06/16/2009 (8:12 pm)

RIM aims to cross categories with BlackBerry Tour

Filed under: term |

Research In Motion is adding another smartphone to its BlackBerry lineup as it aims to win market share among both executives and mainstream consumers despite tough economic conditions.

The new model is known as the BlackBerry Tour and falls somewhere between the BlackBerry Curve, which has proved very popular with consumers, and the BlackBerry Bold, which RIM has aimed at high-end corporate users.

RIM co-Chief Executive Jim Balsillie told Reuters in an interview that the new device will soon launch with Verizon and Sprint in the United States and Telus and BCE’s Bell unit in Canada.

Even though the device isn’t drastically different from many other BlackBerry handsets in appearance — it has the familiar candy-bar shape with a full keyboard — Balsillie said the Tour is a “big step forward”.

It is what RIM calls a “world phone,” which means it can easily access voice and data services on networks outside the user’s home country. This has proven popular with business users in the past cash til payday loans.

To appeal to the retail market, the Tour is loaded with multimedia features similar to those found in the BlackBerry Curve and Pearl, including a photo and video camera and media player.

Unveiling products that cross customer categories is proving increasingly important to Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM and it is continuing to make deer inroads into the broader retail market.

However, the company is also being careful not to alienate the corporate users who have been its mainstay and who rely on its smartphones to send wireless e-mail securely.

At the same time, rivals such as Apple and Palm in North America and Nokia in Europe are launching new products and aggressively pricing their phones to lure users.

(Reporting by Wojtek Dabrowski; editing by Peter Galloway)

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06/15/2009 (3:33 pm)

Citi in $1.25 billion trade funding deal with IFC

Filed under: business |

Citigroup Inc and the private sector arm of the World Bank have struck a deal to offer a $1.25 billion funding facility intended to stimulate emerging markets trade over three years.

The U.S. bank said on Monday it would provide 60 percent, or about $750 million, while the World Bank arm, International Finance Corp, and other development agencies will purchase participations for the remaining $500 million.

The groups said they expect the funding to support trade flows of up to $7.5 billion. Under the facility, Citi will provide funding to banks in Asia, Africa, Latin America, Central and Eastern Europe, and the Middle East progressive car insurance.

With the partnership, Citi aims to get a lead over competitors by tapping into opportunities arising from lack of credit in the capital markets, which has driven up the price of trade finance, according to the Financial Times.

(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; editing by John Wallace)

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06/14/2009 (4:00 pm)

Missouri officials ban Chicago auto insurer

Filed under: online |

The Missouri Insurance Department is forbidding the Universal Casualty Company from writing new insurance policies in the state, following a rash of consumer complaints.

The Chicago-based company writes auto insurance and collects $5.9 million in premiums a year in Missouri.

The department says the company is slow to respond to claims and refuses to send insurance adjusters to inspect damage, relying instead on car owners to send in photos and police reports. Universal makes "low ball" settlement offers and sometimes refuses to pay claims without conducting a reasonable investigation, the insurance regulators say personal loans for poor credit.

A company spokesman declined comment.

The Insurance Department reports receiving 63 complaints against the firm this year, 13 times the number it would expect from a company its size. The company will be allowed to continue servicing existing policies.

Source

06/13/2009 (9:47 am)

TSX rises on U.S. optimism

Filed under: economics |

The Toronto stock market ran up sharply today in a widespread advance as investors latched onto further signs of an improving American economy.

The S&P/TSX composite index rose 116.3 points to 10,714.11 as investors took in economic data showing U.S. retail sales beat expectations while fewer people applied for jobless benefits last week.

Gains were led by rising financials but substantial support also came from commodity stocks on hopes for higher demand from Asia and recovering global economies.

The financial sector ran up 1.1 per cent, with National Bank ahead 59 cents to $54.17.

Bank of Montreal (TSX: BMO) shares ticked nine cents higher to $45.32 after it said that it would raise $350 million in an offering of preferred shares. The bank had planned a $200-million offering, but increased the size of the deal due to investor demand.

The price of oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange rose $1.35 to US$72.68 a barrel, taking the energy sector almost two per cent higher. Canadian Natural Resources (TSX: CNQ) gained $1.50 to $66 and EnCana Corp. (TSX: ECA) improved 71 cents to $62.99.

"I still think that people are gaining confidence in the economy and towards the market," said Ian Nakamoto, director of research at MacDougall, MacDougall and MacTier, a Toronto-based money manager

"There is still a lot of cash out there and I still think the average fund manager is underweight equities and underweight cyclical equities. So I think the market will continue to do well."

The TSX Venture Exchange edged up 5.93 points to 1,148.32 while the Canadian dollar climbed four tenths of a U.S. cent to 90.65 cents US.

In New York, indexes closed well off the highs of the day but the Dow Jones industrial average still closed up 31.9 points to 8,770.92.

The Nasdaq composite index moved ahead 9.29 points to 1,862.37 while the S&P 500 index gained 5.74 points to 944.89.

The Commerce Department said today that U.S. retail sales increased by 0.5 per cent last month, in line with economists expectations. It was the largest increase since sales surged by 1.7 per cent in January following six straight declines.

However, "three-tenths of the increase reflected a spurt in gasoline station receipts, mostly due to higher prices rather than greater driving," observed BMO Capital Markets senior economist Sal Guatieri.

"Gas prices have climbed about US$1 this year, which could cut annual discretionary spending by more than one per cent."

And the Labour Department said that the number of newly laid-off Americans requesting jobless benefits fell for the third time in the past four weeks. Initial claims for unemployment insurance dropped last week by 24,000 to a seasonally adjusted 601,000 free credit report without a credit card.

Gains were buoyed by strong results in an auction for 30-year Treasury bonds. Investors have been worried about rising interest rates and weak results from other Treasury auctions recently, which helped send stocks lower Wednesday.

"The bond market is a potential risk to the stock market if yields continue to move higher," said Dean Curnutt, president of Macro Risk Advisors.

"A further rise in yields (interest rates) threatens to choke off a recovery."

The yield on the benchmark 10-year note fell to 3.87 per cent from 3.96 per cent late Wednesday.

Elsewhere on the TSX, the base metals sector moved up more than four per cent as the July copper contract in New York rose eight cents to US$2.45 a pound. Teck Resources (TSX: TCK.B) gained 54 cents to $20.69 and Sherritt International (TSX: S) jumped 48 cents to $5.55.

The utilities sector was also a boost, rising almost one per cent.

In that sector, natural gas shipper TransCanada Corp. (TSX: TRP) is partnering with the world's biggest oil company ExxonMobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) on plans to build a US$26 billion Alaska gas pipeline to bring northern gas to southern markets. The project would compete against a rival pipeline plan by other big oil companies in Alaska and TransCanada shares were ahead 68 cents to $33.68.

The TSX gold sector faltered 0.8 per cent even as the August bullion contract in New York rose $7.30 to US$962 an ounce. Barrick Gold Corp. (TSX: ABX) declined 56 cents to C$38.31.

The telecom sector was off one per cent but Telus Corp. (TSX: T) shares rose 32 cents to $32.55 as it announced plans to invest more than $250 million in Quebec this year, with a focus on advanced wireless and wireline broadband infrastructure that includes health-care related technology.

In earnings news, shares in Lululemon Athletica (TSX: LLL) tumbled $2.26 or 13.45 per cent to $14.56 after the yoga and workout wear retailer reported that quarterly earnings fell to $6.5 million in the latest quarter from $8.5 million a year earlier. The Vancouver company also said it expects profit to be flat in the current quarter because of the troubled economy.

Transat AT Inc. (TSX: TRZ.B) said today a record number of winter travellers helped boost the company's revenues and bottom line during the second quarter. The Montreal-based tourism giant reported profits of $42.2 million, up slightly from year-earlier net income of $41.7 million.

The company reported a top line of $1.12 billion, an increase from $1.08 billion recorded the year before and its shares ran ahead 17 cents to $10.27.

Source

06/12/2009 (12:32 am)

What’s a public health plan anyway?

Filed under: technology |

The debate over whether to have a government-backed insurance plan is fast becoming the most divisive health care reform issue.

And it’s a debate devoid of serious details about how such a plan would work. Those details, of course, will matter to supporters and opponents … a lot.

"There are many ways to skin a cat," said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., a leader on the issue.

Of course, lawmakers are not entertaining an endless number of ways to craft a public plan. One option not on the table is a single-payer system — whereby everyone would be enrolled in a national health insurance plan based on Medicare. Such a plan doesn’t have the votes, according to Baucus and House Ways and Means Chairman Charles Rangel, D-N.Y.

But excluding the single-payer idea is where clarity in the debate ends. What form a public plan would take is anyone’s guess.

A competitor to private insurers: Supporters of a public plan say it would push private insurers to lower costs and provide better coverage.

Private insurers fear a public plan will be too hard to compete with, especially if the government dictates how much it reimburses providers.

The House Progressive Caucus, which has more than 70 members, put out a statement on Monday calling for "robust" public option in the absence of a single-payer system, which many of its members would prefer.

Specifically, the caucus wants a plan that charges premiums "at the lowest levels possible, not tied to the rates of private insurance plans" and would "have the ability to structure the provider rates to promote quality care … ." The caucus also wants a public plan to "establish or negotiate rates" with drug and health equipment companies "to achieve the lowest prices for consumers."

It opposes any provisions that would undermine or limit where or to whom the public plan is available.

Democrats on the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee want a public plan, said Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., who is leading the charge in the absence of committee chairman Ted Kennedy due to brain cancer.

But a framework for one will be left out of its bill intentionally, Dodd said Tuesday. "I left those areas open for discussion — not because they are open for some decision about whether or not we ought to move in that direction."

Other lawmakers worry an unbridled public option would set the stage for unfair competition.

Last week, after a meeting of key senators from both parties, Baucus said they had agreed on some basic principles if there is a public option, according to Congress Daily. "Make sure it doesn’t set prices, [and] there really is competition, where government is very, very light."

A fallback: Fiscally conservative Democrats, known as the Blue Dogs, are not endorsing a public plan but will support one if it meets certain requirements.

Specifically, claims covered by a public plan would have to be paid for by premiums and co-payments. And reimbursement rates would have to be negotiated with the health care providers rather than based on Medicare rates payday advance online.

The Blue Dogs, a 51-member coalition, don’t want medical providers to be forced to participate. And the public plan must only be a "fallback" option triggered "in the absence of adequate competition and cost containment."

"We cannot create a public option that stacks the deck — through rate setting and forced participation — against a system that currently provides coverage to 160 million Americans," said Rep. Mike Ross, D-Ark., in a statement from the coalition.

One way a fallback could be structured is for a public plan to take effect immediately in areas where there’s very little choice among insurance carriers. But it would only be triggered nationally if lawmakers determine cost containment hasn’t worked.

"It’s basically a threat [to private insurers]," said Paul Fronstin, director of the health research program at the Employee Benefit Research Institute.

A nonprofit cooperative: Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., has suggested a possible compromise on a public plan option that could satisfy opponents who fear government control.

Conrad is floating a proposal that would create state-based or regionally based nonprofit co-op insurance plans in which participants pay into the plan and if there’s any money left at the end of the year, it would be paid back to participants or used to lower premiums or improve benefits.

The co-op plans would be subject to the same rules as private insurers. And they would not be run by the federal government, although they might receive seed money from Uncle Sam. So whether a co-op plan would be considered "public" is a question mark.

And that could be its selling point.

On Monday, Baucus said, "we’re trying to figure out a way to help keep the insurance companies’ feet to the fire in a way that doesn’t frighten Republicans away because it sounds too much like government."

How many people would join a public plan?

No matter the details of a public plan, there’s no telling how it will alter the health insurance landscape.

"It’s very difficult to say what people will do without looking at health reform in general," Fronstin said.

That’s because the interaction between all the reforms eventually enacted could influence employers’ decisions to keep or drop the coverage they offer.

For instance, some proposals mandate that individuals get insurance and that companies help them. There are proposals to set up a public insurance exchange in which consumers chooses from a bevy of health plans. And many proposals would prohibit insurers from denying anyone coverage based on health status.

Leaders from both parties say that however health reform is done, if you like the insurance plan you have, you can keep it.

"But what they don’t say is [that it] may not be around any longer," Fronstin said.

- CNN congressional producer Ted Barrett contributed to this report. 

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06/11/2009 (12:35 am)

Apple’s new iPhone is faster, more powerful

Filed under: term |

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple Inc. upped the ante in the smart phone wars Monday by slashing the entry price for an iPhone in half and unveiling a new model.

The iPhone 3G S looks the same but sports a faster processor, longer battery life, an internal compass, a video camera and a photo camera with better resolution and auto-focus. A 16-gigabyte version of the 3G S will cost $199 and a 32-gigabyte version will be $299.

The 8-gigabyte iPhone 3G, which came out last year, now costs $99, instead of $199. When the iPhone debuted two years ago, eager Apple fans had to shell out $499 for a 4-gigabyte version and $599 for 8 gigs.

The latest iPhones go on sale June 19, just as two-year contracts for the buyers of the original models are expiring and Apple faces tougher competition from the likes of Research in Motion Ltd. and Palm Inc. On Saturday Palm came out with a well-regarded iPhone rival, the $200 Pre cheap health insurance.

Industry analyst Michael Gartenberg, with the Interpret market-research firm, said the new iPhone pricing breaks through an important barrier for consumers. It will likely cause other smart phone makers to offer something similar, he said.

"Every $100 you move down in consumer electronics brings in a lot more customers," he said. "Ninety-nine dollars is a psychological price point, so that’s a real barrier to move through. It becomes something people can afford — it becomes an affordable luxury."

But lowering the price could be risky for Apple unless its new versions have enough appealing features to keep them selling briskly at higher prices.

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06/09/2009 (9:59 pm)

S&P bumps up Lambert airport debt rating to A-

Filed under: finance |

Standard & Poor’s raised the debt rating for Lambert-St. Louis International Airport just as the airport prepares to sell bonds for terminal upgrades.

The credit rating agency raised its underlying rating one notch to A— from BBB+ late last week. Standard & Poor’s based the upgrade on the airport’s "stable financial performance" during difficult economic times and actions taken by the airport’s managers to provide financial cushions. Those included creation of a debt service stabilization fund, which has a current balance of $17 easy fast payday loans.3 million.

Last week, Lambert officials announced their plan to sell up to $125 million in bonds to make terminal and airfield improvements. St. Louis Comptroller Darlene Green’s office suggested Monday that the credit upgrade will reduce interest and issuance costs.

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06/08/2009 (2:17 pm)

Barclays in BGI talks, $12 billion BlackRock deal seen

Filed under: news |

Barclays Plc is in talks to sell Barclays Global Investors (BGI), the British bank said on Monday, with U.S. fund manager BlackRock the frontrunner to land the asset manager for about $12 billion.

BlackRock and Bank of New York Mellon are both in talks to buy BGI in a deal that might come early this week, people familiar with the matter said.

The complex deal could see Barclays take a stake of up to 20 percent in the enlarged asset manager, according to the sources, who asked not to be named as the talks are confidential.

“It sounds like a deal is coming and the price is undeniably attractive,” said Ian Gordon, analyst at Exane BNP Paribas.

“It’s an opportunity to realize a premium price for a business that has delivered exceptional growth but might be expected to grow at a slower pace from here, and also bolster capital ratios,” he added.

Barclays said on Monday it had received proposals for BGI and iShares from a number of parties, including BlackRock, and was continuing talks. Blackrock also confirmed the talks but both companies said issues remained that could derail a deal.

San Francisco-based BGI is the world’s biggest fund manager with $1.5 trillion in assets under management and would swell BlackRock’s assets to $2.8 trillion, double the amount managed by nearest rival State Street.

BGI is staffed by academics from a range of disciplines from economics to engineering, attracting graduates from the nearby University of California at Berkeley color business cards. They have helped the staid index-tracking fund manager shift to more active and lucrative management, and many will land windfalls if a deal is reached.

Barclays agreed to sell iShares, which is part of BGI, to buy-out house CVC for $4.4 billion in April, but is allowed to hunt for better offers until June 18.

By 1150 GMT (7:50 a.m. EDT) Barclays shares were down 2 percent at 279.25 pence, underperforming a weaker European bank sector, and valuing the bank at just under 24 billion pounds ($38 billion).

MIDEAST FUNDING?

Bankers told Reuters last month that Barclays would likely sell BGI if offers approached $12 billion.

BlackRock is likely to get funding for a deal from Middle East investors, possibly including some Barclays shareholders, according to media reports.

The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) and Adia, the government investment arm of Abu Dhabi, are in talks alongside Kuwait’s KIO to inject $3 billion into BlackRock for a 12 percent stake, the UK’s Sunday Telegraph newspaper said.

BlackRock, founded in 1988, had a market value of just over $21 billion at Friday’s close. Bank of America owns 49 percent of it, stemming from a 2006 deal when Merrill Lynch, now owned by Bank of America, sold it its fund unit. 

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06/04/2009 (7:53 pm)

It’s deja vu for stocks

Filed under: management |

After a bleak beginning to 2009, stocks are rallying and many investors are hopeful that the worst has passed.

Funny thing is, that’s where we were this time last year, just before the markets and the economy went into a tailspin.

Consider the parallels. Gold briefly traded above $1000 an ounce, a sure sign of investor fear, at the beginning of last year and this year.

In March 2008, Bear Stearns was "saved" when it was sold to JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) in a government-approved fire sale. In late February of this year, Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) was pulled from the brink by yet another bailout from the Federal Reserve.

Government stimulus packages have also played a role in both years. Last year, it was President Bush’s tax rebates that led some to think the economy might have hit bottom. This year, President Obama’s plan to create more jobs is raising similar hopes.

In fact, it’s uncanny how the performance of the major market barometers in the first five months of 2008 mirror this year’s January through May period (see charts to the right).

Sure, the dip earlier this year was more severe, and the subsequent rally has been more explosive. But the charts essentially show the same pattern.

And as we all know, that movie didn’t end too well last year. In case you forgot, the third chart to the right is a painful reminder.

Stocks took a turn for the worse heading into last July as it started to become evident that the bottom had yet to truly fall out of the financial sector. The market really nosedived in September following the implosion of Lehman Brothers.

Is this time going to be different? It’s tempting to say that it is. But some investors are understandably still wary, having been burned a year ago.

"The next few weeks will be critical. There is some skepticism with respect to the economy," said Todd Salamone, senior vice president with Schaeffer’s Investment Research in Cincinnati. "There is still uncertainty about whether the credit crisis has completely played out and concerns about the unintended consequences of stimulus, such as inflation."

Talkback: Do you feel better about the economy and markets than this time a year ago? Leave your comments at the bottom of this story.

But others think that these fears are already priced into the markets. Even with bank stocks rallying sharply, investors seem to be aware of, if not necessarily worried about, potential problems with commercial real estate loans, for example.

What’s more, inflation would be a consequence of an improving economy. It’s, of course, something that needs to be closely monitored. Still, it seems like it’s a risk investors are willing to live with for the time being No teletrack payday loans.

Don’t get me wrong. Few are forecasting rosy times ahead for the economy. In fact, the American Bankruptcy Institute reported Tuesday that U.S. consumer bankruptcies in May were up 37% from a year ago.

Then again, the level of bankruptcies was down slightly from April of this year. That could be further proof that the economy no longer seems to be staring into the abyss. And that’s what seems to be sparking this rally.

"This is not going to be an easy couple of years for people. There’s no truly great news out there but the economy isn’t in free fall. It’s stabilizing," said Eric Ross, director of U.S. research for Canaccord Adams, an investment bank. "Because of that people and businesses can start to make more intelligent decisions about what to do with their money."

It is remarkable how investors have shrugged off developments that, if they happened last summer, might have been viewed as further signs of economic disaster.

Honestly, would anyone have predicted a year ago that markets would surge on a day when General Motors (GMGMQ) (that GMGMQ ticker is going to take some time getting used to) filed for bankruptcy?

Investors have not only become inured to more bad news. They also appear to be genuinely more upbeat than they were now at this time a year ago. And that’s important.

Salamone points out that the sheer level of fear-induced selling earlier this year was much greater than it was before Bear almost went under in March 2008. That’s evident from the fact that the VIX (VIX), a key index that measures volatility on Wall Street, was much higher in March this year than it was a year ago.

"One can look at sentiment and potentially, you could conclude that 2009 will turn out better than 2008," Salamone said. "This past March, the market was at one of the most oversold levels in decades. That’s not a condition we had last year."

In other words, the sense of impending doom is largely gone. And unless it returns, Ross thinks the markets will, at the very least, chug along. Even if they don’t continue to surge, he doubts they’ll plummet like they did last summer and fall.

"I don’t think we will have the same collapse in confidence like we had last year. That was all about liquidity problems followed by panic," he said. "Now, people think the worst case is the economy is in a slow grind. A slow grind doesn’t get you into a panic."

Talkback: Do you feel better about the economy and markets than this time a year ago? 

Source

06/03/2009 (6:52 pm)

Oil passes US$69 as rally continues

Filed under: news |

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Oil prices briefly passed US$69 per barrel today in a weeklong rally that appears short on fundamentals, yet exceedingly full of momentum.

Average retail gasoline prices continued to march upward: A gallon of gas in the United States now costs about 46 cents more than it did a month ago.

After peaking at $69.05 this afternoon, a price not seen since early November, benchmark crude for July delivery fell three cents to settle at $68.55 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

There have been a few indications that the economy is mending in some of the hardest hit sectors.

Pending sales of existing homes showed the biggest jump in nearly eight year, the National Association of Realtors reported today.

That report came on the heels of manufacturing data Monday that showed some improvement both here and in China, two major energy consumers.

Yet much of the momentum on Nymex appears to be fuelled by the weakening U.S. dollar, which hit a new low for the year today, and an influx of money from speculators.

Investors buy commodities like oil and gold as a protection against inflation and U.S. dollar weakness.

Oil prices have risen every day since May 21 on snips of moderately good news from manufacturers, home builders and the U.S. government.

"What kind of news? Well any kind of news because we seem to be living in a world where good economic news for oil is bullish and bad economic news might be bullish too," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp.

For instance, even though unused crude in storage remains near 19-year highs, which would typically drive prices down, levels have fallen for the past three weeks, according to the Energy Department guaranteed payday loans.

That is typical for this time of year, however.

And there are some signs that major oil exporting countries, squeezed for months by low energy prices, have been bumping up production.

Analysts expect another drawdown of two million barrels when the Energy Information Administration reports crude levels Wednesday, according to a survey by Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos.

Prices at the pump added slightly more than a penny overnight to hit $2.525, according to auto club AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service. That's a dime higher than last week and well above the $2.07 that gas cost just a month ago.

Still, a gallon of gas last year at this point was three cents shy of $4 per gallon.

In Canada, the price of gas averaged C$1.015 per litre, up from 90.1 cents a month ago, but down from $1.331 per litre a year ago, according to price-watching website GasBuddy.com.

In other Nymex trading, gasoline for June delivery rose less than a penny to settle at US$1.9252 a gallon and heating oil rose 1.24 cents to settle at $1.7979 a gallon. Natural gas for June delivery slid 12.9 cents to settle at $4.12 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent prices rose 20 cents to settle at $68.17 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

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