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Darling to get tough on bank bonuses.

December 2nd, 2009 by tom | 0 Comments | Filed in Central banks, Daily News, Employment, Exchage Rate, Gold, Recession, Retail, The Markets, UK Banks, World Banks

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The Treasury is looking at introducing tougher requirements on bankers’ pay disclosure than those proposed last week by Sir David Walker.

Alistair Darling, the chancellor, announced a formal consultation exercise on Monday on whether legislation should go further than the Walker review, which proposed that banks should disclose the numbers of employees earning above £1 million.

Treasury officials said there was a case for greater disclosure, for example starting at £750,000 and having narrower bands.

The news came as the chairman of the Financial Reporting Council; Sir David Hogg signalled that his review of broader corporate governance at UK listed companies, published on Tuesday, would be more far-reaching than Sir David’s recommendations on bank boards.

U.K. house prices rose for a fourth month in November as the shortage of homes for sale sustained the property market, according to industry sources.

The average cost of a home in England and Wales climbed 0.2 percent from October to 156,700 pounds, meaning that prices are down 11 percent from the 2007 peak. While U.K. mortgage data due today may show loan approvals at the highest level in 19 months in October, rising unemployment may curb house price increases next year. According to Bank of England Governor Mervyn King, the economy’s recovery from the longest recession on record isn’t “particularly strong.”

Dubai World, the investment company whose $59 billion of liabilities caused stock markets across the World some anxiety will ask all creditors for a “standstill” agreement as it negotiates to extend maturities according to Dubai’s Department of Finance. Reports are that the plan will not be acceptable to most investors and would be considered a default. Dubai, the second-biggest of seven states that make up the United Arab Emirates (UAE)., and its state-owned companies borrowed $80 billion to fund an economic boom and diversify its economy. The global credit crisis and a decline in property prices hurt companies like Dubai World as they struggled to raise loans and forced the emirate to turn for help to Abu Dhabi, UAE capital who hold 8 percent of the world’s oil reserves.

Barclays Bank will book a gain close to £1 billion more than expected on the sale of its asset management arm to BlackRock thanks to a 62 per cent rise in the US fund manager’s shares since the deal was struck. The UK bank on Tuesday completed the £9.1 billion sale of Barclays Global Investors (BGI) to BlackRock, which becomes the world’s biggest asset manager with more than $3,000 billion .Barclays has taken a 19.9 per cent stake in BlackRock as part of the cash-and-shares deal. The sale price was £6.2 billion higher than the value of BGI in the accounts of Barclays, and £900 million more than estimated when the deal was agreed in June.

Thomas Cook will refinance their £1.65 billion loan facilities by next summer but has no plans to use a rights issue, according to a leading company representative. The tour operator’s current facilities are due to expire in May 2011. The company has predicted that 2010 would be a tough trading year, and the refinancing plans were announced as Thomas Cook revealed that net debt had more than doubled from £292 million in 2008 to £675 million. Explanations were that the additional debt had come from completing its share buy-back programme, acquisitions and the need for increased working capital arising from late holiday bookings.

British Airways Plc has announced that they are to conduct a series of feasibility studies and tests to see if their planes can run on bio-fuels. The airline will run the trials in conjunction with Rolls-Royce. On that piece of good news for the environment, shares in BA shares gained 0.6 pence percent, to 193.8, while Rolls-Royce rose 0.9 pence to 476.4.

Cadbury Plc Chief Executive Officer’s Todd Stitzer has signaled his support for a possible bid by U.S. candy maker Hershey Co. in preference to the hostile bid from Kraft. Meanwhile JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. are being lined up to provide Hershey a further $7 billion in finance. Cadbury’s shares later advanced 3 pence to 806.

Drinks manufacturer C&C saw its share price jump almost 9 per cent yesterday on the back of an announcement that it is to acquire the British cider assets of Constellation Brands owners of the Gaymer Cider Company, the UK’s second largest cider manufacturer, for £45 million.

The transaction is expected to be completed by mid-January 2010, and will broaden C&C’s existing cider offering beyond Bulmers and Magners to include brands such as Blackthorn, Olde English as well as Gaymers.

Under the terms of the deal C&C will also acquire a cider production facility in Shepton Mallet, Somerset, and a distribution warehouse in Bristol. As well as strengthening its position in the UK cider market, the acquisition is expected to shift C&C’s focus away from on-trade sales towards the faster-growing off-trade distribution channel.

On the Foreign Currency exchanges, the Pound rose against the dollar, yen and Swiss Franc whilst falling slightly against the Euro,

  • Pound/US dollar 1.6605
  • Pound/Euro 1.1002
  • Pound/Japanese Yen 144.5284
  • Pound/Swiss Franc 1.6589

Fears of a further fall in share value on the FTSE 100 were dispelled as shares continued to recover, closing in Wednesday on 5312.77, up 67 points from the weekend.

US shares headed higher on Tuesday after a flurry of economic data pointed to a rebound in the economy Better reports on construction and housing suggested there was something to look forward to.

The housing figures, from the National Association of Realtors, provided the best hopes for growth, showing sales agreements 3.7% up on the month and 32% higher than this time last year.

The Dow Jones index closed up 126.66 points, or 1.2%, on Tuesday to reach 10,471.50 points, while the NASDAQ also rose, closing the day on 2175.8.

Australia’s central bank lifted interest rates for a third consecutive month on Tuesday amid signs that inflationary pressures were building in an economy expected to return to “trend” growth of 3.25 per cent next year. The 25 basis point rise to 3.75 per cent matches increases in the last two months and is part of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s strategy of weaning the economy off historically low interest rates. The benchmark rate fell to a 49-year low of 3 per cent earlier this year.

The continuing weakness of the US dollar has pushed up demand for gold to another record level. Gold struck £722.69 an ounce on the London Bullion Market, after striking historic peaks over recent weeks. The dollar index fell 0.8% against a number of currencies as early fears regarding the Dubai debt crisis continued to wane across international markets. Demand for gold has been fueled by moves by central banks to diversify assets.

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Jobless creeping up towards 1980’s levels

May 18th, 2009 by admin | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Employment, Recession, UK Small Business, UK employment

Figures released by the Office for National Statistics show that unemployment levels are rising as fast as they did in the recession n of the early 1980s, and even faster than that of the early 1990s. Unemployment figures show that the number of UK residents who are claiming benefit rose by 1.3 percent to 7.1 per cent in the last quarter.
Barclays Bank continues to impress, by announcing that they are in talks with several companies about selling their asset management arm Barclays Global Investors (BGI). The bank hope to bring in around for about $10billion for the sale, with US money manager BlackRock apparently keen to conclude the purchase. Barclay’s cash raising move comes on the heels of their sale at auction of iShares, BGI’s exchange-traded funds unit to buyout group CVC for $4.2billion last month.

It might have been a coincidence but Barclays was among the top performers yesterday on the FTSE, up 4.2 percent (0 pence to 253) Standard Chartered was up 8.1 per cent (95 pence to 1197) and the Royal Bank of Scotland also added 4 per cent (1.6 pence to 39.5)

A spokesman for the National Grid announced yesterday that that company expects to strengthen its financial position this year, despite the fact that they are planning a further £1billion debt to fund a necessary investment programme.

The FTSE 250 index rose by 43.56 points to close on 7,472.33
While the FTSE 100 finished the session up 13 points, higher at 4,375.58
Sterling fell slightly against the dollar and rose against the strengthening Euro as well as the Japanese Yen and the Swiss Franc:

· Pound/US dollar 1.5235

· Pound/Euro 1.1198

· Pound/Japanese Yen 145.03

· Pound/Swiss Franc 1.6844

US equities broke their losing streak on Thursday following three consecutive days of selling as investors shrugged off negative unemployment data and took encouragement from the retail sector, allowing for a mixed day on trading on Wall Street
The Dow Jones Average rose 46.43 points to close at 8331.32. Nasdaq did well rising 25.02 points to 1689.21

The Obama administration is expected to roll out the next phase of its financial rescue plan any day now. The phase is scheduled to deal with toxic “legacy assets”, with senior administration officials keen to discover new private/public marketplaces for these bubble-era loans and securities. Their hope is by doing so banks can clean up their balance sheets and attract the almost £49 billion in equity they need to meet their stress test targets.
Sports clothing giant, Nike has announced their intention to cut about 1,750 jobs, making for the largest headcount reduction in its history, amounting to about 5% of Nike’s 35,000 global workforces. Nike is striving to cut costs after a recent sales decline due to the economic downturn, particularly in Europe.

It was announced yesterday that the German economy has suffered its largest contraction for the first quarter of 2009 since reunification/
Gross domestic product (GDP) dropped by 3.8% from the previous quarter, due to sharp falls in exports and investment. The French economy fared a little better for the same period down 1.2%

The Spanish economy also shrank, this time by 1.8% for the same quarter, making it the highest rate of decline for nearly 40 years.
In Asia, Toyota Motors, still reeling from their first loss making year in history, announced their plans for one of the most drastic management overhauls in its 70-year history. The ball is expected to begin rolling next month Akio Toyoda, grandson of the company’s founder, takes over at the helm as chief executive of the Japanese car maker.

The company intend to replace almost half of their senior managers as well as reorganising its key North American business.
After a few days of rises, crude oil prices fell yesterday after the International Energy Agency (IEA) said global demand would shrink by 2.56m barrels a day to 83.2m in 2009.
The IEA said eight out of the world’s 10 largest oil consuming countries were likely to see a “marked fall” in oil demand as their economies slowed or contracted. Despite that gloomy forecast, crude prices actually rose around 10 cents a barrel to average $58.69.
Gold was down $2.00 an ounce at $926.40, while copper also fell to $203.50
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