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Saturday, November 1, 2008

Central Banks Panic – ECB, BOE and RBA may follow the Fed to cut rates in the next week


This week the Central Banks were shocked by sudden slump in economic activity. After the Fed cut benchmark rate to 1% on Wednesday, Bank Central of Japan followed to cut its benchmark rate by 20 basis points to 0.3% on Friday. This Saturday, Bank Central of India also followed to cut rate for the second time in two weeks after kept it for 7 years.

Ben Bernanke and colleagues were also signaling they may cut the benchmark rate further to below 1% as downside risks remain to growth high. The economy contracted by the most since 2001 in the third quarter and Fed Bank of San Francisco President Janet Yellen said on Oct. 30 that rates may head to zero (ZIRP – Zero Interest Rate Policy) if economic pain persists.

Meanwhile, not all banks are easing. Iceland this week unexpectedly raised its main rate by 6% to 18% as it battles a currency crisis and possible hyperinflation with the help of the International Monetary Fund.

Central banks are going beyond interest-rate policy to confront the unprecedented crisis with unconventional measures. The Fed on Oct. 29 agreed to provide $30 billion each to the central banks of Brazil, Mexico, South Korea and Singapore to unfreeze money markets, the first time it has extended such measures to emerging nations. Meantime, the ECB gave Denmark access to 12 billion euros.

In the next week, ECB and BOE will likely follow the Fed to cut its benchmark rate on November 6 by 50 basis points to 3.25% and 4% respectively, according to economists expectation. Australia’s Central Bank (RBA – Reserve Bank of Australia) may also cut rates on November 4 after lowering them by 100 basis points to 6% last month.

The idea to cut rates has solidified pretty sharply that the world economy is going to fall pretty hard here and some good old- fashioned monetary easing is in order, according to Joseph Lupton, an economist at JPMorgan.


Related Posts :
  1. India unexpectedly cut rates for the 2nd time in 2 weeks to boost growth
  2. Bank of Japan cut interest rate by 20 basis points
  3. Iceland's central bank unexpectedly raised the benchmark interest rate to 18 percent
Sources :Please Note!

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Good news and bad news for RIMM

From The Financial Post - Reuters
October 31, 2008

Good News :
    Vodafone (VOD.L) said on Friday it was offering the BlackBerry Storm smartphone free to customers in Britain willing to sign a two-year contract, a move that could brighten the outlook for sales of the new device.

    "The BlackBerry Storm pricing will start from free on a two year contract at 35 pounds (C$56.35) per month on a Best for Text plan that will include 600 minutes and unlimited texts," Vodafone said in a release on its website.
Bad News :
    Vodafone is the world's biggest mobile phone company by revenue.

    However, handset management software firm Mformation Technologies said Friday it has sued RIM, claiming patent infringement.

    New Jersey-based Mformation claims RIM has infringed two of its patents by making and selling the BlackBerry and the BlackBerry's management software. It did not specify what remedies it is seeking.

    "After refusing to license Mformation's disclosed systems and software, RIM modified its BlackBerry software to include Mformation's patented systems and methods of remote management," Mformation said.

    RIM was not immediately available for comment.
© Thomson Reuters 2008

Related Posts :
  1. Mobile Video Market Still Growing
  2. Internet Market Share by Operating System per October 2008
  3. Bottom Fishing - RIMM & POT
Sources :Please Note!

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Mobile Video Market Still Growing

Silicon Alley Insider
By Dan Frommer
October 31, 2008 1:30 PM

mediaflo.jpg


Mobile carriers have been trying to get subscribers to watch video on their cellphones for years, but the market is still tiny: Some 6.5 million U.S. wireless subscribers watched video on their cellphones in August, or 2.8% of the U.S. mobile market, according to comScore M:Metrics.

The good news for carriers and companies like Qualcomm (QCOM) and MobiTV, who sell mobile video services: That's up almost 50% from last December, when about 1.9% of the market watched video on their phones. (M:Metrics has changed their polling methodology since then, so these stats aren't precisely apples-to-apples. But they sufficiently point out how small the market is, and that the needle is moving in the right direction.)

The bad news for Qualcomm and MobiTV: We think most of the growth in the market is coming from free services like the YouTube (GOOG) app built into Apple's (AAPL) iPhone -- not broadcast TV-like services that cost an extra $10-$15 a month.

Indeed, M:Metrics says amateur video clips are the most popular -- watched by 38% of mobile video viewers this summer -- followed by music videos, comedy videos, and movie trailers.

Related Posts :
  1. Internet Market Share by Operating System per October 2008
  2. Credit Suisse Raises Google to "Buy" with a $400 Price Target
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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Internet Market Share by Operating System per October 2008

From Apple20.blogs.fortune.cnn.com
November 01, 2008 10:02 am
By Philip Elmer-DeWitt


How do you explain this one?

The monthly Market Share survey from Net Applications, which had reported steady increases for the Mac OS in the previous two months and sharp growth for the iPhone — including a 57% surge in August — showed a very different picture in the October report issued overnight Saturday.

In October, iPhone growth slowed to 3.12% (down from 6.67% in September) and the Mac’s share actually fell, down 0.85% from September. (Linux was particularly hard hit, down nearly 22% for the month; see charts below.)

Windows, meanwhile, got a little bump — up 0.25% — thanks to a healthy 5.24% jump in Vista’s share.

How did this happen?

The first thing to be said about these results is that Net Applications’ “market share” report doesn’t actually measure share of market as a percentage of revenue or unit sales. That’s the business Gartner and IDC are in. And in Gartner and IDC’s latest reports, Apple’s (AAPL) share of the U.S. market had grown to 9.5% and 9.1% respectively, largely at the expense of the HP (HPQ) and Dell (DELL) (see here).

What Net Applications does measure — based on browser data from some 160 million visits to websites operated by Net Applications’ clients — is the extent to which users of each operating system are hanging out on the Internet.

In other words, what the Web metrics firm’s latest data show is that in October, Windows users — and Vista users in particular — were coming online at a faster rate than Mac users. This despite the fact that Mac sales grew 21% worldwide last quarter according to Apple, and roughly 30% in the U.S. according to Gartner and IDC.

So what was it about October that drew Vista users to the Web in greater proportion than Mac users? Could it have something to do with Microsoft’s (MSFT) $300 million ad campaign for Windows? Was it PC users obsessively tracking poll numbers in the U.S. presidential race? Could it be related somehow to the meltdown of the global financial markets?

While you ponder that, here are summaries of the latest Net Applications reports, broken down first by OS and then by different versions of those operating systems. To see the full results, click here.





Related Posts :
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  2. Microsoft to Test Windows 7, a Successor to Vista
Sources :

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Where oil prices are heading

Ministers within the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which supply 40% of the world's oil, appear ready to back a cut of a million barrels a day or more in a bid to soak up excess supply and protect their own budgets. Officials say the cut could come in two stages -- some of it now, and the rest in December, when the group plans to meet again.

But the cartel has a mixed record in trying to stop sliding prices by cutting supply, especially in the face of a strong recession. The group failed famously in 1998, when it lopped off 2.5 million barrels a day in the midst of the Asian financial crisis, and had only spotty success in 2001.

Falling demand for oil in the U.S. and Europe this year has been a significant force driving oil prices down more than 50% from their record highs this summer.

Deutsche Bank, in a report Monday October 18, predicted that anemic 1.2% growth in the world's economy next year could drive oil prices as low as $50 a barrel -- roughly a third of their summertime high.

Oil at that price would cause pain across much of the cartel, where government spending has ballooned. An International Monetary Fund report released Monday said that Iran requires oil to average $90 a barrel this year to avoid deficit spending. Bahrain requires $75 and Oman, $77. Iraq, which the IMF says needs oil at $111 a barrel to balance its books this year, is already looking at ways to curtail spending in 2009.

[slippery target]
Historical chart of changing OPEC's production quota
Chart courtesy of WSJ

Some oil-consuming countries have begun to caution against an OPEC cut, arguing that the world economy needs the boost of lower energy prices.

A decision to trim production will raise the perennial question in the cartel of who should do the cutting. Nigeria, Iran and Venezuela, who are already under growing fiscal pressure, will be loath to cut back their own output even in the face of falling prices. That job will fall largely to Saudi Arabia, OPEC's largest producer by far. The Saudis until now have been hesitant to reduce output this year, but analysts say the kingdom is serious about ensuring that prices don't fall below $60 a barrel.

OPEC often doesn't live up to its promises to trim or add barrels. In 2006, the cartel said it was going to cut 1.7 million barrels a day but trimmed far less than that. Similarly, OPEC ministers could try to send a message to the market by announcing cuts, even if the reality falls short of the pledge.

As long as oil is priced in USD, OPEC tends to boost oil prices when USD drops to keep its revenue steady. The recent movement in global markets are the global de-leveraging and force liquidation. Investors from entirely the world scrambles USD to save their assets; meanwhile hedge funds face money redemption and sell everything to meet its margin requirements. These all actions have been strengthening USD and Yen against other major currencies as the most liquid asset in the world at this time. As a result, oil prices has been pushing more down since then.

Related Posts :
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Sources :
  1. The Wall Street Journal: OPEC Expected to Cut Output In Bid to Prop Up Oil Prices, October 21, 2008
  2. This Blog: 10/26/2008 - Analysis for the next week, October 26, 2008
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India unexpectedly cut rates for the 2nd time in 2 weeks to boost growth

Brokers look at a terminal while trading at a stock brokerage firm
in Mumbai October 31, 2008. Indian shares rose more than 9 percent
on Friday, led by banks on speculation the central bank may
ease monetary policy following rate cuts across the world,
including in the United States, China and Japan this week.
Reuters/Arko Datta (INDIA)

India's central bank unexpectedly cut interest rates for the second time in two weeks and reduced the amount of money lenders need to keep in government bonds and as cash reserves to boost growth amid a global slowdown.

The Reserve Bank of India lowered its repurchase rate to 7.5 percent from 8 percent, reduced the amount of deposits that lenders need to set aside as reserves to 5.5 percent from 6.5 percent, and cut the amount of money lenders are required to keep in government bonds to 24 percent from 25 percent.

The steps signal a U-turn from the Reserve Bank's policy stance just a week ago, when Governor Duvvuri Subbarao said a "heightened vigil" was needed to fight inflation. This is a strong message that growth has become the central bank's priority. It's a good set of measures that addresses the most pressing need of the hour, which is to ease liquidity constraints in the system.

India's money-market rates have more than tripled in the past week, in contrast to the rest of Asia where the rates at which banks lend to each other has been declining.

The overnight call rate in India touched 21 percent yesterday. India's 10-year bonds gained, heading for their best month in almost a decade, on speculation policy makers will be forced to step up efforts to boost cash with banks and ease a credit squeeze.

Today's cut in the cash reserve ratio, the fourth in the past month, will infuse 400 billion rupees ($8 billion) into the financial system, the central bank said. Before today, the bank lowered the ratio by 2.5 percentage points in the past month.

The Reserve Bank also reduced for the first time in 11 years the statutory liquidity ratio, the amount of deposits that lenders need to invest in government debt or bonds of state-run companies, by one percentage point.

This kind of fund injection is required to bring in stability in the financial market. The system has been under stress because of liquidity shortfall. Cash dried up in India's banking system as overseas investors pulled out $12.7 billion from India's stock markets.


Related Posts :
  1. Sweden guarantees $200 billion in bank loans, Oil Heads Toward $50, India Lowers Key Rate for the First Time Since 2004
  2. New Zealand offers to guarantee deposits
  3. $915 bln in U.S. credit card debt is time bomb
  4. East Europe Borrowers panic as Banks Cut Franc Loans
Sources :Please Note!

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Foster Wheeler (FWLT) - Earning Estimate


Foster Wheeler (FWLT) is an international engineering, construction and project management contractor as well as a power equipment supplier. The Company operates through two business groups, The Global Engineering and Construction (E&C) Group and The Global Power Group.

Foster Wheeler is one stock that hasn't escaped the brutal selloff. This is a company with a huge backlog of work that exceeds the market cap of the company which, according to the CEO, is not in danger of being cancelled unless oil goes under $70, and even then isn't a sure thing to be cancelled.

They have a forward P.E under 8 and are expected to grow earnings at 18% for the next five years. This gives them a PEG of .48. Analysts have them earning $4.24 next year, which if they were to miss by $1 would still give them a P.E of 10 and a PEG under 1.0. And let's not forget the buyback that was just announced of 15% of the shares that will help offset any weakness in earnings.

The is scheduled to release third-quarter results on November 5.

The company reported its second quarter in early August, referring to it as the second consecutive quarter of record earnings.

Earnings per share of 98 cents, excluding an item, surpassed the consensus estimate by 21% and improved on the previous year's total. The company missed expectations only once over the past 5 consecutive quarters but still averaged out an upside surprise of 6%.

Analysts are calling for full-year earnings per share of $3.75, up 3% from the estimates of two months ago.

At 70%, FWLT boasts the highest return on equity (ROE) of the group and stomps the industry average of 9%. Earnings per share are expected to grow by 18% over the next 3 ? 5 years, which compares favorably to the industry average of 15%. Historically, FWLT's earnings ascended 20% over the past 5 years.

Foster Wheeler is trading 6x. The company's 5-year low P/E is the lowest of the bunch at 0.74.

While there were more downside to come as more funds faced redemptions and oil continues to fall, this is a great time to go against the crowd and start a position in FWLT, taking advantage of any further weakness to average down. This isn't for the faint of heart, but those willing to take a gamble could be rewarded in the future.

Foster Wheeler Ltd. has announced on October 30 that its Milan-based subsidiary Foster Wheeler Italiana S.p.A., part of its Global Engineering and Construction Group, has been awarded a contract by Zwara Oil Refinery Company Limited (ZORCO) for consultancy and project management services for a planned new 200,000 barrels per stream day crude oil refinery at Mellita, near Zwara, in the Great Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. ZORCO is a project company in which Tamoil Africa Holdings Ltd. holds the equity.

Related Posts :
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  2. Falling Oil = Rising Refining Margins
  3. Citigroup lost $1.4 billion from credit card securitization
  4. Credit Suisse Raises Google to "Buy" with a $400 Price Target
Sources :
  1. SeekingAlpha: Feeling Brave? Try Foster Wheeler, October 02, 2008
  2. iStockAnalyst: Ride The Wave Of Recovery When It Arrives - Investment Ideas, October 27, 2008 1:25 PM
  3. BuyOnTheDip: STAY in the GAME! ~ Foster Wheeler Ltd. (Public, NASDAQ:FWLT), October 3, 2008
Please Note!

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$915 bln in U.S. credit card debt is time bomb


Now another link in the consumer debt chain - credit cards - is starting to show signs of strain. And the fear that the $915 billion in U.S. credit card debt (an uncannily similar figure) may blow up has major financial institutions like Citigroup, American Express, and Bank of America strapping on their Kevlar vests.

Last month, as banks reported their worst quarterly results since 2001, concerns about rising credit card delinquencies began to make their way onto earnings announcements alongside mentions of subprime woes.

First Citigroup (C), reporting a 57% decline in earnings, cited higher consumer credit costs and said it would put aside $2.24 billion in loan-loss reserves to cover future defaults.

In describing the situation to analysts, CFO Gary Crittenden said Citi's credit card holders were beginning to increase the balance on their cards or take cash advances on those cards for the first time - behavior that, in his experience (which includes seven years as CFO of American Express), can translate into future trouble. Citi said the change in loan losses was "inherent in the portfolio but not yet visible in delinquencies."

Then American Express (AXP) said that it too was seeing "signs of stress" and would boost its loss reserves in its core U.S. card unit by 44%. Capital One (COF), Bank of America (BAC), and Washington Mutual (WM) all said they are bracing for a 20% or higher increase in credit card losses over the near and medium term.

Dennis Moroney, an analyst at TowerGroup, expects credit card delinquencies will rise as consumers, who have until now used home-equity lines of credit to pay off their cards, start ratcheting up higher card debt. When housing prices were rising, it was easy for consumers to tap the escalating values of their homes to keep borrowing. With the home-equity spigot turned off, over-leveraged consumers may have trouble keeping up with payments.

The doomsday scenario would play out something like this: Just like CDOs and other asset-backed securities, credit card debt is sliced, diced, and sold off again as packages of securities. Rising delinquencies would hurt not only the banks involved but the securities backed by the credit card receivables. Those securities would decline in value as consumers defaulted, leading to bank losses as well as portfolio losses in the hedge funds, institutions, and pensions that own the securities. If the damage is widespread enough, it could wreak havoc on the economy much as the subprime crisis has done.

To be sure, there are key differences between the subprime market and the problems brewing with credit cards. The first is that while rising mortgage delinquencies were apparent for months before the subprime market blew up, credit card delinquencies are actually coming off unusually low levels.

"This is absolutely not the next one to blow," says Meredith Whitney, banking analyst at CIBC. Christopher Marshall, CFO of Fifth Third Bancorp in Cincinnati, points out that the U.S. has a long history of credit card securitization, "so it's fairly well understood." The securitization of the subprime sector, by comparison, "got blurry, and people didn't focus on what it meant."

Credit agencies that monitor credit cards in the asset-backed securities market share that confidence. "The performance in the core consumer [asset-backed securities] sectors is expected to deteriorate modestly, but not enough to cause substantial downgrades," says Kevin Duignan, managing director at Fitch.

But credit card debt is different from subprime debt in another way: Unlike mortgages, credit card debt is unsecured, so a default means a total loss. And while missed payments are at a historical low, they show signs of an uptick: The quarterly delinquency rate for Capital One, Washington Mutual, Citigroup, J.P. Morgan Chase, and Bank of America rose an average of 13% in the third quarter, compared with a 2% drop in the previous quarter.

If there is an international precedent the U.S. should be watching, it's actually that of the U.K. British consumers are just as overstretched as Americans, but since the real estate market there rose faster and fell earlier, they're about 18 months ahead in the credit cycle. Since the last quarter of 2005, credit card delinquencies and charge-off rates in Britain have risen as much as 50%, forcing banks to take huge write-offs.

It's a sign of the times that, according to one survey last month, 6% of British homeowners have been using their credit cards to pay their mortgages. That's suicidal, of course, given that credit card interest rates are more than double even the heftiest mortgage.

Related Posts :
  1. Citigroup lost $1.4 billion from credit card securitization
  2. Credit Card Crunch
  3. The Next Meltdown: $950 bn Worth of Outstanding Credit-Card Debt—Much of it toxic
Sources :Please Note!

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New Zealand offers to guarantee deposits

The central business district in Auckland, New Zealand.
The government has confirmed it will guarantee wholesale
bank deposits in a scheme that it hopes will stop
the financial system running out of cash.
Photo courtesy of Breinbart.com

The New Zealand government confirmed Saturday it will guarantee wholesale bank deposits in a scheme that it hopes will stop the financial system running out of cash.

At the same time, it has secured a deal with banks to go easy on mortgage clients hurt by the recession.

Finance Minister Michael Cullen said the government would offer a wholesale funding guarantee facility to investment-grade financial institutions in New Zealand.

It has already offered a guarantee of up to one million New Zealand dollars (US $580,700) for retail deposits to stop worried customer pulling their money out. Other countries, including Australia, have started offering the same guarantee and there were fears that if New Zealand did not follow suit banks could run short of money to lend to businesses and households.

The problems were due to the international credit crunch drying up funds. Without the guarantee there were fears that banks' access to cash would dry up.

Central bank governor Alan Bollard said in a statement the primary goal of the guarantee was to support the re-entry of New Zealand banks to regular foreign markets to raise cash, though it could also apply to debt instruments raised in New Zealand.

There had been fears that banks based in New Zealand would have cash dry up as overseas investors stayed clear of any bank that did not have a government guarantee.


Related Posts :
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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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S&P Cuts Las Vegas Sands To 'B'

From Marketwatch
October 31, 2008

Standard & Poor's Ratings Services on Friday lowered Las Vegas Sands Corp.'s (LVS) corporate credit rating to B from B+ and further downgrade possible. The rating remains on CreditWatch with negative implications. The downgrade reflects the ratings agency's continuing concerns regarding the weakening U.S. economy and its likely effect on gaming markets, such as Las Vegas, said Ben Bubeck, an S&P credit analyst. S&P said the company's performance will continue to be pressured for the next few quarters.

Related Posts :
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  2. Citigroup lost $1.4 billion from credit card securitization
  3. 10/31/2008 - Upgrade & Downgrade (Update 1)
  4. Morgan Stanley Cuts Cisco's Earnings Estimates for the Next Two Years
  5. Credit Suisse Raises Google to "Buy" with a $400 Price Target
  6. Dennis Gartman Letter: Suggests investing in gold
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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Fitch cut rating of Hartford Financial Services Group

From Marketwatch
October 31, 2008

After Friday's closing bell, Fitch Ratings lowered Hartford Financial Services Group's (HIG) issuer default rating to A from A+ and the insurer financial strength ratings of Hartford's primary life and property/casualty insurance subsidiaries to AA- from AA. "The rating actions reflect Fitch's more detailed review of HFSG's exposure to the current volatile credit and investment market conditions, which are negatively impacting its asset portfolio as well as earnings and capital needs in its variable annuity business. The combination of these issues has negatively impacted the organization's capital position," said Fitch in a statement. The outlook is negative.

Related Posts :
  1. Citigroup lost $1.4 billion from credit card securitization
  2. 10/31/2008 - Upgrade & Downgrade (Update 1)
  3. Morgan Stanley Cuts Cisco's Earnings Estimates for the Next Two Years
  4. Credit Suisse Raises Google to "Buy" with a $400 Price Target
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 online spending drops


Growth in online spending in the U.S. slowed in the third quarter, according to a study released Friday, in yet another sign that the economic slowdown has caused the American consumers to pull back.

According to a study released by comScore (SCOR), a company that tracks online business, e-commerce grew by 6% in the third quarter versus the same quarter a year ago. But that was slower than the 13% year-over-year growth in the second quarter and 12% year-over-year increase in the first quarter.

Looked at on a month-by-month basis, online spending grew by 18% in December of 2007 and 20% in November, compared with the same month a year prior. In June of 2007, online spending had surged 25% over the previous year.

Total online retail sales in the U.S. were approximately $30 billion in the third quarter, excluding travel spending, according to the study.

It really goes to the point that no segment has been immune to the pull back in consumer spending, according Michael Niemira, chief economist and director of research at International Council of Shopping Centers. Every segment of retail has been affected.

While consumers have pulled back their spending overall, video game sales surged by 60% in the third quarter of 2008 compared with a year earlier. Spending on furniture and appliances also jumped, up by 52% from the same quarter one year ago.

Consumers decreased their spending on music, movies and video, with sales down 29% from 2007 levels. And consumers spent 11% less on jewelry and watches.
Online spending has been the fastest growing area of retail, but as the credit crunch has cramped the consumer, even e-commerce has fallen off significantly.

Related Posts :
  1. Citigroup lost $1.4 billion from credit card securitization
  2. Credit Card Crunch
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.
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Citigroup lost $1.4 billion from credit card securitization

A Citibank sign can be seen through a window in New York, October 6, 2008.
Reuters/Lucas Jackson

Citigroup Inc. (C) lost $1.4 billion from packaging credit card loans into bonds in the third quarter, a regulatory filing showed on the last Friday, October 31.

The loss reflects in part the worsening performance of credit card loans as the U.S. economy deteriorates. In the third quarter of 2007, Citigroup earned $169 million from packing credit card loans into bonds.

Citigroup said earlier this month that global credit card revenue had declined 40%, partly due to lower securitization results, but it did not disclose at the time the precise figure.

Credit card lenders are broadly expected to suffer higher credit losses as rising unemployment makes it increasingly difficult for some borrowers to pay their bills.

Credit card spending is actually on the rise as consumers affected by the credit crunch use plastic to pay off other debts. For households unable to cope with increasing monthly bills and denied access to new unsecured loans, credit cards have become the last source of funds available.

According to the UK Financial Times, the month-on-month increase of £131m in total credit card loans in August plugged the gap opened by the £132m decline in money lent out in new unsecured personal loans over the same period. Analysts said consumers desperate for cash were incurring high rates of interest by increasingly using their credit cards to make cash withdrawals rather than individual purchases.

Related Posts :
  1. Credit Card Crunch
  2. The Next Meltdown: $950 bn Worth of Outstanding Credit-Card Debt—Much of it toxic
Sources :
  1. Reuters: Citigroup loses $1.4 bln on securitizations, October 31, 2008 08:24pm EDT
  2. The Financial Times: Rise in credit card spending, October 22 2008 03:00am
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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