Posts :
  1. 10/24/2008 Market Recap - Global Investors Retreat (Update 2)
  2. 10/24/2008 - October Blues
  3. Markets are in absolute freefall
  4. US Credit Crunch Hits South Korea
Sources :
  1. Bloomberg: Bank of Korea Cuts Rate by Record to Bolster Markets (Update3), October 27, 2008
  2. Fox Business: Bank Of Korea Cuts Rate By 0.75 Points To 4.25% : Reports, October 27, 2008
  3. International Herald Tribune: South Korea cuts key interest rate by 75 basis points, October 27, 2008
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


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Don’t Buy In to Share Buybacks

By Andrew Mickey - Wall Street Pic, October 24, 2008


Bull Market - A random market movement causing an investor to mistake himself for a financial genius. – Anonymous

The bull market is over and the days when everyone was an expert are gone. Merely buying a stock and watching it go up day after day is history. “Buy and hope” is dead.

But that doesn’t mean you can’t make money and get your portfolio back in shape. You can. You just have to separate the fact from fiction. And one of the most dangerous myths that could cost you even more money is that share buybacks are good.

You see, the world is not coming to an end. The economy will recover…eventually. A new bubble will form. And greed will replace fear. It always does. And here’s the best part, a few companies will emerge stronger than they were before. The trick is to identify which ones will make the best of a bad situation.

This is a time when great companies increase their market share. The strong get stronger and well…the weak disappear.

Companies have to make investments to get stronger. They can refurbish factories, develop new products, or aggressively build a brand while advertising costs have dropped significantly. If a company has a mountain of cash, it should be reinvesting it to take advantage of future growth opportunities, reduce costs, and increase efficiency. Frankly, there’s no better time to do it than now.

That’s why it pains me to see the sharp increase in share buybacks recently. A share buyback, or repurchase, is when a company buys its own shares. It’s a way for companies to reduce the number of shares outstanding. Earnings per share will increase because there are fewer shares to divide profits.

It makes sense on the surface. Less shares and same profits equal more profits per share and a higher share price. It seems like they’re doing something good for shareholders. In fact, the markets will usually reward a buyback plan and bid shares up a few percentage points when the plan is announced. But it’s just one of the many stock market myths that are allowed to live on.

Over the past couple of weeks dozens of companies took “advantage” of the market turmoil to announce share buybacks. In some cases, the buyback programs are reaching well into the billions.

Last month Microsoft (MSFT) set a new record when it announced it would be buying back $40 billion worth of its stock. Following behind are other cash-heavy companies including Intel (INTC), Nike (NKE), Hewlett-Packard (HP), and Oracle (ORCL).

All of these buyback announcements were viewed positively by Wall Street. It’s considered a sign of strength to be buying back your own shares.

But Wall Street, as it has been so many times before, is dead wrong. Share buybacks are not positive. There are some benefits, but the long-term benefits are limited.

When a company is buying back shares, it is telling the world, “We cannot find anything better to do with our money.”

It’s just that simple. A company that is buying back shares is doing so because it can’t find any better investments to make. Microsoft isn’t launching any more major projects. Intel is not building any new plants. They’re giving up on growth. And when the economy does recover, these companies will not turn out to be any stronger, more efficient, or more profitable.

Two Big Pharma companies provide the perfect example.

Pfizer (PFE) has repurchased more than $19 billion worth of its shares since 2005. Its share price has steadily slid from $28 to under $17 during that time.

Meanwhile, its core business has gone down the tubes. The company’s pipeline of new drugs is very limited. And a few of its key cash cow drugs are set to go “off patent,” which means generic drug companies will start selling generic versions for much less.

Pfizer’s share buyback has been a big mistake. For $19 billion it could have bought itself a very strong pipeline of new drugs. A few patent-protected blockbuster drugs would keep the cash flowing in for years to come.

One of Pfizer’s competitors, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), isn’t taking the same path. Earlier this week, Glaxo announced it will be halting its buyback program.

Andrew Witty, Glaxo’s CEO, explains, “We’re not reserving capital for a rainy day that may or may not come. Opportunities are surfacing with some frequency on the small to medium scale. More of these have surfaced in the last month.”

Glaxo is setting up to start making acquisitions while the markets are in turmoil. It’s not buying its own stock for marginal benefit. And it’s not announcing an extended buyback plan just to get a slight uptick in its share price either. Glaxo is taking its cash hoard and going shopping.

As a result, it will be in a much stronger position when the economy recovers. While the rest of its competitors are buying back their own shares, Glaxo is investing in its future. That’s what I like to see. It’s thinking long-term.

Just imagine if the banks would have thought long-term. Over the past few years some of the biggest share buyback leaders have been the banks. Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and Freddie Mac (FRE) all were buying billions of dollars worth of their own shares. If they would have sat on the cash to bolster their balance sheets, they might have had the reserves to save themselves.

Also, corporations have a knack for buying their own shares at the worst possible times. S&P 500 companies spent $135 billion on share buybacks in 2003 when the market was bottoming. In 2007, when the Dow was setting new all-time highs, they bought $590 billion worth of their own stock. In fact, between 2000 and 2005 companies which bought back their own shares only beat the rest of the market by one percent.

Don’t get me wrong, we can learn a lot from buybacks. Just take a look at ExxonMobil (XOM). The oil giant has been a very aggressive buyer of its stock. Over the past three and a half years Exxon bought back just over $96 billion worth of its own shares.

If oil really was going to $200 a barrel or more, wouldn’t the world’s largest oil company who employs thousands of true oil industry experts, spend some of that cash on acquiring smaller oil companies which have made new oil discoveries or have large amounts of reserves? Exxon kept it’s cool throughout the oil boom. And now it’s still in a great position.

That’s exactly what we need to be doing now, keeping our cool and looking at the facts. And the fact is share buybacks don’t tell us much about the long-term prospects of a company or the value of its shares. At Q1 Publishing we try to avoid a lot of the myths that can destroy even a conservative portfolio. So if you see one of the companies you’ve held on to announce they’re buying back shares, it’s time to re-evaluate.


Related Posts :
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  2. 10/24/2008 Market Recap - Global Investors Retreat (Update 2)
Sources :
Please Note!
This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

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