vineri, 27 iunie 2008

The price of oil has exceeded 141 U.S. dollars per barrel


The price of oil on the U.S. market reached a new historical record of 141.71 dollars per barrel. President of the Organization of Petroleum Countries Exportatoare, Chakib Khelil, says that in this rate in summer barilul of crude oil will reach 170 dollars.

In a television interview for France 24, the OPEC official said that the price of black gold will be in the range of 150-170 U.S. dollars per barrel in the period ahead. It is possible however that these tempereze Inflation is the last part of the year.

Chakib Khelil said that devaluing dolarului is the main reason for scumpirea oil, and the problems of supply and demand does not explain developments in the last period.

joi, 26 iunie 2008

NYSE Euronext quarterly profit climbs to 156 million U.S. dollars as a result of increasing transactions


Operator fellow transatlantic NYSE Euronext announced an increase in profit for the fourth quarter, benefiting from an increase in trading activity.
Parent company operator fellow New York Stock Exchange announced that in the fourth quarter, profit climbed to 156 million U.S. dollars (59 cents / Action), compared with net profit of 45 million U.S. dollars (29 cents / Action), recorded in same period last year, before the merger with Euronext.
Câştigurile ajustate, care exclud cheltuielile de fuziune şi pentru alte operaţiuni, sunt prezentate ca şi cum tranzacţia Euronext a avut loc la începutul celui de-al patrulea trimestru al anului trecut şi însumează 66 cenţi/acţiune, faţă de 47 cenţi/acţiune în aceeaşi perioadă a anului trecut. Adjusted earnings, excluding merger costs and other operations are presented as if the Euronext transaction took place at the beginning of the fourth quarter of last year and sums 66 cents / share, versus 47 cents / action in the same period last year. Potrivit estimărilor Reuters, analiştii se aşteptau la un câştig trimestrial de 67 cenţi/acţiune. According to Reuters estimates, analysts are waiting at a quarterly earnings of 67 cents / share. Compania a mai anunţat că volumele de tranzacţionare au urcat în ianuarie atât în cadrul operaţiunilor din Statele Unite cât şi în Europa. The company announced in May that trading volumes have climbed in January in the operations in the United States and in Europe. NYSE Euronext a mai anunţat că pieţele financiare europene au înregistrat în ianuarie cea mai puternică activitate din istorie, tranzacţiile urcând cu 80% faţă de anul anterior, la 41,5 milioane dolari, în timp ce bursele americane au înregistrat o creştere de 40%, la 3,9 miliarde dolari. NYSE Euronext has also announced that European financial markets have seen in January the strongest activity in history, urcând transactions with 80% versus the previous year at 41.5 million U.S. dollars, while U.S. exchanges have registered an increase of 40% at 3.9 billion U.S. dollars. Volumele de produse derivate tranzacţionate au crescut cu 61% în Europa şi 98% în Statele Unite, a mai transmis NYSE Euronext. Volumes of derivatives traded increased by 61% in Europe and 98% in the United States, sent May NYSE Euronext.

Vienna Stock Exchange will still buy 25.2% of the Budapest Stock Exchange

Vienna Stock Exchange will purchase the package of shares of 25.2% owned by UniCredit Scholarship in Budapest. Astfel participaţia Wiener Borse la operatorul de pe piaţa de capital ungară se ridică la 37,7%. Such participation Wiener Borse operator at the Hungarian capital market amounted to 37.7%.

Wiener Börse is part of an Austrian consortium of companies including Oesterreichische Kontrollbank, Erste and Raiffeisen Zentralbank Group, the consortium that owns 68.8% of the capital of Budapest Stock Exchange. La sfârşitul lunii mai erau listate 43 de companii la Bursa de Valori Budapesta iar capitalizarea pieţei era de 28,45 miliarde de EUR. At the end of May were 43 listed companies at Budapest Stock Exchange and the market capitalization was 28.45 billion EUR.

FED decision 25.06 ...

FED decision dominated the first pages of the newspaper business, Anglo American remains firmly against the investment positions of Zimbabwe, the sale of Postbank could take place more quickly than most analysts believed, the holder of the legendary Budweiser brand is preparing to reject the hostile bid from the capable belgienilor from InBev, the pressure on Bradford and Bingley are rising after a failed round of negotiations and according to the daily Handelsblatt, Siemens could redundant 15,000 employees! These are some of the international press headlines today.

FED remain in the positions while Trichet indicated an interest rate increase, titrează Financial Times. In comments on the sidelines of the decision, alleging the Federal Reserve to address concerns of inflation, but not identified inflation as the dominant risk. FED's reserves the option to expensive credit in the near future, but at this point forward if no one will do or not. According to expectations, interest landmark in the United States remained unchanged at 2 percent. Following the decision, action on U.S. exchanges were appreciated, the market is interpreting that Federal Reserve interest rate increase is not considered a priority at this time. Dollar lost ground against the euro and closed at 1.5665. Communication brings an improvement in the terms used in the last period on the sidelines of the state economy: economic activity expands further, partly reflecting a consolidation of some consumer spending. " Meanwhile, European Central Bank president, Jean-Calude Trichet expressed concern about inflation and massive wage increases. He cimentat so convinced that the ECB will increase key interest rates 0.25%, at the next monetary policy meeting. European Central Bank officials are aşteapta that inflation in the euro area, which has reached the maximum past 16 years, respectively 3.7 percent in May, to keep high the following period.


From the economic daily The Guardian hear that Anglo American is not deviate from the position taken in the case of investment in Zimbabwe. Gigantul mining insists the controversial decision to invest hundreds of millions of pounds sterling in a platinum mine in Zimbabwe, despite harsh ciriticilor coming from all over the world. Company representatives said that, in the long term, people will benefit from the project. "Responsible development of the Unki mine will generate a viable business in the long term that will have an important contribution to the country's economic future", described in a communication of Anglo American.

"Sale of Deutsche Post, a final step," titrează Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. According to the notice of the concern aseară parent Deutsche Post, Postbank chief, Woflgang Klein resigned as the State Board of the German Post. Moving is likely to avoid potential conflicts of interest that might arise from this dual quality. Klein retains his role as chairman of the Board of Trustees of the bank. According to analysts, the resignation would indicate that negotiations for a possible takeover of the bank entered into a straight line. Speculaţiile were largely confirmed by the German Post. From communicated hear that the discussions with tenderers are in an advanced stage.

Anheuser is preparing to reject the offer InBev, titrează cotdianul The Wall Street Journal. The U.S. move into defensive position against the hostile takeover bid of belgienilor from InBev. According to sources close to the situation in the following days we might assist in a spectacular confrontation between the two giganţi in beer. According to the same sources, believes that Americans offer subevaluează much Budweiser and the manufacturer intends to propose as soon as possible a plan of their own restructuring. The plan would consist of the sale of assets not related to business basics. These include several thematic parks. The sale, Anheuser could impetus to the value of shares on the exchange. Totşi It is unlikely that this strategy and to determine those from InBev to waive takeover plan. The company with headquarters in Leuven, Belgium, could address directly to shareholders. In such a scenario, the Americans would remain very little room for manoeuvre

"Resolution puts pressure on Bradgord and Bingley," hear from the economic daily The Times. Clive Cowdery's Fund, one of the shareholders of activists from B and B, puts pressure on mortgage creditor for it to provide unlimited access to the accounts. After a day of tense negotiations, the talks have failed, the backdrop of concerns Resolution under which it intends to take total control of the Bradford and Bingley. Following negotiations, Resolution, which enjoys advice from Lazard, has published the full details of the proposed infuziei, worth 400 million pounds sterling. Moving was likely to raise awareness on iotecare British bank shareholders.

Siemens could 15,000 redundant employees, titrează Handelsblattîn exclusivity. Restructuring measures could be much tougher than originally expected. Trade unions are placed in the hands speculation according to which, german engineering concern could disponibiliza between 10,000 and 15,000 employees. Staff reductions could occur both on the administration and the distribution. Cotidianul german sitează sources within the trade unions. Currently, Siemens is working for 435,000 people globally. Approximately one third of them operating in Germanny.

marți, 10 iunie 2008

Oil futures reclaim $135 as output concerns persists....

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Crude-oil futures climbed Tuesday to reclaim the $135-a-barrel level, rebounding after a steep decline in the previous session as traders weighed concerns about global production against expectations for a slowdown in demand.


"The familiar divide -- higher on supply worries, lower on demand concerns -- is setting the tone again," said Michael Fitzpatrick, an analyst at MF Global, in a note to clients.
Crude oil for July delivery climbed as high as $137.98 a barrel in electronic trading on Globex. It's pulled back a bit to trade at $135.34, up 99 cents on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
The secretary general of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Abdalla Salem el-Badri, told Reuters Tuesday at the Reuters Global Energy Summit that the record-high oil price was "unbearable" and "there is no shortage now and in the future."
"We are not happy with the current level of price for one reason. It has nothing to do with the fundamentals," he said at the summit.
El-Badri also told Dow Jones on Tuesday that OPEC didn't plan to move against speculators that it blames for the record surge in oil prices.
He said the oil cartel has "very reasonable" spare capacity of 3 million barrels a day, according to a Dow Jones report.
Reports of more violence in oil-rich Nigeria helped support oil prices Tuesday. The BBC reported that Nigerian militants have killed a sailor in the second attack on navy ships patrolling the Niger Delta region. Four people were injured in the attack on a ship protecting a vessel belonging to Canadian company Addax Petroleum, the BBC reported.
"There are a lot of little stories that got the market a little nervous," said Phil Flynn, vice president at Alaron Trading in Chicago. "It's very sensitive and ready to run up."
On Monday, crude dropped $4.19 to close at $134.35 a barrel on the Nymex after touching a low of $133.95. The decline followed oil's unprecedented surge of nearly $11 a barrel to record levels on Friday.
IEA cuts demand forecast
Oil prices rebounded Tuesday even as the International Energy Agency lowered its forecast for average global oil product demand in 2008 to 86.8 million barrels a day, down 80,000 barrels a day from its estimate last month.
The decline followed the reduction of price subsidies in several countries which are not part of the group of industrialized nations called the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the IEA said. Global oil supply rebounded in the May report by 490,000 barrels a day to average 86.6 million barrels a day, boosted by higher OPEC crude supply.
The increase, however, follows extensive downward revisions to first-quarter non-OPEC production. OECD oil stocks fell 8.1 million barrels in April to 2.562 billion, "in stark contrast to the typical build," IEA said. Total oil cover remains "above average" at 53.4 days, IEA said.
The IEA "which cut its demand growth the slowest rate since 2002, also cut expectations for supply growth, as well," said Fitzpatrick.
OECD stocks fell at a time when they should be building, he said. "So, while market participants are starting to recognize that economic deterioration has begun, supply may be stretched more than producers contend," he said.
Bigger Picture
Taking a look at the bigger picture, "it is becoming more clear each day that under current conditions, we are peaking in oil production worldwide," said Charles Perry, president of Perry Management, an energy-consulting firm.
"The U.S. is essentially shut down on any further oil development, but the world['s] government-owned oil companies are not doing a good job in managing their production so [there's] not much possible for new production," he said.
Still, there's "a lot of potential if it is unleashed," including the potential for the U.S. to open up ANWR, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, he said.
In the meantime, prices for petroleum products edged higher to follow crude Tuesday. July reformulated gasoline rose 2 cents at $3.419 a gallon and July heating oil gained 5 cents at $3.923 a gallon.
The average retail prices in the U.S. for a gallon of regular gasoline surpassed $4 on Sunday for the first time ever. See full story. It stood at $4.043 on Tuesday, 31.2% higher than a year ago, according to AAA's Daily Fuel Gauge Report.
In a weekly report, the Energy Information Administration, the reporting arm of the Energy Department, said the average retail price for a gallon of regular gasoline climbed to $4.039 for the week ended June 9. That's up over 12% from the week ended April 28.
The energy market looked ahead to Wednesday's data on petroleum supplies from the EIA. Analysts at MF Global expect the data to show that crude supplies fell 600,000 barrels for the week ended June 6. Distillates likely rose by 1.1 million, while motor gasoline inventories likely rose by 300,000 barrels, they said.
Analysts polled by Platts expect to see a decline of 1.4 million barrels in crude supplies as well as increases in distillates of 1.7 million and gasoline of 1.1 million. The survey also showed that the market's expecting a rise in refinery utilization of 0.6% to 90.3% of capacity for last week.
July natural gas futures tacked on 7 cents to $12.675 per million British thermal units, after trading as high as $12.68. The EIA's update on natural-gas supplies will be released on Thursday.
Rounding out Tuesday's trading, energy equities edged lower. The Amex Natural Gas Index ($XNG:
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$XNG, , ) shed 0.8% to 738.10. See Energy Stocks.
Prices for gold futures dropped on the heels of a stronger U.S. dollar. See Metals Stocks.
Myra P. Saefong is MarketWatch's assistant markets editor, based in San Francisco.Polya Lesova is a MarketWatch reporter based in New York.

miercuri, 4 iunie 2008

CORRECTED - CORRECTED-UPDATE 2-Apple teams up with Softbank to sell iPhone i

TOKYO, June 4 (Reuters) - Apple Inc (AAPL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) will launch its popular iPhone in Japan this year, entering one of the world's most advanced mobile phone markets by teaming up with Softbank Corp (9984.T: Quote, Profile, Research), the country's aggressive No.3 operator.

The deal was announced by Softbank, which bought Vodafone Group's (VOD.L: Quote, Profile, Research) troubled Japan unit in 2006 and is still a long way behind market leaders NTT DoCoMo Inc (9437.T: Quote, Profile, Research) and KDDI Corp (9433.T: Quote, Profile, Research), although its share is steadily growing thanks to quirky marketing and price cutting.

Apple is widely expected to announce a new generation iPhone next week, with analysts betting it will have high-speed 3G data capability -- a much more competitive product in Japan where mobiles are used as much for Web browsing and email as they are for talking. [ID:nN02319008]

DoCoMo, which controls just under half Japan's mobile market, has also sought Apple's gadget for its customers and it was not immediately clear if Softbank would have exclusive sales rights.

"The key question is if the agreement would be exclusive and what kind of (revenue-sharing) agreement Softbank has entered with Apple," Macquarie analyst Nathan Ramler said.

"Apple typically goes with exclusive agreements, so chances are that this will also be exclusive."

Apple's iPod music player is widely used in Japan but some analysts doubt the iPhone will be as popular, given the advanced state of the mobile market.

The device allows Internet access and plays music, but most mobile phones in Japan have those functions and more -- such as TV viewing and video downloads. The iPhone would be a hard-sell especially if the price is high, they say.

"It's very rare that something popular in the U.S. comes to Japan and captures that much demand here," Shinko Securities analyst Tomohiko Okugawa said.

"Japanese consumers tend to stick to what they liked first ... It will need to offer something new and surprising to be a hit in Japan."

Softbank spokesman Fumihiro Ito said he did not have further details on the deal. Apple Japan spokesman Takashi Takebayashi also said he did not know any more details.

DoCoMo spokesman Shuichiro Ichikoshi said the company has not heard back from Apple after talks to sell iPhones. (Additional reporting by Mayumi Negishi; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Rodney Joyce)

2nd UPDATE: Softbank To Sell Apple's iPhone In Japan This Year

General Motors posted a sales drop of about 27% from a year earlier and said it would close four truck plants, prepare its Hummer brand for a possible sale and focus on making smaller cars. Chrysler's 25.4% sales decline put it behind Honda in monthly sales for the first time.

And, after 17 years, Ford's F-Series trucks were dethroned from the top sales position, falling to No. 5 behind the Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla, Toyota Camry and Honda Accord.

"I think it's a watershed moment," said Jim Farley, head of marketing at Ford.

For the month, overall vehicle sales in the U.S. were 1.4 million, down 8.4% from a year earlier, according to Autodata Corp. Based on the May sales rate, the industry is on pace to sell just 14.3 million vehicles this year in the U.S. In 2007, total sales were 16.1 million.

For nearly a decade, Americans bought more light trucks -- a segment that includes pickups, SUVs and minivans -- than cars. But starting in March, cars edged ahead. The gap widened in April, and in May, 193,559 more cars than light trucks were sold.

"The market has shifted dramatically from large gas-guzzling vehicles to smaller, fuel-efficient vehicles," said Dennis Virag, president of Automotive Consulting Group in Ann Arbor, Mich.

GM in May saw a 37% decline in light truck and SUV sales and its share of the overall U.S. market dropped below 20%, a new low for the automotive giant that in 1980 had 45% of the U.S. market.

GM Chairman Rick Wagoner said the company believed that American consumers were shifting permanently from SUVs toward smaller vehicles. He said the company's board had greenlighted production of a new small car in an Ohio factory and of its Volt electric vehicle -- set to debut in 2010 -- in Detroit.

"We at GM don't think this is a spike or a temporary shift," Wagoner said in a conference call before the company's annual shareholder meeting in Wilmington, Del.

It was a different story for many Asian automakers.

The fuel-efficient Honda Civic compact had a record month with 53,299 sold, a 38.5% increase from May 2007. It and other small cars including the Fit helped Honda, which sells very few light trucks and and is heavy with fuel-efficient cars, post a 15.6% increase in vehicles sold for the month.

Hyundai, Mazda, Kia and Subaru posted sales increases for the month. So did Nissan, which saw an 8.4% increase in sales, driven by a 43% burst from its Altima sedan, which like the Civic comes as a hybrid as well as a traditional drivetrain. But Nissan's results were pulled down by a lineup that includes large SUVs such as the Armada, whose sales fell 52%, and the Titan full-size pickup, which was down 56%.

The difficulties of that delicate balancing act between cars and light trucks was perhaps best illustrated by Toyota, which had a 4.3% decline in sales for the month despite a mix of cars that includes the popular Yaris, Camry, Corolla and Matrix models. The drag, in the Japanese automaker's case, was the trucks and full-sized SUVs it makes in the U.S.

"All of our previous assumptions on the full-sized pickup truck segment are off the table," said Bob Carter, head of Toyota's U.S. sales unit.

Of the many models crippling GM sales, the worst have borne the Hummer nameplate. In May, Hummer purchases declined 60%, and through the first five months of the year it is the marque that has slipped the most, down 36%, placing it behind brands such as Chrysler, Bentley and even Maybach. The Hummer H3 gets an average of 15 miles per gallon, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

"At this point, we are considering all options for the Hummer brand," Wagoner said. "Everything from a complete revamp of the product lineup to partial or complete sale of the brand."

No possible buyer has been named for the division, which was for a few years -- when gasoline cost less than $3 a gallon -- one of GM's best-performing. Last week, GM's stock hit a 26-year low, falling to $17.38. In trading on Tuesday, GM shares rose 14 cents, to $17.58.

At Tuesday's shareholder meeting, speakers criticized Wagoner for what they called his excessive compensation in light of the company's poor performance. According to one calculation, GM's chairman received compensation worth nearly $16 million last year, up from $9.6 million in 2006. Nevertheless, a measure to tie executive pay to performance was defeated at the meeting.

Besides Hummer, another SUV brand that has been rumored to be on the block is Jeep, considered the one salable product among the holdings of cash-starved Chrysler. The privately held automaker has repeatedly denied that it intends to sell Jeep, but analysts say it ought to have considered that option some time ago. Jeep's top-selling vehicle, the Wrangler, gets an average of 18 mpg.

"Chrysler should have sold it two years ago," analyst Virag said. "Today, Jeep is seen as a portfolio of products that are pretty inefficient."

After years of juicy profits from light trucks, all three U.S. automakers are scrambling to shift production toward cars.

GM said Tuesday that it would close plants in Oshawa, Canada; Moraine, Ohio; Janesville, Wis., and Toluca, Mexico. Several thousand jobs could be affected. Those plants are responsible for pickup trucks and SUVs such as the Chevrolet Silverado, the GMC Envoy and the medium-duty Chevy Kodiak and are expected to end production no later than the end of 2009.

Sales at Ford fell 15.6% in May, buoyed a bit by a 3% gain in its sales of cars such as the popular Focus. Last month, Ford said that it would cut worker shifts and total production at a handful of plants that make its largest SUVs and pickup trucks, and that it would produce the subcompact Fiesta in a plant outside Mexico City that currently makes the F-series pickup.

Even Chrysler, which of all carmakers has the product mix most heavily slanted toward light trucks, with 71% of its vehicles sold through May falling into that category, is looking to cars. In April, it announced that Nissan would produce a small car for it, while Chrysler would make trucks for Nissan in a Mexico factory.

Still, some worry that Detroit's newfound love of small cars could backfire because of the sheer size and inertia inherent in such large operations.

"Oftentimes what we see from Detroit is an overreaction too late," said Wes Brown, principal of Los Angeles marketing research firm Iceology. "They make seismic shifts to react to what the market is doing today, and by the time they get the product to market, the market has moved on."

Pickup truck, SUV sales run out of gas

Demand for the huge autos drops in May as cars zoom off lots.

month of gasoline prices near $4 a gallon was enough to sour Americans' long love affair with trucks and sport utility vehicles, pushing them back into sedans -- and driving Detroit's automakers into deeper trouble.

U.S. sales results released Tuesday showed cars outselling gas-guzzling trucks and SUVs by almost 200,000 in May -- the biggest margin since 1996. That was bad news for U.S. automakers, whose lineups are heavily skewed toward large, inefficient vehicles, but a boon to their car-focused Asian rivals.
General Motors posted a sales drop of about 27% from a year earlier and said it would close four truck plants, prepare its Hummer brand for a possible sale and focus on making smaller cars. Chrysler's 25.4% sales decline put it behind Honda in monthly sales for the first time.

And, after 17 years, Ford's F-Series trucks were dethroned from the top sales position, falling to No. 5 behind the Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla, Toyota Camry and Honda Accord.

"I think it's a watershed moment," said Jim Farley, head of marketing at Ford.

For the month, overall vehicle sales in the U.S. were 1.4 million, down 8.4% from a year earlier, according to Autodata Corp. Based on the May sales rate, the industry is on pace to sell just 14.3 million vehicles this year in the U.S. In 2007, total sales were 16.1 million.

For nearly a decade, Americans bought more light trucks -- a segment that includes pickups, SUVs and minivans -- than cars. But starting in March, cars edged ahead. The gap widened in April, and in May, 193,559 more cars than light trucks were sold.

"The market has shifted dramatically from large gas-guzzling vehicles to smaller, fuel-efficient vehicles," said Dennis Virag, president of Automotive Consulting Group in Ann Arbor, Mich.

GM in May saw a 37% decline in light truck and SUV sales and its share of the overall U.S. market dropped below 20%, a new low for the automotive giant that in 1980 had 45% of the U.S. market.

GM Chairman Rick Wagoner said the company believed that American consumers were shifting permanently from SUVs toward smaller vehicles. He said the company's board had greenlighted production of a new small car in an Ohio factory and of its Volt electric vehicle -- set to debut in 2010 -- in Detroit.

"We at GM don't think this is a spike or a temporary shift," Wagoner said in a conference call before the company's annual shareholder meeting in Wilmington, Del.

It was a different story for many Asian automakers.

The fuel-efficient Honda Civic compact had a record month with 53,299 sold, a 38.5% increase from May 2007. It and other small cars including the Fit helped Honda, which sells very few light trucks and and is heavy with fuel-efficient cars, post a 15.6% increase in vehicles sold for the month.

Hyundai, Mazda, Kia and Subaru posted sales increases for the month. So did Nissan, which saw an 8.4% increase in sales, driven by a 43% burst from its Altima sedan, which like the Civic comes as a hybrid as well as a traditional drivetrain. But Nissan's results were pulled down by a lineup that includes large SUVs such as the Armada, whose sales fell 52%, and the Titan full-size pickup, which was down 56%.

The difficulties of that delicate balancing act between cars and light trucks was perhaps best illustrated by Toyota, which had a 4.3% decline in sales for the month despite a mix of cars that includes the popular Yaris, Camry, Corolla and Matrix models. The drag, in the Japanese automaker's case, was the trucks and full-sized SUVs it makes in the U.S.

"All of our previous assumptions on the full-sized pickup truck segment are off the table," said Bob Carter, head of Toyota's U.S. sales unit.

Of the many models crippling GM sales, the worst have borne the Hummer nameplate. In May, Hummer purchases declined 60%, and through the first five months of the year it is the marque that has slipped the most, down 36%, placing it behind brands such as Chrysler, Bentley and even Maybach. The Hummer H3 gets an average of 15 miles per gallon, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

"At this point, we are considering all options for the Hummer brand," Wagoner said. "Everything from a complete revamp of the product lineup to partial or complete sale of the brand."

No possible buyer has been named for the division, which was for a few years -- when gasoline cost less than $3 a gallon -- one of GM's best-performing. Last week, GM's stock hit a 26-year low, falling to $17.38. In trading on Tuesday, GM shares rose 14 cents, to $17.58.

At Tuesday's shareholder meeting, speakers criticized Wagoner for what they called his excessive compensation in light of the company's poor performance. According to one calculation, GM's chairman received compensation worth nearly $16 million last year, up from $9.6 million in 2006. Nevertheless, a measure to tie executive pay to performance was defeated at the meeting.

Besides Hummer, another SUV brand that has been rumored to be on the block is Jeep, considered the one salable product among the holdings of cash-starved Chrysler. The privately held automaker has repeatedly denied that it intends to sell Jeep, but analysts say it ought to have considered that option some time ago. Jeep's top-selling vehicle, the Wrangler, gets an average of 18 mpg.

"Chrysler should have sold it two years ago," analyst Virag said. "Today, Jeep is seen as a portfolio of products that are pretty inefficient."

After years of juicy profits from light trucks, all three U.S. automakers are scrambling to shift production toward cars.

GM said Tuesday that it would close plants in Oshawa, Canada; Moraine, Ohio; Janesville, Wis., and Toluca, Mexico. Several thousand jobs could be affected. Those plants are responsible for pickup trucks and SUVs such as the Chevrolet Silverado, the GMC Envoy and the medium-duty Chevy Kodiak and are expected to end production no later than the end of 2009.

Sales at Ford fell 15.6% in May, buoyed a bit by a 3% gain in its sales of cars such as the popular Focus. Last month, Ford said that it would cut worker shifts and total production at a handful of plants that make its largest SUVs and pickup trucks, and that it would produce the subcompact Fiesta in a plant outside Mexico City that currently makes the F-series pickup.

Even Chrysler, which of all carmakers has the product mix most heavily slanted toward light trucks, with 71% of its vehicles sold through May falling into that category, is looking to cars. In April, it announced that Nissan would produce a small car for it, while Chrysler would make trucks for Nissan in a Mexico factory.

Still, some worry that Detroit's newfound love of small cars could backfire because of the sheer size and inertia inherent in such large operations.

"Oftentimes what we see from Detroit is an overreaction too late," said Wes Brown, principal of Los Angeles marketing research firm Iceology. "They make seismic shifts to react to what the market is doing today, and by the time they get the product to market, the market has moved on."

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Bush would veto U.S. climate change bill


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Even before debate began on Monday on the first comprehensive climate change bill to reach the U.S. Senate floor, the White House said President George W. Bush would veto it in its current form.

Bush himself slammed the bill, saying it would cost the U.S. economy $6 trillion. His estimate drew quick denials from those who support the legislation, including Sen. Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat and longtime environmentalist.

The Bush administration has consistently opposed economy-wide measures to limit climate-warming emissions of carbon dioxide. The United States is alone among major developed countries in rejecting the carbon-capping Kyoto Protocol, which sets more stringent targets than the bill headed for Senate debate.

"I urge the Congress to be very careful about running up enormous costs for future generations of Americans," Bush said at a White House meeting on the economy and taxes. "We'll work with the Congress, but the idea of a huge spending bill fueled by tax increases isn't the right way to proceed."

He said the bill, known as the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act and set for its first debate in the Senate late on Monday, "would impose roughly $6 trillion of new costs on the American economy."

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said Bush would veto the bill if it arrived on his desk as currently drafted, but added, "It's very unlikely to pass the Senate anyway."

Most Capitol Hill observers acknowledge the bill is highly unlikely to become law before Bush leaves the White House in January.

FENCE-SITTERS IN THE SENATE

The number of uncommitted senators is impressive, said Jeremy Symons of the National Wildlife Federation.

"The fence is so crowded you can hear it creaking," Symons said of the fence-sitters on global warming legislation.

Some estimates have put the number of uncommitted senators at up to 20 -- one-fifth of the 100-member Senate.

The bill's supporters maintain that the legislation's cap-and-trade provisions would create jobs and that the cost of doing nothing about climate change justifies action now.

Carbon dioxide, which is emitted by fossil-fueled vehicles and coal-fired power plants as well as from natural sources, is a powerful greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming.

Boxer, who chairs the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee and who has shepherded this legislation to the Senate floor, offered a blistering response to Bush's comments.

"Just when we finally have a chance to get off of Big Oil and foreign oil, you can count on the Bush administration to fight us every step of the way," she said in a statement. "Where were they when gas prices went to 250 percent of what they were at the start of this administration? They did nothing."

The Lieberman-Warner bill contains tax relief for consumer energy costs, Boxer said.

"As you can imagine, our opposition to this will be quite strong and we'll be making these points throughout the week," said Keith Hennessey, director of Bush's National Economic Council.

U.S. gross domestic product could be reduced by as much as 7 percent in the year 2050 and gasoline prices -- already at record highs in the United States -- could soar by as much as 53 cents a gallon by 2030, he said.

The legislation the Senate will debate could cut total U.S. global warming emissions by 66 percent by 2050, according to a summary of the measure.

U.S. greenhouse gas emissions would drop by about 2 percent per year between 2012 and 2050, based on 2005 emission levels, under the measure.

The bill would cap carbon emissions from 86 percent of U.S. facilities, and emissions from those would be 19 percent below current levels by 2020 and 71 percent below current levels by 2050, according to a summary of the bill's details released by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

Grasso’s curse


The antagonists of former New York Stock Exchange CEO Richard Grasso haven’t fared well in the five years since he was ousted, amid a public outcry over his $187.5 million compensation package.

As the legal battle over his payday heads to the New York Court of Appeals, former Attorney General Eliot Spitzer’s reputation is in tatters, and many of the NYSE board members who forced Grasso out are now out of work themselves.

Tuesday’s trial could be a showstopper for Wall Street, reliving an embarrassing drama for the NYSE. Potential witnesses include U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and ex-Bear Stearns chairman James Cayne, who were both members of the NYSE’s compensation committee — as well as Spitzer himself.

As the New York Times reported, “the misfortunes that have afflicted a long list of stock exchange directors, all of whom were handpicked by Mr. Grasso, is enough to make one wonder about evil spirits swirling in the stock exchange’s boardroom.”

Fed lowers growth forecast, raises inflation

By Mark Felsenthal and Glenn Somerville

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve on Wednesday slashed its U.S. economic growth forecast for 2008 and signaled that mounting concerns over inflation would make further interest rate cuts unlikely.

"Several members noted that it was unlikely to be appropriate to ease policy in response to information suggesting that the economy was slowing further or even contracting slightly in the near term," the Fed said in minutes from its April 29-30 policy meeting.

Fed officials said that cutting benchmark interbank lending rates by a quarter percentage point to 2 percent at their last meeting was "a close call," reinforcing the impression that policy-makers may be putting further interest rate moves on hold.

"If you had any doubt that the Fed is signaling a pause, that doubt is gone," said Christopher Low, chief economist at FTN Financial in New York.

In an accompanying forecast, the Fed cut its projection for 2008 growth to a scant 0.3 percent to 1.2 percent, down from the 1.3 percent to 2 percent it forecast three months ago.

At the same time, the U.S. central bank said it expects inflation to remain "elevated" and unemployment to increase "significantly."

Wall Street stocks tumbled after the Fed forecast, with the Dow Jones industrials closing off nearly 1.8 percent. Treasury debt prices also fell while the dollar eased against the euro and the yen.

U.S. short-term interest rate futures expect no imminent change from the Fed, but point to rate increases in the final months of the year.

SLOW RECOVERY

The minutes showed a Fed increasingly concerned about inflation and anticipating sluggish growth for a while, but cautiously optimistic the worst of the most serious financial crisis in years has passed.

"Much of the concern about severe disruptions to financial markets, which had motivated the aggressive policy actions at the beginning of the year, appears to have abated in the minds of most members," said Lehman Brothers economist Michael Hanson.

Given recent shocks to the economy, it could be years before growth rates and unemployment levels return to their optimal levels, the Fed said.

The interest rate cut on April 30 was the seventh in a series of that has taken the interbank lending rate down by 3.25 percentage points since September as the central bank moved to buffer an economy battered by the housing downturn and a credit crunch.

The economy has expanded at a sluggish 0.6 percent annual rate in both the last three months of 2007 and the first quarter of this year.

At the same time, however, record high oil prices have pushed up energy and food prices, raising the consumer price index by 3.9 percent in the 12 months to April.

Policy-makers felt at their April meeting that the risks that growth could slow were more closely balanced than in the past by the risks that inflation could spike higher.

"Members were ... concerned about the upside risks to the inflation outlook, given the continued increases in oil and commodity prices and the fact that some indicators suggested that inflation expectations had risen in recent months," the Fed said.

DIFFERENCES OVER INFLATION RISK

Participants at the Fed's meeting were about evenly divided as to whether the risks to the inflation outlook were balanced or were tilted to the upside, the minutes said.

The Fed boosted its forecasts for inflation to 3.1 percent to 3.4 percent in 2008 from its January 2.1 percent to 2.4 percent projection for the personal consumption expenditures index. It expects unemployment to rise to 5.5 percent to 5.7 percent for the year. The jobless rate was at 5 percent in March and employers had cut jobs for the fourth month in a row.

The Fed also warned that the risks to its scaled-down growth projection remain to the downside, particularly if house prices continue to slide lower.

"Participants saw little indication of a bottoming out in either housing activity or prices," the minutes of the meeting said.

Fed officials took some comfort from signs that fragile credit markets, which have been severely shaken by doubts about bad credit, appear to be on the mend.

"The generally better state of financial markets had caused participants to mark down the odds that economic activity could be severely disrupted by a further substantial deterioration in the financial environment," the minutes said.


FOREX-Dollar holds gains after rare Bernanke warning

By Veronica Brown

LONDON, June 4 (Reuters) - The dollar held firm versus a basket of six major currencies on Wednesday, keeping hefty gains made the day before on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's warning about the inflationary threat from a weak U.S. currency.

The dollar index .DXY surged as much as 1.3 percent from Tuesday's lows after Bernanke said dollar weakness was adding to price pressures and that the Fed along with the U.S. Treasury were carefully monitoring currency markets, suggesting greater concern in Washington and potential for dollar-buying intervention. [ID:nN03353007]

The dollar's tumble to record lows this year, driven by the Fed's aggressive rate cuts to try to limit damage from a global credit crunch, has caused a vicious circle by heaping fuel on surging oil and commodity prices that helped stoke inflation pressures.

The Fed rarely comments on the dollar, normally leaving currency policy to the U.S. Treasury, which made Bernanke's comments all the more extraordinary and heightened their impact across asset classes. But some analysts said the words of warning could be put to the test.

"The dollar's had a big rally but you have to ask the question: if the U.S. want a stronger dollar how are they going to get it -- are they ready to intervene? Only if they are prepared to back it up with rate hikes," ING head of FX research Chris Turner said.

"We think activity data won't allow them to do that over the summer," he added.

Turner also said any dollar buying intervention would have to be co-ordinated. "Are the ECB ready to cut rates -- that seems a bit premature as well. It's one thing to want a stronger dollar but quite another to get it," he added.

The market for international goods

Gold was scumpit with 2.5% or 22 U.S. dollars last month. He noted, however, a ieftinire by 4% in the last week because of marking profits, dolarului appreciation, and ieftinirii oil.

Technically, futures contracts on gold support at 850 dollars per oz. Gold closed the meeting at 887.3 U.S. dollars per oz up by 10.1 U.S. dollars. Silver was scumpit with 2.1% to 16.87 U.S. dollars per oz. He earned 7.8% last week. Platina with maturities in July increased by 23.6 U.S. dollars and closed at 2013.80 week U.S. dollars per oz b ursa on goods from New York. Increased by Paladiumul U.S. dollars and 7.2 to scumpit copper with 4.6 cents in 3606 U.S. dollars per oz.

Contracts oil futures were slightly scumpit Friday and marked an additional 12% in May.
Investors have deshis positions before the rainy season and led the price of natural gas to 8% higher in May.

However, last week to ieftinit oil with 3.7%. A closed meeting Friday at 127.35 U.S. dollars per barrel after atinsese minimum 2 last week: 125.7 U.S. dollars per barrel. Uraganelor season which begins on June 1 official and U.S. authorities estimate that there is a probability of 60-70 percent to have 12 to 16 storms, 6 to 9 uragane and 2-5 uragane large Atlantic ocean this season.

And though analysts talk of buying opportunities because we are below the level of 16 U.S. dollars per thousand British thermal units recorded in 2005 after Katrina. John Person, president of the Agency Supreveghere Futures Contracts said that those not considered 135.09 U.S. dollars per barrel on 22 May atinţi point of maximum price until it sees barilului under 118 U.S. dollars. The price of petrol at the pump reached a new record level Friday 3962 U.S. dollars per gallon. Consemnează an increase of 24.2% over same period last year.

European indices have advanced ....

European indices have advanced further after S K AG, the largest European producer of potassium, and has revised the growth forecast profit for the year 2008 and the declining price of oil and a stronger U.S. dollars have improved the prospects for retailers and exporters.

Shares plus S K have been appreciated by 3.6%, to 315.16 euros, against the backdrop of increase in the price of goods. EBIDTA profits will climb to around 1.1 billion euros, compared with the 850 million originally forecast. Also in the agricultural sector, securities Syngenta AG, the largest producer of fertilizers, increased by 2.9 percent to around 329 Swiss francs from.

In the retail sector, Carrefour quotation climbed by 3.1% to around 45.38 euros after analysts at ING offered recommendation "buy". Analysts at Seymour Pierce also said that vînzările online Argos have a substantial advance over those of Tesco.

On the electronic and electrocasnic, quotation Philips climbed by 2.4%. On the car manufacturers, Porsche shares were obsolete by 2.5%, after brokers at Credit Suisse were revised downward in the title recommendation on a possible legal dispute with the order of Volkswagen.

In the banking sector, Royal Bank of Scotland, the biggest British bank has recorded an advance of 8.3 percent, against the backdrop of speculations according to which the issue of shares will be suprasubscrisa and a speculative fund buying in the UK massive actions to determine a division .

Earnings were recorded yesterday and by Ryanair, whose stock climbed by 5.2% after the CEO Michael O-Leary has prognozat that the biggest discount air carrier in Europe will be able to maintain profitable during the this year, due to the increase in ticket prices and taxes on cargo.

Thus, the CAC 40 has consmnat the most important advance of the indices developed scholarships, 0.98%, followed by FTSE100, with an additional 0.83% and DAX, 0.15%. The pan-European Dow Jones Stoxx600 has progressed in turn with 0.82 percent.

At the level of indices scholarships Central and Eastern Europe, the most important win was marked by WIG20, 1.01 percent, followed by BUX, which climbed by 0.31% and ATX, with an extra 0.29 %.

At the opposite side, perdantul meeting yesterday was the index market from Bucharest, BET, with a minus of 1.33%, followed by PX50, with a decrease of 0.91% and SOFIX, with a depreciation of 0.09 percent.

U.S. indices have seen decreases in the second-chairmen of the week because of fears of liquidity problems in the financial sector. In the market rumours have arisen on the hand of aid required by an investment company Federal Reserve. It seems that financial institutions would have been used credit facility created to save the Bear Stearns.

DJIA index fell by 0.81% and ended the meetings of the least over the threshold of 12,400 points. The actions GM increased by 0.9% after the company announced a 27.5% drop in sales of light vehicles but also plans to focus on this segment.

Among the shares falling in the composition of DJ, Wal Mart notes that the titles were scumpit with 1%. At the opposite side were ieftinit Boeing shares with McDonalds and 3.8 respectively 1.7%. [P1] The S & P 500 was obsolete by 0.58% and the Nasdaq fell by 0.44%.

The actions Lehman Brothers were ieftinit by nearly 9% after the WSJ report that the bank is faced with the first quarterly loss from listing on the stock exchange in 1994. It seems that the investment would need an infusion of capital by 4 billion U.S. dollars.


The goods have reached 9,000 billion USD by the end of 2007

The exposure of banks globally on derivative financial instruments which have the active support goods increased by 27 percent in the last year, shows a study published yesterday by the International Financial Services London. Derivatele on goods represent about 1.5% of total derivative financial instruments now available on international markets, with more than about 0.5 percentage points than the level recorded 10 years ago.

Instumentelor value of financial derivatives, which are actively supporting the goods, reached the end of 2007, at 9 thousand billion U.S. dollars, marking an increase of about 27% over the previous year. According to a report published yesterday by the institution of financial studies in International Financial Services London, with the support derived from the goods represent about 1.5% of the total derivatives traded globally, and this share is growing by about 0.5 percentage points of the weight they had a face value of up to approximately 10 years.

Successive reductions, and sometimes aggressive of key interest, which led to the depreciation dolarului, but also rising demand for raw materials are the main causes of this increase in May analysts say the institution.
otrivit report, a special contribution to this growth it had contracts with the support of the raw materials and energy materials. Dealtfel, 2 of the biggest markets for goods 5 of the world are in China, a country which contributes significantly to increasing global demand for raw materials and materials.

At the end of 2007, the New York Mercantile Exchange was the most active market derivatives, with approximately 353 million futures contracts with the active support of the energy sector and metals. On the second position, was Chinese scholarship, Dalian Commodity Exchange, with approximately 186 million contracts. According to estimates made by analysts International Financial Services, about 15% of derivatives with the support of the goods are owned by banks londoneze. The percentage is rising with aproxiamtiv 1 point over 2006, when banks based in London had about 14% of the total derivatives on the goods.