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Stock markets UK time


FTSE 100
6251.20 203.10 at 16:34



Dow Jones
13389.44 395.63 at 19:23



Nasdaq
2570.08 78.09 at 19:23



Dax
7508.96 183.59 at 17:31



Cac 40
5675.05 162.06 at 17:10



S&P 500
1469.96 48.13 at 19:28



BBC Global 30
5749.77 157.73 at 19:47




Currencies UK time


Sterling - US Dollar
2.0515 0.0021 at 19:48



Sterling - Euro
1.4919 0.0045 at 19:48



Euro - US Dollar
1.3749 0.0023 at 19:48



US Dollar - Yen
118.7200 1.7300 at 19:48



FTSE 100



Latest


3 Months


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CURRENCIES

Market Data

Last Updated: Thursday, 26 July, 2007, 18:50 GMT 19:50 UK

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UK £ | USA $ | Eurozone € | Travel money



United States Dollar - Euro



Select time span for charts: One month Three months Twelve months Intra-day



$1 buys change % 52 wk-h 52 wk-l
Euro 0.72725 0.00110 0.15 0.80070 0.72150



More currency pages
Click name to view chart (if available)

Asia Pacific
$1 buys change % 52 wk-h 52 wk-l
Japanese Yen 118.60500 1.85000 1.54 124.15000 113.93000

Australian Dollar 1.14630 0.01580 1.40 1.34790 1.12670

New Zealand Dollar 1.26890 0.02090 1.68 1.62680 1.23260

Hong Kong Dollar 7.82405 0.00080 0.01 7.82740 7.76390

Singapore Dollar 1.51520 0.00480 0.32 1.59250 1.50330

Taiwanese Dollar 32.94200 0.04100 0.12 33.52100 32.01000

Thai Baht 33.71000 0.03000 0.09 38.01000 31.38000

Malaysian Ringgit 3.43900 0.01450 0.42 3.75250 3.36500

Indonesian Rupiah 9100.00000 10.00000 0.11 9379.00000 8640.00000

South Korean Won 918.30000 1.10000 0.12 966.30000 912.70000



South Asia
$1 buys change % 52 wk-h 52 wk-l
Indian Rupee 40.22500 0.01000 0.02 46.97500 40.00000

Pakistani Rupee 60.46500 0.02000 0.03 61.14000 59.86500

Sri Lankan Rupee 111.80000 0.03000 0.03 111.85000 102.00000



Europe / Africa / Middle East
$1 buys change % 52 wk-h 52 wk-l
Pound Sterling 0.48745 0.00030 0.06 0.53990 0.48400

Euro 0.72725 0.00110 0.15 0.80070 0.72150

Danish Kroner 5.41160 0.01100 0.20 5.97200 5.36890

Israeli Shekel 4.31800 0.07100 1.67 4.47180 3.90210

Norwegian Kroner 5.83560 0.04080 0.70 6.78630 5.69530

Saudi Arabian Riyal 3.75000 0.00040 0.01 3.79000 3.63980

South African Rand 7.09730 0.21580 3.14 7.97230 6.69000

Swedish Kronor 6.73630 0.02170 0.32 7.43300 6.61370

Swiss Franc 1.20315 0.01000 0.82 1.27700 1.18770

Turkish Lira 1.30300 0.05300 4.25 1.55090 1.23380



Americas
$1 buys change % 52 wk-h 52 wk-l
Canadian Dollar 1.05380 0.01240 1.19 1.18770 1.03340

Mexican Peso 10.99120 0.13960 1.29 11.25370 10.67900

Brazilian Real 1.93110 0.06760 3.63 2.23400 1.83550



* chart not available



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share prices
Market Data

Last Updated: Thursday, 26 July, 2007, 18:50 GMT 19:50 UK

Search company or market:




London | NYSE | Nasdaq | Paris | Frankfurt


Search share prices by name or symbol*:


* In London, New York, Paris, Frankfurt and on Nasdaq.

Indexes

value change %

Dow Jones
13415.86 369.21 2.68

Nasdaq
2575.79 72.38 2.73

S&P 500
1473.49 44.60 2.94



Market reports
London
Paris
Frankfurt
Wall Street
Tokyo
Top 10 winners

value change %

OWENS-ILLINOIS
39.20 4.17 11.90

FRIEDMAN BILLINGS RAMSEY GP'A'
5.14 0.24 4.90

CMI CORP CL'A'
114.96 5.15 4.69

PEPSIAMERICAS INC
26.92 0.79 3.02

MEMC ELECTRONIC MATERIALS
59.49 1.73 3.00

UST INC
53.32 1.07 2.05

WPS RESOURCES
57.26 0.52 0.92

BARD (C.R.)
79.34 0.69 0.88

TRIBUNE CO
28.40 0.20 0.71

VISHAY INTERTECHNOLOGY
16.46 0.09 0.55


Top 10 losers

value change %

GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO
27.70 4.35 13.57

SOTHEBY'S HLDGS CL'A'
44.50 6.60 12.92

AMER AXLE & MANUFACTURING
22.77 3.28 12.59

BEAZER HOMES USA
14.94 2.10 12.32

"ARVINMERITOR, INC"
19.68 2.40 10.87

PETROLEO BRASILEIRO SA- PETRO
52.90 6.32 10.67

NAVIOS MARITIME HLDS INC
12.64 1.40 9.97

MALAYSIA FUND
24.22 2.67 9.93

COMPANHIA VALE DO RIO DOCE ADS
38.58 4.19 9.80

PETROLEO BRASILEIRO S.A. ADS
62.30 6.62 9.61



Winners and Losers are drawn from NYSE equities with a daily trade volume > 2,000,000 and share price > $1




All prices carried by BBC News Online enjoy indicative status only. The BBC accepts no responsibility for their accuracy or for any use to which they may be put. All share prices and market indexes delayed at least 15 minutes, NYSE 20 minutes. 52 week high and low values are calculated from close price data. Click here for terms and conditions

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stock markets

Market Data

Last Updated: Thursday, 26 July, 2007, 18:49 GMT 19:49 UK

Search company or market:



FTSE 100 15 min delay
Dow Jones 15 min delay


Dax 15 min delay

Cac 40 15 min delay

Nasdaq 15 min delay



*All Times GMT Select time span for charts: One month Three months Twelve months Intra-day





More index pages
Click name to view detailed information and chart


Global
time index value change %
BBC Global 30 Thu 19:59 5736.69 170.81 2.89





Europe / Africa
time index value change %
London

FTSE 100 Thu 16:34 6251.20 203.10 3.15
FTSE 250 Thu 16:42 11033.40 382.50 3.35
FTSE 350 Thu 16:42 3280.20 107.60 3.18
FTSE All Share Thu 16:36 3228.93 104.08 3.12
FTSE Techmark Thu 16:36 1654.04 39.62 2.34


Pan European

FTSEurofirst 300 Thu 17:33 1527.79 43.98 2.80
DJ Eurostoxx 50 Thu 17:20 4252.92 107.98 2.48


Amsterdam AEX Thu 17:06 533.04 13.84 2.53


Frankfurt

Dax Thu 17:31 7508.96 183.59 2.39
MDax Thu 17:31 10534.20 311.26 2.87
SDax Thu 17:31 6113.77 143.92 2.30
TecDax Thu 17:31 899.45 24.32 2.63


Paris Cac 40 Thu 17:10 5675.05 162.06 2.78


Brussels Bel 20 Thu 17:06 4369.97 114.61 2.56


Madrid IBEX Thu 16:38 14540.40 397.30 2.66


Zurich

SMI Thu 16:30 8706.40 216.31 2.42
SPI Thu 16:36 7139.37 171.55 2.35


Moscow RTS Thu 17:09 1996.91 50.91 2.49


Johannesburg All Share Thu 17:18 28585.84 519.43 1.78





South Asia
time index value change %
Bombay BSE Sensex Thu 11:43 15776.31 76.98 0.49


Karachi KSE-100 Thu 18:14 13684.27 89.07 0.66


Colombo CSE All Share Thu 15:09 2460.10 21.90 0.90





Asia Pacific
time index value change %
Sydney All Ordinaries Thu 07:34 6301.40 76.60 1.20


Hong Kong Hang Seng Thu 10:09 23211.69 150.49 0.64


Tokyo Nikkei Thu 07:35 17702.09 156.33 0.88


Singapore STI Thu 18:15 3579.73 65.85 1.80





Americas
time index value change %
New York

Dow Jones Thu 19:36 13412.12 372.95 2.71
Nasdaq Thu 19:36 2575.45 72.72 2.75


Chicago Mercantile Ex.

S&P 500 Thu 19:41 1471.83 46.26 3.05
Russell 2000 Thu 19:41 783.06 29.44 3.62


Buenos Aires General Wed 23:45 2242.78 1.35 0.06


Sao Paulo Bovespa Wed 23:45 55998.54 203.97 0.37


Mexico IPC Wed 23:45 31103.53 358.62 1.14

All prices carried by BBC News Online enjoy indicative status only. The BBC accepts no responsibility for their accuracy or for any use to which they may be put. All share prices and market indexes delayed at least 15 minutes, NYSE 20 minutes. 52 week high and low values are calculated from close price data. Click here for terms and conditions

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Oil price climbs on rising demand
Oil prices have hit their highest level in almost a year as US stockpiles fall while demand from refineries rises.
US light sweet crude was $1.08 higher at $76.96 a barrel after earlier peaking at $77.24, while London Brent crude rose 57 cents to $76.89.

The rise came a day after a US Department of Energy report showed crude oil stockpiles had fallen while refineries had stepped up production.

Refinery output has risen to counter recent shutdowns and meet high demand.

During the summer months, Americans tend to use more fuel as they take to their cars for the holidays.

According to the weekly energy department report, crude oil stockpiles fell by 1.1 million barrels while utilisation of refineries grew by 0.7% to 91.7% as output moved up a gear.

The rise in oil prices also marked the first time US light sweet crude has been higher than Brent crude since February. Traditionally US oil has traded at a premium to London Brent crude.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/6917327.stm

Published: 2007/07/26 15:29:03 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 

Sales of new US homes in decline
Sales of new US homes fell in June for the largest amount in five months as housing market woes continued.
Sales sank 6.6% to an annual rate of 834,000, according to figures from the US Commerce Department.

This was more than triple what was expected and comes as banks start to tighten their lending rates in the wake of rising defaults.

US consumers, hit by rate rises, are waiting for further house price falls before they buy, analysts say.

Prices of newly-built homes fell 2.2% last month to $237,900 (£116,202) as house builders continued to offer heavy incentives to shift an oversupply of stock, which is putting pressure on an already strained market.

But despite their efforts to mop up the overhang, the inventory of unsold new homes was static for June at 537,000 units.

Deeper slump

The disappointing numbers come a day after data was published showing sales of existing homes in the US during June fell to the slowest pace since November 2002.

"It is a continuation of a downtrend - the decline was more than many people had expected," said Kevin Logan, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort.

"What it is telling us is that the overall slump in the housing market is deeper and is likely to be more prolonged than many people had anticipated."

Markets will now focus on US economic growth numbers due out on Friday to gauge the extent to which the problems in the US housing market have filtered through to the broader economy.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/6917754.stm

Published: 2007/07/26 15:24:25 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 

UK house prices 'stall' in July
House price growth in the UK "stalled" during July, suggesting that higher interest rates are starting to bite, the Nationwide has said.
Prices grew by just 0.1% in July, cutting the annual rate of growth to 9.9% from June's rate of 11.1%.

The underlying trend also slowed, with prices in the past three months up 2% against the previous three months, down from June's comparable figure of 2.2%.

Nationwide said house prices would slow in the second half of the year.

Finances 'under pressure'

The Bank of England has increased interest rates five times in the past year in an attempt to cool inflation.

The Bank's key rate now stands at 5.75%, and many analysts expect rates to hit 6% before the end of the year.

"The Bank of England now faces a tough balancing act in the months ahead, with tightening consumer finances on the one hand and resilient economic growth on the other," said Nationwide chief economist Fionnuala Earley.

"Fundamentals do suggest that household finances are coming under considerable pressure, and that house prices and consumer spending will both see a slowdown in the second half of the year.

"The sharp slowdown in July's house price numbers could show that potential homebuyers are thinking twice about overstretching themselves in a higher interest rate environment."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/6916823.stm

Published: 2007/07/26 10:30:24 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 
the latest from the debacle that hit daw...


Stocks Plunge; Dow Down More Than 310
Thursday July 26, 8:50 pm ET
By Joe Bel Bruno, AP Business Writer
Stocks Plunge on Lending Worries, As Dow Industrials Plunge More Than 310 Points

NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street suffered one of its worst losses of 2007 Thursday, leading a global stock market plunge as investors succumbed to months of worry about the mortgage and corporate lending markets. The Dow Jones industrials closed down more than 310 points after earlier skidding nearly 450.
Investors who had been able for months to largely shrug off discomfort about subprime mortgage problems and a more difficult environment for corporate borrowing finally decided it was time to sell after the Commerce Department issued another disappointing home sales report.

Feeding the plunge were concerns that higher corporate borrowing costs will curb the rapid pace of takeovers that had driven stocks higher this year. Investors also feared the sluggish environment for home sales and continued defaults in subprime loans would spur debt defaults and weigh on corporate earnings.

While stocks plummeted, investors poured money into the safe haven of the bond market. The soaring price of Treasurys pulled yields lower, and the rate on the 10-year note plunged to 4.79 percent from late Wednesday's 4.90 percent.

"Worries that have been out there for the past couple of years are coming to a head right now," said investment strategist Edward Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research Inc. "It's show time."

Thursday's trading was the latest and most extreme in a series of frenetic sessions over the past month -- many also accompanied by triple-digit swings in the Dow -- as investors sold on worries about the subprime fallout or bought on optimism that there wouldn't be any widespread problems caused by mortgage failures. Many analysts have described the back-and-forth trading as overwrought and based more on gut emotion than careful consideration of market and economic fundamentals.

That was the feeling again Thursday.

"The rally in bonds at this point looks a little bit overdone," said Tom Higgins, chief economist at Payden & Rygel Investment Management in Los Angeles. "If you're going to park money temporarily then cash I think is the way to be but I think that we're going to form a bottom. I think people are going to be legging it back into the market."

The Dow plunged 311.50 or 2.26 percent, to 13,473.57 after falling 449.77 in earlier trading. The close was its worst since the 416.02 it lost on Feb. 27, when a drop in the Shanghai stock market rattled world exchanges.

Broader market indicators also slid. The Nasdaq composite index tumbled 48.83, or 1.84 percent, to 2,599.34, while the Standard & Poor's 500 skidded 35.43, or 2.33 percent, to 1,482.66.

The Russell 2000 index, which reflects the movement of small-company stocks, fell 21.02, or 2.59 percent, to 791.48.

Before Thursday's big drop, the Dow had been up 10.61 percent for the year -- and that margin has now been cut to 8.11 percent. The S&P 500 was up 7.04 percent, and the market decline now puts it at a year-to-date gain of 4.54 percent; while the Nasdaq's 9.64 percent increase has been cut to 7.62 percent.

The declines triggered a global sell-off in stocks, causing minor losses in Europe to accelerate rapidly along with the Dow's drop. In Europe, Britain's FTSE 100 closed down 3.15 percent, Germany's DAX index dropped 2.39 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 2.78 percent.

Asian markets followed, with Japan's Nikkei stock index falling 2.55 percent in early trading in Tokyo on Friday.

Wall Street also found more immediate reasons to sell during the session -- primarily the home sales figures from the Commerce Department, which further eroded confidence in the housing industry's ability to rebound.

The department reported that sales of new homes fell 6.6 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 834,000 units, more than triple what had been expected and the largest percentage drop since sales fell by 12.7 percent in January.

This boosted anxiety after quarterly results from home builders including Pulte Homes Inc. and D.R. Horton Inc. were squeezed by a sluggish environment from home sales and continued defaults in subprime loans.

"Wall Street continues to walk a wall of worry," said Ryan Larson, a senior equity trader at Voyageur Asset Management. "The housing market continues to be a story, and nobody knows when it will rebound. But, the real concerns are about credit and oil pushing higher."

Also stunting stocks was the Commerce Department's disappointing durable goods report. Though sales of big-ticket items increased by 1.4 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted $217.07 billion, durable goods excluding transportation equipment had an unexpected drop.

The Labor Department reported that jobless claims fell by 2,000 to 301,000 in the week ended July 21, slightly better than analysts' expectations.

Investors also reacted negatively as oil prices climbed to almost $77 per barrel during the session, stoking the market's worries about inflation. However, crude pared gains in the afternoon when a barrel of light sweet crude fell 93 cents to $74.95.

It all led to a frantic day for stock traders.

"It has been pretty volatile as of late, but now fears about a credit crunch are spreading more than they have in the past -- and that's causing this drop," said Matt Kelmon, portfolio manager of the Kelmoore Strategy Funds. "That's hurting the financials, and now energy companies are joining the party because oil is so high. They make up a large part of the S&P 500."

Wall Street, now at the peak of second-quarter earnings season, has been extremely volatile lately. On Thursday, declining issues beat advancers by a 14-to-1 basis on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to a record 5.84 billion shares, up from 4.14 billion on Wednesday.

Both NYSE Group Inc. and Nasdaq Stock Market Inc. reported that their electronic trading systems were functioning normally, and no problems had been reported.

Ford Motor Co. rose 12 cents to $8.09 after it reported cost-cutting and a turnaround in its core automotive operations pushed its second-quarter to a profit. The company had posted seven quarters of losses as it grappled with sluggish sales and a major overhaul of its operations.

The Nasdaq's losses weren't as steep as other major indexes during the session due to strength from Apple Inc., which surged $8.74, or 6.4 percent, to $146. The iPod and iPhone maker's earnings easily surpassed Wall Street projections late Wednesday due to strong sales from its computer offerings.

Home builders sank after several disappointing reports. D.R. Horton fell 32 cents to $17.16 after it posted a fiscal third-quarter loss on charges to write down the value of unsold inventory and deposits on land.

Pulte fell 63 cents, or 3.1 percent, to $20.04 after it posted a second-quarter loss amid the struggling housing market.

New York Stock Exchange: http://www.nyse.com

Nasdaq Stock Market: http://www.nasdaq.com
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070726/wall_street.html?.v=101&printer=1
 
Mortgage concerns hit US markets
US shares have tumbled amid fears that problems in the mortgage market may prompt a global credit crunch.
The main Dow Jones index fell 387.18 points, or 2.8%, to 13,270.68. The S&P shed 3% and the Nasdaq lost 2.2%.

European indexes had slumped earlier after BNP Paribas froze three funds saying the market for some of the assets they contained had disappeared.

At the same time, the European Central Bank said it was pumping money into the banking market to boost liquidity.

There also were reports that the US Federal Reserve was doing something similar to ensure that there was enough cash available for banks to use.

Analysts said that the markets would remain volatile in the near future.

"Markets are taking this latest news seriously with the risk appetite on the back foot," said David Corbell, analyst at IFR Markets.

Spreading out

The latest trigger for the slump was the announcement by BNP Paribas that it was suspending the three investment funds worth 2bn euros (£1.35bn) because of problems with the US sub-prime mortgage sector.

Sub-prime lenders offer loans to consumers with a poor credit history.


You're looking at the foundation of a marketplace that has imploded somewhat
Steve Goldman, Weeden & Co

In recent months, the number of loan defaults has increased because of higher interest rates, raising concerns that the wobble in the housing market will affect other parts of the economy and then start hurting other nations.

The worry is that should banks make losses then it would hurt their earnings and their profitability making them less willing to fund the takeovers and buyouts that have underpinned much of the stock markets' recent gains.

The recent collapse of American Home Mortgage, the 10th largest lender in the US, has intensified those concerns.

"You're looking at the foundation of a marketplace that has imploded somewhat," said Steve Goldman, an analyst at Weeden & Co.

Tighter times

At the same time, banks have suddenly started charging significantly more for the money they lend to each other, signalling that they are looking to limit their risks, analysts said.

In response, the European Central Bank (ECB) said on Thursday that it had pumped 95bn euros into the eurozone banking market to allay fears about a credit crunch and lack of liquidity.


The conditions for the marketplace working through these issues are good
President George W Bush

The move represented the ECB's single largest intervention in the banking sector since the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks on the US in 2001.

Calling it a "fine-tuning operation", the ECB made the money in the form of loans, an offer taken up by 49 banks and other financial institutions.

In the US, the Federal Reserve, also was reported to have taken similar action, pumping about $24bn (£12bn) into the US banking system.

Analysts said that a credit crunch - when it becomes harder for banks, companies and consumers to get access to loans and cash to run their operations - was a serious occurrence that could lead to a recession.

Soothing words?

The declines in the US markets came despite attempts by President George W Bush to calm market fears.

Speaking after a meeting with his top economic advisers, President Bush acknowledged there had been "disquiet" on Wall Street over the housing slump.

But President Bush said he believed the markets were set for a "soft landing".

President Bush said he expected the markets to focus increasingly on the underlying health of the global economy and robust US prospects.

"The underpinnings of our economy are strong," he said, adding that second-quarter growth had been strong, while both inflation and unemployment remained low.

"So the conditions for the marketplace working through these issues are good. My hope is that the market, if it functions normally, will be able to yield a soft landing."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/6938072.stm

Published: 2007/08/09 21:13:32 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 
US lender on brink of bankruptcy
US lender American Home Mortgage has filed for bankruptcy, after laying off the majority of its staff last week.
The demise of one of the country's largest independent home loan providers is the latest case of a business suffering from the US housing slump.

Despite these worries, Wall Street rallied on Monday with leading share indices closing up sharply.

The benchmark Dow Jones industrial average closed up 286.87 points, or 2.1%, at 13,468.78.

Market volatility

The strong gains reflected continued volatility on the markets, the Dow Jones having fallen by a similar amount on Friday.

American Home Mortgage's woes are the lastest to afflict the mortgage investment market.

Earlier this year the firm had over seven thousand employees, but by Friday only 750 staff remained.

Repeated interest rate rises have pushed up loan repayments, leading to a rise in defaults and hitting mortgage lenders hard.

While the sub-prime market - the sector that caters for the riskiest borrowers - has been the most obvious to suffer from defaults, it is not alone.

American Home Mortgage offered loans that were categorised between prime and sub-prime.

It also provided the less common mortgage with adjustable interest rates. Most US mortgages have fixed rates.

As the firm files Chapter 11 proceedings - the US process to seek bankruptcy protection - Deutsche Bank, Wilmington Trust and JP Morgan Chase are American Home Mortgage's three largest creditors.


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/6933336.stm

Published: 2007/08/06 23:12:18 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 
Big US slump ends volatile week
US stock markets fell heavily on Friday after a wild and volatile week.
The Dow Jones, which saw triple digit gains on Wednesday and Thursday, fell by 2.1%, 284.8 points, to 13,178.5. The Nasdaq lost 2.5% to 2,511.25 points.

Selling was driven by continuing concerns over financial institutions, especially sub-prime lenders, and its knock-on effect to the credit market.

A Bear Stearns top executive said that credit markets were in the worst turmoil he had seen in 22 years.

"These times are pretty significant," said Sam Molinaro, the investment bank's chief financial officer.


There is not going to be one sort of clear signal that suggests everything is OK
Mike Malone
Analyst


His comments reinvigorated the market's fears that a credit squeeze will end an era of cheap funding for corporate takeovers.

Despite Friday's heavy falls, the Dow Jones only lost 0.5% over the week.

A week earlier, Wall Street saw its worst five days of trading in four years.

Housing slump widening?

Equity markets have been concerned for some time that the problems affecting the US housing market will grow into a credit crunch that will hit the wider economy.

The sub-prime mortgage market, which offers high interest loans to higher risk customers or people on low incomes, has suffered as the US central bank - like many others - has increased interest rates to curb inflation.

This has resulted in record numbers of defaults in the past year, and dented investor enthusiasm for financial companies that have exposure to the industry.

Higher interest rates have also made it more expensive and thus difficult for private equity groups to continue to finance buyouts.

This has led to concerns that the takeover boom that has been a critical driver of stock market performance over the past few years could fizzle out.

"I think there is a tremendous amount of uncertainty with regard to the credit markets and how the situation will ultimately settle," said Mike Malone, trading analyst at Cowen & Co.


"There is not going to be one sort of clear signal that suggests everything is okay. I think it's going to take time and the equity markets are going to experience heightened volatility."

Shares in big home lenders, including Countrywide Financial and Washington Mutual, fell by more than 6% on Friday

And Accredited Home Mortgages saw its shares fall 31% after it announced plans to close down most of its operations, making it one of the biggest casualties of the US housing slump.

Its problems suggest the housing slump is widening because it is not a sub-prime lender.

Global markets have all seen volatility in the past fortnight.

The London market beat a retreat on Friday as weaker-than-expected US employment figures concerned traders.

The FTSE 100 index closed down 1.2% at 6,224.3 while French and German markets fell by similar number of percentage points.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/6930654.stm

Published: 2007/08/03 21:51:22 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 
MSNBC.com
Stock prices tumble on credit concerns
Dow falls 387 points; French bank's move help fuels 'mini-panic'
The Associated Press
Updated: 7:38 p.m. ET Aug 9, 2007
NEW YORK - Wall Street plunged again Thursday after a French bank said it was freezing three funds that invested in U.S. subprime mortgages because it was unable to properly value their assets. The Dow Jones industrials extended its series of triple-digit swings, this time falling more than 380 points.

The announcement by BNP Paribas raised the specter of a widening impact of U.S. credit market problems. The idea that anyone — institutions, investors, companies, individuals — can’t get money when they need it unnerved a stock market that has suffered through weeks of volatility triggered by concerns about tight credit and bad subprime mortgages.

A move by the European Central Bank to provide more cash to money markets intensified Wall Street’s angst. Although the bank’s loan of more than $130 billion in overnight funds to banks at a low rate of 4 percent was intended to calm investors, Wall Street saw it as confirmation of the credit markets’ problems. It was the ECB’s biggest injection ever.

The Federal Reserve added a larger-than-normal $24 billion in temporary reserves to the U.S. banking system.

The concerns that arose in Europe and spilled onto Wall Street underscored the potential worldwide ramifications of an implosion of some subprime loans. The growing problems undermined arguments that strength in the global economy could help keep profit growing among large U.S. companies that do business overseas.

The ECB’s injection of money into the system was unprecedented move, said Joseph V. Battipaglia, chief investment officer at Ryan Beck & Co., adding that it shows that problems in subprime lending are, in fact, spilling into the general economy.

“This is a mini-panic,” he said. “All the things that had been denied up until this point are unraveling. On top of this, retail sales were mediocre, which shows that indeed, the housing collapse is affecting the consumer.”

Retailers released July sales figures Thursday that were generally disappointing.

The Fed didn’t soften its stance on inflation after leaving short-term interest rates unchanged Tuesday. However, the renewed credit market concerns spurred bond traders to put more money on the idea that the Fed will cut rates at its meeting next month.

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow fell 387.18, or 2.83 percent, to 13,270.68.

Thursday’s pullback continued an erratic pattern of triple-digit moves in the Dow since the index closed at a record 14,001.41 on July 19. Eleven of the 15 ensuing sessions have ended in a triple-digit gain or loss. Gains have been evaporating at the first mention of trouble in housing, subprime lending or the credit markets.

With Thursday’s decline, the Dow is about 730 points, or 5.2 percent, below its record close. Some experts have been calling for a textbook correction — a pullback of at least 10 percent.

Bonds rose sharply as investors again sought the relative safety of Treasury securities, pushing down the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to 4.79 percent from 4.89 percent late Wednesday.

The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 44.40, or 2.96 percent, to 1,453.09, ending a three-day advance that had been the best in nearly five years.

Thursday's pullback was the biggest point drop and percentage loss for both the Dow and the S&P since a market pullback on Feb. 27, that also owed in part to concerns about subprime loans.

The Nasdaq composite index fell 56.49, or 2.16 percent, to 2,556.49.

Investors began to head for the exits after France's BNP Paribas Investment Partners said it was suspending three funds worth a total of about $3.79 billion and wouldn’t make investor redemptions until it could determine net asset values.


The funds invest in part in subprime mortgages through a process known as securitization. Investment banks bundle together mortgages — including those from subprime borrowers — and sell them off to investors such as hedge funds, mutual funds and other institutional investors. Buyers of such securities are seeking the steady flow of income from homeowners making their mortgage payments.

Shares of financial companies, which investors have fled recently amid lending concerns, took another beating. Citigroup Inc. fell 5 percent, as did fellow Dow component JPMorgan Chase & Co.

In another sign of credit market trouble, Home Depot Inc. warned that the sale of its wholesale business might bring in less than expected. Home Depot fell $1.66, or 4.4 percent, to $36.14, and was the worst performer of the 30 Dow components.


But American International Group Inc., one of the world’s largest insurers, reassured investors that it remains comfortable with its exposure to the subprime lending market as an investor, lender and mortgage insurer. AIG, which reported a 34 percent jump in second-quarter profit late Wednesday, said it has enough cash and liquidity and “does not need to liquidate any investment securities in a chaotic market.”


The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices fell. Crude oil fell 56 cents to $71.59 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange’s volatility index, often called the “fear index,” hit its highest level since April 2003.

European stocks plunged. Britain’s FTSE 100 lost 1.92 percent, Germany’s DAX index fell 2.00 percent, and France’s CAC-40 fell 2.17 percent after being down more than 3 percent.

Japan’s Nikkei stock average rose 0.83 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.43 percent.


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MSNBC.com
Central banks pump cash to calm markets
Fed adds a larger-than-normal $24 billion in temporary reserves
Reuters
Updated: 4:02 p.m. ET Aug 9, 2007
OTTAWA/FRANKFURT - Major central banks swept in to calm credit markets spooked by mounting losses on Thursday, with the European Central Bank injecting record amounts of cash to prevent the financial system from seizing up.

President George W. Bush also sought to calm fears that a credit market squeeze would shake economic growth, telling a news conference both the global and U.S. economy were strong.

“I’m told there is enough liquidity in the system to enable markets to correct,” Bush said.

The Bank of Canada said it was in contact with other central banks on the global situation and stood ready to add money as needed.

The European Central Bank pumped a record 94.8 billion euros ($130.6 billion) into Europe’s money markets as banks scrambled for cash after France’s biggest listed bank, BNP Paribas, froze withdrawals from three funds. It cited U.S. subprime mortgage market problems.

Another European fund valued at 750 million euros was frozen too, and a Dutch bank pulled its planned new listing after suffering subprime losses.

The U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Canada both pumped in money through regular operations aimed at bringing benchmark overnight interest rates back to target. The Fed injected $24 billion and the Bank of Canada C$1.64 billion ($1.55 billion) — in both cases more than normal, but amounts analysts said did not reflect an emergency injection of liquidity.

Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners in Greenwich, Connecticut, said the Fed injection of funds was a normal response to funds trading above target. Strong demand had pushed the federal funds rate up to 5.5 percent, above the 5.25 percent Fed target, but it retreated to 5.438 percent.

“It’s a mini-panic, and we are seeing demand for short-term credit,” he said. “We are not seeing a so-called 'credit crunch' in the U.S. money market.”

Nonetheless, U.S. interest rate swaps, a measure of market risk appetite, widened sharply on renewed credit worries. Stocks fell and investors piled into the safety of bonds, pushing down the yield on U.S. Treasuries and European government debt.

In Europe, traders said cash markets were seizing up until the ECB acted. “There appears to be a dash for cash both in dollars and in euros,” said Nick Parsons, head of market strategy at nabCapital in London.

The ECB tried to calm markets by injecting the largest amount of money ever in a single operation, saying “the aim was to assure orderly conditions in the euro money market.” It routinely holds quick market operations when there is a cash imbalance but not since after the U.S. terror attacks in 2001 has the size neared Thursday’s level.

The BNP problems had sent jitters through European markets already rife with rumors of worsening troubles in Germany. The Bundesbank hosted a meeting with banks involved in the rescue of Europe’s highest profile subprime victim yet, lender IKB, to arrange details of its 3.5 billion euro bailout.

“Nobody wants to lend any money. It’s safety first.” said Karen Birzler, a money market trader at HVB in Munich.

The cost for banks to borrow money overnight in the euro one, the world’s second largest economic region, shot up to 4.62 percent, the highest since shortly after the 2001 U.S. attacks, and above the ECB’s 4 percent target.

Only when the ECB offered banks extra cash to assure orderly conditions did rates return to normal.

Watching the Fed
A Zurich-based money market trader called market conditions ”crazy” since Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has given no signal of concern that credit markets could undo the real economy.

“The market is acting like a yo-yo. It’s all very psychological. The possibility of a credit crunch returning is starting to spook everyone,” he said.

A rates strategist at a large European bank in London said that fear of a scarcity of liquidity, whether irrational or otherwise, was taking hold.

“It’s about lines of credit, fear that credit lines will be called and institutions will have to make money available to others who are facing big credit-related losses,” he said.

U.S. dollar deposit rates for tomorrow/next day delivery surged by more than half a point, before easing back. It was the first time since December 2000 they had jumped over half a point in a single day, according to Reuters data.

The scramble for cash forced traders to unwind so-called carry trades, where low-yielding currencies are sold to finance purchases of higher yielding assets. This sparked a broad-based yen rally, but the surge in short-term dollar deposit rates lent the dollar support against most other major currencies.

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BNP Paribas freezes funds over subprime
Issues in mortgage sector preventing calculation the funds’ value
The Associated Press
Updated: 7:45 a.m. ET Aug 9, 2007
PARIS - A major French bank, BNP Paribas, announced Thursday that it was suspending three of its asset-backed securities funds, saying it could no longer value them accurately because of problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market.

The announcement by the bank’s BNP Paribas Investment Partners unit sent shock waves through an already sensitive money market.

The bank, France’s largest bank by market value, said it was suspending three funds worth a total of 2 billion euros ($2.75 billion): Parvest Dynamic ABS, BNP Paribas ABS Euribor and BNP Paribas ABS Eonia. All funds combined at BNP Paribas Investment Partners are worth more than 350 billion euros ($482.79 billion).

“The complete evaporation of liquidity in certain market segments of the U.S. securitization market has made it impossible to value certain assets fairly regardless of their quality or credit rating,” BNP Paribas SA said in a statement.

“The situation is such that it is no longer possible to value fairly the underlying U.S. ABS assets in the three above-mentioned funds” and “therefore unable to calculate a reliable net asset value, NAV, for the funds,” the company said.

Defaults on subprime loans, or those made to people with poor credit, have climbed sharply in recent months and have triggered concern about the impact on credit markets worldwide. BNP’s announcement sent European stock markets lower and stirred concerns that problems among subprime borrowers would further roil markets.

“Who knows where the subprime story is going to pop up again,” said Adam Cole of RBC Capital Markets.

BNP Paribas shares dropped Thursday.

When the bank posted second-quarter results last week, Chief Executive Baudouin Prot assured investors the bank would be virtually untouched by the plummeting valuation of some subprime mortgage portfolios in the U.S. because it has little exposure to the market.

BNP’s actions come amid a panic period and the prices of assets remain volatile, said Celent analyst Cubillas Ding.

“Securitized assets that have underpinnings in the U.S. subprime market may now be difficult to put a price tag on given market sentiment — as there is still lingering uncertainty whether the meltdown has greater knock-on effects down the line,” he said.

Germany’s financial watchdog, BaFin, said Thursday it has yet to see any firm reason to examine the extent of that nation’s banks’ exposure to the U.S. subprime market.

This week WestLB Mellon Asset Management, the asset management joint venture of German state bank WestLB AG and The Bank of New York Mellon Corp., suspended redemptions from its asset-backed securities ABS Fund, which is part of the West LB Mellon Compass Fund.

WestLB AG denied speculation on Thursday that it is facing a fund liquidity problem.

Other companies, including Union Investment Asset Management, a German mutual fund manager, and Frankfurt Trust, a unit of BHF-Bank, have also halted redemptions.

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(July 9 report on Boeing)

MSNBC.com
Boeing's party is over; now it's crunch time
Will aviation giant's 787 gamble finally pay off?
ANALYSIS
By Karen West
MSNBC contributor
Updated: 8:25 a.m. ET July 9, 2007
EVERETT, Wash. - For a few, high-profile hours on Sunday, Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner captured the world’s attention as it was unveiled during a multimedia extravaganza. Like a newly crowned beauty queen, the revolutionary commercial jet basked in the global spotlight, giving millions of people a peek at aviation’s future.

But as soon as the sun set on Dreamfest '07, assembly workers rolled the airplane back into Boeing’s massive aircraft factory and rolled up their sleeves for 24/7 rework. What the world didn’t see under the plane’s shiny new paint job, were the 1,000 temporary fasteners that need to be replaced, its half-empty belly that still needs to be stuffed with 60 miles of wiring or the avionics systems that still need to be installed and tested.

While most new airplanes are rarely ready to fly when they are first “rolled out,” the 787 rework illustrates the tremendous pressure Boeing is under to get its airplane ready for first flight in late August, certification test flights this fall and commercial service in May 2008 with All Nippon Airways of Japan.

Boeing executives insist the 787 program is on schedule, despite persistent weight issues and early manufacturing snafus. “We have no intentions to be late into service,’’ Boeing 787 chief Mike Bair told reporters Friday during a “rollout” briefing in Seattle.

The stakes have never been higher for Boeing, which has pushed the envelope many times in its 91-year history. The 787 is a $10 billion gamble to reinforce the company’s standing as the world’s most innovative and successful builder of commercial airplanes.

Boeing claims to be holding a winning hand. And with more than $110 billion worth of airline endorsements, it’s hard for giddy executives to maintain a poker face.

On Saturday, Germany’s Air Berlin made a $4 billion order for 25 Dreamliners. As of today, 787 has already racked up a record 677 orders from 47 airlines, making it the biggest selling new commercial jet in history – and it hasn’t even flown yet. The plane, which sells for between $146 million to $200 million, is sold out until 2014.

Despite the unprecedented enthusiasm, Boeing is far from cashing in on the 787. Executives, who just hours ago were popping the champagne, are now working around the clock to turn their Dreamliner into a flying reality – and do it under rigorous and tight deadlines.


“It’s a painful process but we have to go through it,’’ says Bair, 787 vice president and general manager, of the aggressive flight test program that will use six test airplanes. “We know we are going to find issues. You always have challenges when you have a program this complicated going together in what is really kind of record time.”

The TV cameras might be turned off, but the 787 is now under the microscope of federal aviation regulators, anxious airline customers, shareholders and the flying public. Boeing still needs to prove to the world that the new, mostly plastic airplane can fly higher, faster, farther and less expensive than its aluminum predecessors and competitors.


Much of Boeing’s success lies in its more than 50 suppliers and partners that are working 24 hours a day at 135 sites on four continents to design and build 787 parts.

Boeing has rewritten aviation history with the 787. Just about every aspect of the plane is new, including the way it is designed and built to the material used to build it. For the 787, Boeing is leading a team of international partners who are shouldering production and design work – including its long-coveted wings and fuselage – in addition to sharing in the financial risk.

It’s the company’s first all-new commercial jetliner since the twin-engine 777 rolled out in 1994 and is Boeing’s first passenger airplane built primarily of man-made carbon-fiber reinforced plastic, known as composite.

Because composites are lightweight and don’t corrode or fatigue the way metal does, Boeing says the 787 will use 20 percent less fuel and will be 30 percent less expensive to maintain.

Jeff Hawk, Boeing’s director of certification for the 787, told reporters that the 787 is 65 percent more fuel efficient than the 707, which ushered in the jet age in the 1950s.

Those claims have caught the attention of cash-strapped airlines worldwide.

“This is a technology-breaking aircraft,’’ Qantas CEO Geoff Dixon, in Seattle for the 787 rollout, said during Friday’s media briefing.

Other airline executives, including the CEOs of Air India and Shanghai Airlines, told reporters they chose the 787 because it is a mid-size airplane that offers “big-jet ranges” and flexibility in route planning.

Those words are golden to Boeing, which lost a lot of credibility in the aerospace industry just a few years ago when it decided against developing a super-jumbo jet to counter Airbus Industrie’s double-decker A380.

Unlike Airbus’ view of future air travel, Boeing set its sights on a smaller, mid-size, “point-to-point” airplane that could fly direct, non-stop flights between more cities throughout the world.


For Boeing executives, it came down to a choice: speed or efficiency. They had to decide whether to build the Sonic Cruiser that flew non-stop to more city pairs 20 percent faster than any other airplane, or an airplane that flew non-stop to more places with 20 percent less fuel burn than any other airplane. The decision, announced in 2003, was the 7E7 (E for efficiency), which was later renamed 787 Dreamliner.

“This airplane is very much the son of the Sonic Cruiser,’’ Bair said during the media briefing. “We took all the technology of the Sonic Cruiser and put it into the 787.’’

Today, analysts who were speculating that Boeing’s commercial aircraft days were numbered are saying the company placed the right bet in the 787.

“It has essentially turned around the fortunes of the company,’’ says Forecast International analyst Ray Jaworowski.

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