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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

TOSHIBA Announces Discontinuation of HD DVD Business

WAYNE, N.J., Feb 19, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Toshiba America Consumer Products, L.L.C. ("Toshiba") today announced that it has completed a thorough review of its overall strategy for HD DVD and as a result of recent market developments, the company has decided to discontinue sales and marketing of HD DVD players. Accordingly, Toshiba will begin to cease shipments of its HD DVD products to retail channels.

"While we continue to believe HD DVD is the best format for consumers, based on its technological advancements and the value and quality inherent in our player offerings, recent market developments have led us to the decision to choose new and different paths," said Yoshi Uchiyama, Group Vice President of Toshiba's Digital A/V Marketing Group.

In an effort to contribute to the sound development of the audio-video market and bring the full benefits of new digital technologies to consumers, the company will shift its resources into the creation of new business strategies that leverage the vast technological resources of Toshiba.

Furthermore, Toshiba will remain committed to standard DVD business, and the company will continue to market their leading line-up of DVD players.

Ongoing Customer Commitment

Dedicated to customer support, Toshiba will continue to provide full product support and after sales service. Customers can contact, 1-888-MY HDDVD (1-888-694-3383) for answers to general questions and operational assistance for HD DVD.

About Toshiba America Consumer Products, L.L.C.

Toshiba America Consumer Products, L.L.C. is owned by Toshiba America, Inc., a subsidiary of Toshiba Corporation, a world leader in high technology products with subsidiaries worldwide. Toshiba is a leading manufacturer of a full line of home entertainment products, including flat panel TV, combination products and portable devices. Toshiba America Consumer Products, L.L.C. is headquartered in Wayne, New Jersey. For additional information, please visit www.tacp.toshiba.com.

HD DVD and DVD are trademarks of DVD Format/Logo Licensing Corporation.

SOURCE Toshiba America Consumer Products, L.L.C.


Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Beware of rising car prices: GM exec

Industry restructuring, rising materials costs and new government regulations could significantly affect auto prices, says CFO Fritz Henderson.

A green sports car
A new car company is promising sports car performance from a hybrid vehicle.

DETROIT (AP) -- U.S. automobile prices could rise significantly in the near future because of industry restructuring, rising raw materials and regulatory costs, General Motors's (GM, Fortune 500) chief financial officer said Tuesday.

Fritz Henderson said the industry has less manufacturing capacity than in the past and therefore less pressure to sell vehicles cheaply just to move inventory.

It also faces higher raw materials costs, rising technology costs and increased costs from fuel economy and other government regulations, he said.

While the U.S. market still is competitive, "you could potentially see a significant change from what we've seen in the last eight or 10 years," Henderson said during a speech to the Automotive Press Association in Detroit.

(Source money.cnn.com)

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Microsoft planning to buy Logitech?

Logitech, the maker of popular mice, speakers and other peripherals, may be on the verge of acquisition by Microsoft. Reuters reports that shares rose 12 percent early Thursday morning, fueled partly by trader speculation surrounding a possible takeover. In theory, Logitech -- which has a market capitalization of 7 billion Swiss francs ($6.3 billion US) -- would be bought for 48 francs per share, a premium of 38 percent on Wednesday's closing stock price of 34.80 francs. Logitech would thus become worth 9.16 billion francs.

Neither company has so far commented officially, but Daniel Borel, a board member at Logitech, says he has no intentions of selling his stake. "I am a co-founder of Logitech," he notes. "Would you be willing to sell your child?" Borel cautions, however, that even if he refuses to sell his six percent ownership, his control is still too small to prevent an acquisition. Borel also refuses to confirm or deny takeover moves.

Were Microsoft to absorb Logitech, it would instantly become the largest manufacturer of computer peripherals, as it already produces a number of mice, keyboards and other devices through companies it acquired earlier in its history. Reuters observes that while Microsoft has generally been apathetic about dominating hardware sectors, this would help with the company's Xbox 360 console, as Logitech already makes a number of third-party gaming controllers.
(Source electronista.com)

Monday, January 14, 2008

IBM impresses with earnings

In early announcement, tech giant delivers results beating Wall Street's expectations; stock surges.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- IBM issued preliminary quarterly earnings Monday that handily beat Wall Street's estimates, sending its stock soaring.

Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM (IBM, Fortune 500) shares gained nearly 10 percent in pre-market trading on the announcement.

The tech bellwether said fourth-quarter earnings from continuing operations rose to $2.80 a share, up 24 percent from $2.26 a share a year earlier. Wall Street had been expecting earnings of $2.60 a share, according to Thomson Financial.

IBM is due to formally report its results Thursday.

IBM said revenue for the quarter gained 10 percent to $28.9 billion, also beating estimates.

"The broad scope of IBM's global business - led by strong operational performance in Asia, Europe and emerging countries - drove these outstanding results," Samuel Palmisano, IBM's chairman and CEO said in a statement.

Palmisano also offered an upbeat outlook, saying the company is on track to reach its 2010 earnings target.

IBM said 2007 earnings jumped to $7.18 a share, up 18 percent from 2006, helped by the sale of its printing systems division during the second quarter.

The company said it would provide more detailed information about its quarterly and full-year results Thursday.
(Source money.cnn.com)

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Apple: What've you done for me lately

Shares of the iPod maker more than doubled in 2007. With Macworld coming up, what can Steve Jobs and Apple do for an encore this year?

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Apple had a banner year in 2007. The stock more than doubled thanks to strong sales of the new iPhone, revamped iPods, and updated Macs.

But that was last year. Now investors want to know if Apple can live up to Wall Street's lofty expectations for 2008.

Tech stocks have taken a big tumble so far this year and Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) is no exception, with shares falling about 10 percent.

With that in mind, investors will be paying a lot of attention to what Apple chief executive officer Steve Jobs has to say during his keynote address at the company's Macworld show on January 15th.

Last year, Jobs unveiled the iPhone at Macworld. So Wall Street is hoping Jobs can once again deliver some exciting news to get the stock back on track.

A new 'Touch' for the iPod

Investors will definitely be looking for any announcements about updates to the company's popular iPod. Despite that product's runaway success, some analysts say that Apple has started to reach the saturation point with its portable media player. "Everyone who wants one has one," said Technology Business Research analyst Ezra Gottheil.

Morgan Keegan analyst Tavis McCourt also wrote in a recent report that he's concerned about slowing growth in iPod sales.

He cited the fact that the number of iPods sold in the company's fiscal fourth quarter, which ended in September, increased just 17 percent from a year ago, down from 50 percent growth in unit sales in the company's fiscal first quarter.

But just before the holiday season, Apple released the iPod Touch - basically an iPhone without the phone. The device's ability to access the Internet and its emphasis on video makes it more than just a standard iPod. So analysts said they are confident the iPod Touch could rejuvenate sales growth for the iPod product line in 2008.

Apple could also benefit from falling component prices. McCourt noted that NAND flash memory chips, which are used in the iPhone, iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Touch, have been getting steadily cheaper, which could boost the amount of profit Apple generates from the iPod and other consumer electronics devices.

And analysts said that other announcements from Macworld may also be viewed positively by investors. Trip Chowdhry of Global Equities Research, predicts Apple will unveil an update to Apple TV, a device that lets people view videos stored in their iTunes library on their television sets.

There has also been speculation that Apple will announce plans to allow movie rentals on iTunes through a partnership with News Corp.'s (NWS, Fortune 500) Fox studio. Gottheil said that even though revenue from iTunes is still relatively small, anything that can help increase movie and music downloads would be helpful since this should also boost demand for new iPods.

Thin is in

Of course, Apple still relies heavily on computer sales -- even though the company dropped the word "Computer" from its corporate name last year and now generates more than half of its total sales from non-Mac products.

At this year's Macworld, analysts suspect the company will round out its MacBook line with a new ultra light notebook.

A highly portable computer with long battery life and a flash drive instead of a delicate hard disk is something that Apple doesn't have right now, said Chowdhry.

He argues that if Apple unveils a new MacBook, that could open Apple's laptop line even further to new customers.

Gottheil disagreed with the idea that an ultra portable would bring in new customers. Still, he said that even if Apple simply got existing Apple fans to buy newer MacBook models, this would still benefit Apple because the new MacBooks would likely generate higher profit margins.

And that would be good news for Apple shareholders since Mac sales have been what's really driving growth for the overall company lately.

In the company's fiscal fourth quarter, Mac sales rose 40 percent from a year earlier to $3.41 billion. iPod sales, on the other hand, increased only 4 percent to $1.6 billion. So if the iPod Touch isn't as big a hit as analysts expect, the company will need to depend even more on the Mac to keep sales and profits growing.

No worms in this stock

With all this in mind, how will Apple's stock fare this year. David Bailey of Goldman Sachs wrote in a report earlier this month that he doesn't believe 2008 will be as "explosive" as last year, but that Apple's stock should head higher over the next twelve months.

He expects Apple's upcoming fiscal first-quarter earnings announcement, which includes sales during the key holiday shopping season, to prove that Apple is still a great growth stock.

Apple will report its results on January 22. Analysts predict revenue will grow 32 percent to about $9.4 billion and that profits will soar 40 percent to $1.60 a share.

Apple's string of healthy results come at a steep price, however. The stock trades at nearly 35 times fiscal 2008 earnings estimates.

That's much higher than the valuations for rivals Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) and personal computer maker Dell (DELL, Fortune 500), which trade at 19 times and 13 times earnings forecasts for this fiscal year respectively.

Still, Apple has consistently smashed Wall Street's earnings per share estimates over the past year. And the company's projected earnings growth rates of 30 percent this fiscal year and 22 percent a year, on average, for the next few years, is much higher than most other large tech companies.

Chowdhry said investors should probably not try and make short-term trades on the stock though. He warns that investors who buy now just because they think Jobs will make an announcement at Macworld that will send the stock higher could be setting themselves up for disappointment.

But analysts said Apple is a good buy for long-term investors who can avoid being influenced by day-to-day volatility. Investors who want to make a bet on the company's ability to keep coming out with the hottest new gadgets and delivering strong earnings will eventually be rewarded.

Analysts quoted in the story do not own shares of Apple.
(Source money.cnn.com)

Sunday, January 6, 2008

GM uncovers the pre-production Camaro


From now on Camaros will be tested without camouflage, GM says, so bring out your cameras.

The production version of the highly anticipated Chevrolet Camaro won't be officially revealed for some time yet but, in a highly unusual move, GM won't hide the car from prying spy photographers during test drives anymore.

Magazines and car enthusiasts pay top dollar for "spy shots" of early pre-production cars, which are usually covered in black cloth and stripes of tape to try to hide their appearance, as the cars undergo testing on public roads.

In fact, several companies now specialize in selling these pictures, while car companies do their best - or at least claim to do their best - to keep their future products under wraps.

"It's really a cat-and-mouse game between spy photographers and car companies that benefits everybody," said John Neff, editor of Autoblog.com, a Website that posted several Camaro spy photos. (Autoblog.com, like CNNMoney.com, is a Time Warner property.)

Starting now, however, the Chevrolet Camaro isn't playing coy. Want to take a shot? Go for it, GM (GM, Fortune 500) says. When Camaro prototypes go out on public roads for testing they'll be totally naked.

"During this upcoming year, pre-production Camaros will appear both on U.S. and Australian roads as we continue with testing and development," Chevrolet general manager Ed Peper wrote in a post on GM's FastLane blog. "So keep those camera phones ready - if you happen to see one, we'd like to hear about it, so please post a comment and include your 'spy photo!'"

Engineering and development for GM's new rear-wheel-drive cars is taking place in Australia. That's because rear-wheel-drive cars are more common there, making GM's Australian engineers the company's rear-wheel-drive experts.

The FastLane post was accompanied by a "spy photo" GM says was taken by one of the company's engineers.

The main reason for removing the camouflage, according to Peper's post, was to facilitate tests for aerodynamics and cooling efficiency.

But even high-performance cars like the Corvette ZR1, for which aerodynamics and cooling would be especially important, are covered up during public testing. That's made some people skeptical that this is the real reason for the decision. Certainly the move would help juice publicity for the car.

In the case of the Camaro, there wasn't really much of a secret to protect, though. The company has said the production car would closely resemble concept versions that have been seen at car shows and in the movie "The Transformers."

Some executive wondered: "Why are we camouflaging something that's so close to the coupe and convertible that are already on the auto show circuit?" said Chevrolet spokesman Terry Rhadigan.

Even so, there has been a lot of interest in spy photos of the car. On the morning that GM's decision was announced, Autoblog.com posted images of a test Camaro on a parked transport truck. The images included detailed shots of the car's interior and the inside of an open door.

Seeing the potential for damage or injuries as photographers try to get close to the cars, GM may have decided that "at this point everybody is safer just taking off the camouflage," said Brenda Priddy, a professional automotive spy photographer.

Priddy, who has spent 15 years taking spy photos of cars, did not take the pictures posted on Autoblog.com. For her part, she said, she would never actually touch or reach into a car, which is a car company's private property, to get a shot.

A representative for the company that distributed the photos of the test Camaro's interior did not immediately respond to questions about how the photos were obtained.

The decision announced Thursday was made weeks ago, said GM's Rhadigan. It was not made in response to those specific photos, he said.

"This was not by any means a knee-jerk reaction to something we saw on the Internet," Rhadigan said.

Besides, said spy shooter Priddy, why should GM let people like her profit from all the interest in GM's car?
(Source money.cnn.com)

How Bush may boost the economy

Any short-term push to stave off a recession could face political and budgetary challenges.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Word is that President Bush may propose new measures to boost the economy by the time he gives his State of the Union address later this month.

While he has steadfastly maintained that the economy is fundamentally strong, the fact that the president is considering a so-called fiscal stimulus package is an indication that the Administration is getting worried.

Such a package would aim to ward off a recession, the fear of which has grown stronger in the wake of discouraging data on jobs, rising energy prices and a slowing housing market.

There is also an indication that leading Democrats might be working on a plan of their own. A spokesman for Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) said in an e-mail to CNNMoney.com that Sen. Baucus "already has ideas of his own about the possible need for an economic stimulus package this year and is planning for the Finance Committee to discuss very early in the session what shape such a package might take."

Tax cuts on the table

It's not clear what measures the White House is considering, but it is widely believed that tax cuts are among them. In that realm, there are a number of options the president could propose, but all of them carry political costs, economic costs or both.

One option that economist Mark Zandi of Economy.com thinks might help is a temporary tax cut, much like the $300 tax rebate Americans got in the wake of Sept. 11. "It was well-timed and was significant for lower and lower middle-income households," Zandi said, although he acknowledged that not all economists agree about how successful the rebate was.

But a new rebate will likely draw criticism. In 2001, the government had the advantage of a budget surplus. Now it's operating with a deficit, which could raise concerns about the cost of a rebate. "Where's the money going to come from? [A rebate will] take it from some other place in the economy," said Chris Edwards, director of tax policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, which advocates for limited government and free markets.

Zandi thinks it might also make sense to make President Bush's income tax cuts for the middle class permanent, a move that leading Democratic presidential candidates have indicated they'd support. Where they part company with the president, however, is in making those tax cuts permanent for high-income households, too. So if the president did push for an extension of his tax cuts for the middle class, that could undercut his stated goal of making his tax cuts permanent for everyone, Zandi said.

Zandi would also advocate making the lower rates on capital gains and dividends permanent for everyone. Despite his belief that the federal government should not try to control the short-term performance of the economy, Edwards agrees that such a move could help stabilize the markets by giving investors more certainty about their investment tax bill. It also would reduce any pressure investors might feel to sell their holdings before the investment rate cuts expire.

But the cost of making any of the Bush tax cuts permanent is a sore point for fiscal watchdogs, who contend such cuts are unaffordable in the long term, given the growing budgetary demands of Social Security and Medicare as well as the war in Iraq.

Of course, with any tax-based stimulus, the potential benefit of its short-term effect has to be weighed against its long-term cost, said Clint Stretch, a federal tax policy expert at Deloitte Touche. "[You must consider the net benefit] if you have to turn around to the credit markets and borrow the money to pay for it."

Non-tax options

President Bush could also call for measures intended to stimulate the housing market, Zandi said.

Bush has already said Congress should act quickly to pass a number of housing-related legislative proposals that he supports. One key measure would reform the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), which would make the relatively low cost FHA-insured mortgages more readily available to consumers who want to buy homes and to those who want to refinance out of unaffordable subprime loans.

The White House also might consider calling for a temporary increase in the size of mortgages that Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac can purchase from mortgage lenders. These two government-sponsored enterprises guarantee the purchase and trading of so-called "conforming" loans, which are those valued at $417,000 or less. Any loans above that amount are considered "jumbo" loans.

An increase in the conforming loan limit would make it easier and less costly for borrowers in high-cost areas to get loans because Fannie and Freddie would guarantee their purchase by investors.

In the past, the Administration has said it would support a temporary increase in loan limits, but only if lawmakers pass legislation that would boost oversight of both Fannie and Freddie, which have been plagued by accounting scandals

Friday, January 4, 2008

Sony bringing back the 'wow factor'


Tokio: The chief executive of Sony said Tuesday that his company intended to "bring back some of the wow factor" with new products that included a music player with robotics technology and a PlayStation 3 video game console that includes networking services.

Howard Stringer, in wide-ranging comments here, said Sony had recovered from its past financial problems after almost three years of restructuring.

"The next cycle is actual innovation," Stringer said.

Sony's network service, now used to pipe video games to the PlayStation 3, will be expanded to offer other kinds of content. Stringer did not give details or a timetable.

Besides its core electronics business, Sony owns the Hollywood movie studio that made the "Spider-Man" series. Sony also has a joint venture in music with Bertelsmann, which has Bruce Springsteen, Justin Timberlake and Beyoncé Knowles under its labels.

Such content will likely be offered as downloads for the PlayStation 3 in Sony's effort to catch up with U.S. companies like Apple and Microsoft.

When Stringer took the helm at Sony in 2005, the company - once a symbol of innovation with its Walkman line of personal stereos - had been stumbling, falling behind in flat-panel TVs and digital music players.

The turnaround plan that Stringer engineered - which included cutting many jobs, closing plants and dropping unprofitable businesses - will be completed in March next year.

The company has sold off part of its stake in its financial unit, which had a bank and insurer. Sony also has sold its advanced computer chip operations for making the PlayStation 3's "Cell" microprocessor to Toshiba.

On Tuesday, Stringer talked proudly about its latest TV technology and its robotic music player, dubbed Rolly.

This month in Japan, Sony began selling the world's first television for the commercial market with an organic light-emitting diode display, or OLED. The 11-inch, or 27.5-centimeter, display on the TV called XEL-1 measures just 0.12 inches thick, and delivers clear vivid images.

Rolly, which went on sale this year, is a rolling dancing, egg-shaped music player that flaps its lidlike ends and flashes lights.

Stringer made clear that he planned to stay on as chief executive and steer the next three-year plan.

"Am I going to be here for the next three years?" he asked rhetorically. "And the answer is, 'Yes.' "

Stringer said Sony's consumer electronics business in the U.S. market had not been affected by the shaky economy and reiterated that the company was on track to hit a 5 percent operating margin for the year ending March 31.

Electronics operations account for nearly three quarters of Sony's total sales, while the 5 percent margin target has been considered the most visible indicator of success for Stringer's turnaround efforts.

The economy "has not affected electronics in the U.S.," Stringer said. "We are holding up."
(Source ith.com)

Pressure mounting for big rate cut


An uptick in the unemployment rate has Wall Street calling for the Fed to lower rates by a half-point.


ben_bernanke_fed_f.03.jpg
Investors are betting that Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke may cut interest rates by a half-point at the Fed's next meeting later this month.
fed_rate_moves_425_small.gif

Investors to Fed: We want more!
CNNMoney.com's Paul R. La Monica discusses Wall Street's dissappointment with the Fed's quarter-point rate cut in December.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- With unemployment rising to 5 percent in December and jobs growth coming in well below forecasts, economists said the Federal Reserve may be forced to slash interest rates when it meets later this month in order to stave off a recession.

In another step to combat the slowing economy, the Fed also announced Friday that it was going to lend up to $60 billion more to banks in two auctions later this month and that it would decide by February 1 if it will conduct more auctions. The auctions are part of a plan the Fed announced in December to to try and restore order to the distressed financial markets.

The government reported December employment figures on Friday. Only 18,000 jobs were added to the nation's payrolls while economists were predicting job growth of 70,000. What's more, the unemployment rate was expected to come in at 4.8 percent, up from 4.7 percent in November.

As a result of these gloomy numbers, expectations for a half-point rate cut grew Friday morning. According to futures listed on the Chicago Board of Trade, investors are pricing in a 78 percent chance that the Fed will lower the federal funds rates by 50 basis points, to 3.75 percent, at the conclusion of its two-day meeting on January 30. There are 100 basis points in a full percentage point.

"The jobs numbers make a half point cut plausible," said Keith Hembre, chief economist with First American Funds in Minneapolis. "The unemployment rate has moved up to 5 percent from 4.4 percent last March and we've usually not had an upward movement of that magnitude outside of a recession."

Prior to the jobs report, investors were pricing in a 67 percent chance of a half-point cut as recession fears have grown in recent days. A report released Wednesday indicated that manufacturing activity is softening while oil prices, which hit $100 this week, have raised concerns that consumers may pull back on spending as a result of higher energy prices.

The Fed last cut the federal funds rate, a key overnight bank lending rate that affects rates for credit card debt, home equity lines of credit and auto loans, by a quarter-point to 4.25 percent on Dec. 11.

In the minutes from that meeting, released on Wednesday, the Fed hinted that more "substantial" rate cuts might be needed if the economy continued to show signs of weakness in the face of the credit crunch caused by last year's subprime mortgage meltdown.

John Lynch, chief market analyst for Evergreen Investments in Charlotte said that he thinks the Fed will now lower rates to at least 3.5 percent by mid-year. He said that despite the spike in oil and other commodities such as gold, the Fed would probably be more comfortable with inflation picking up a bit if it meant that the economy did not go into recession.

With the economy showing so many signs of sluggishness, it's going to be tough for the Fed to argue that inflation is the bigger bugaboo.

"There is no debate with the latest round of numbers. Everything points to a significantly slower economy," said Joe Balestrino, fixed income market strategist with Federated Investors in Pittsburgh.

Still, more rate cuts have the potential to lift oil and other commodity prices further since lower rates likely would further weaken the dollar. With that in mind, there are concerns that the Fed may not be as aggressive as Wall Street wants it to be.

"$100 oil is an unusual factor," Hembre said. "While it doesn't completely change inflation expectations it does complicate things a bit."

Nonetheless, investors are also worried that more rate cuts from the Fed may be too late to save the economy from dipping into a recession.

"A 50 point cut might not make that much difference in stopping a free fall if that is happening," said Oscar Gonzalez, economist with John Hancock Financial Services in Boston.

Gonzalez cautions that he thinks it's still too soon to say that the "sky is falling." But he would be worried if the jobs numbers for January are as bad as they were for December.

"If employment continues to weaken, we could be in for a very rough patch of economic news for at least the next few quarters," Gonzalez said.

Despite the weak numbers, economists said they did not think the Fed would hold an emergency meeting before Jan. 30 to talk about cutting rates.

Hembre said that it would take a "calamity" such as much weaker than expected retail sales figures for December or a lot more volatility in the stock and bond markets to justify an intermeeting move.

Stocks did not react well to the jobs news, with the Dow falling more than 140 points, or 1.1 percent in early afternoon trading and the S&P 500 off by about 1.4 percent .The Nasdaq plunged more than 2.3 percent.

Bonds continued to rally, sending the yield on the benchmark 10-Year U.S. Treasury down to 3.85 percent. Bond prices and yields move in opposite directions and lower yields are typical during a sluggish economic environment.

But Gonzalez suggested that a rate cut before Jan. 30 might actually cause stocks and bond yields to fall further since it could be construed as a sign of desperation by the Fed.

"An intermeeting move would be a cause for alarm," he said.

Instead, Gonzalez thinks the Fed is more likely to use creative ways to try to restore confidence in the markets and economy, such as the Term Auction Facility it announced last month in conjunction with central banks in Canada and Europe.

The Fed devised this proposal in order to encourage banks that need cash to ask for money without having to borrow directly from the Fed at the discount rate, which is higher than the federal funds rate.

The central bank has already loaned a combined $40 billion to financial institutions during two auctions last month. There was strong demand for these auctions and in both cases, the rates for the loans were below the discount rate of 4.75 percent.

The Fed said Friday it would hold its next auction, of up to $30 billion, on January 14 and that another auction of up to $30 billion would take place on January 28.

Balestrino is cautiously optimistic that a half-point cut, combined with the Fed's three rate cuts in 2007, could keep the economy from heading into a recession.

He adds that if the economy continues to slow in the next few months, the Fed could lower rates by a half-point at its March 18 meeting, or even at an unscheduled meeting in February.
(Source money.cnn.com)

Most Overpriced Vehicles

Go shopping for a Dodge Ram, and you may find a $4,500 factory incentive awaits. On top of that, it's likely a dealer will give you an all-smiles, deep-discount price that's lower by thousands more.

Despite these inducements, Rams are languishing on lots. Nationwide dealers reported a 117-day inventory as of Nov. 1, according to Automotive News. Jonathan Banks, senior director of the Automotive Leasing Guide-affiliated ALG Consulting Group, says that excess dealer inventory is a leading indicator that it's time not just for more incentives but possibly a price cut.

Mercurygrand.jpg

Good thing, because the Dodge Ram is among the most egregiously overpriced cars in the U.S. Rounding out the top five: the Mercury Grand Marquis, Ford's F-150, the Dodge Durango and the GMC Envoy.

Behind the Numbers

In order to find the market's currently most overpriced vehicles, we first looked at market price figures supplied by Vincentric, a firm that tracks vehicle ownership costs for the auto industry. These are updated monthly to reflect marketplace inventory, demand, rebates and incentives, and represent the price that a buyer typically pays. We ruled out any vehicles where the market price was discounted less than 5% from the MSRP.

Next, we looked at J.D. Power's 2007 Automotive Performance, Execution and Layout (APEAL) survey results and ruled out vehicles with average or better satisfaction or better than two and a half stars.

We consulted Consumer Reports' Owner Satisfaction results, data from a survey that asks owners, considering a wide range of factors including price, "Would you get this car again?" Cars with better than average scores were dropped. Then we looked at one-year residual value data from ALG, which help quantify the rapid depreciation of an overpriced vehicle directly after the sale. Finally, we reordered the remaining vehicles by the amount overpriced (difference between market price and MSRP) and ranked the top 15.

Top Five Overpriced Vehicles

Dodge Ram
Mercury Grand Marquis
Ford's F-150
Dodge Durango
GMC Envoy

On the Chopping Block

We looked at price cuts because, while alluring, they may indicate a carmaker's desire to jump-start sluggish sales, which may in turn indicate a less than accurate initial sticker price. Though a number of external forces--such as those related to the economy--can suddenly precipitate a short-term price cut, typically automakers eager to unload their vehicles will keep adjusting the transaction price through incentives in an attempt to make the vehicle more appealing.

"Short-term incentives won't have much of an effect on residuals," says David Wurster, president of Vincentric, "but a continuous pattern of using them begins to reflect a longer-term lack of appeal for a vehicle."

Some might argue this is true of the Ram 1500 pickup. The market is in the midst of a long-term change in product preference, says Wurster, toward so-called crossover SUVs that are less trucklike. The demand for pickups is currently down, so there needs to be a serious adjustment in production and pricing. There have already been some lowered MSRPs on trucks, and Toyota has brought out a lower-priced "EGrade" work-truck model of its Tundra full-size pickup.

Canyon.jpg

The price adjustments are painful to corporate egos and bean counters, but ultimately better for the industry and for buyers. Banks says that between two vehicles, one priced at $25,000 and the other priced at $28,000 with a $3,000 incentive, the $25,000 vehicle is going to have a better residual value and be worth more three or five years down the line.

Declining Desire

Some of our overpriced vehicles--including the Chevrolet Trailblazer and Envoy--are simply suffering from a lack of demand and sales that are losing steam.

"You also have a lot of products that are old, like the Ford Ranger," says Christopher Li, a research specialist at J.D. Power and Associates, who added that the Chevrolet Colorado--another pickup with lagging appeal--hasn't been competing well either in a segment that's become dominated by the Toyota Tacoma. Fuel prices, meanwhile, are putting the squeeze on mid-size sport-utility vehicles. The result? Price cuts.

Vehicles may also be overpriced because the automaker didn't follow the right pricing strategy in the first place. For instance, some domestic brands have been pricing not to the market but where they aspire to be, which results in deep incentives and poor residuals, says Banks, who cites the $36,195 Chrysler Pacifica, which was originally priced as competitive with the Lexus RX, as a prime example.

Automakers run into further trouble when they bring out a model that strays too far from the image of the brand.

"Companies should produce products that enhance their brands but still are true to the heritage," says Wurster, who points out that Volkswagen's Phaeton, and its high price (one model had an MSRP exceeding $100,000 in 2006), was a blunder while the $104,000 Lexus LS600h hybrid flagship is a natural extension.

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Price dissatisfaction is also represented in other metrics, namely satisfaction. No one wants to pay for a product he or she isn't happy with. J.D. Power, which measures how gratifying a vehicle is to own and drive in the first 90 days of ownership with its annual APEAL survey, says that a higher score corresponds to lower model incentives. Consumer Reports also has an Annual Car Owners Satisfaction Survey in which it asks, considering a wide range of factors including price, whether respondents would buy their vehicle again.

One final metric that warrants mention: length of ownership. Robert Smith, manager of car information products at Consumer Reports, says that even if the automaker's piling on the incentives and the residuals are embarrassingly low, it's actually not overpriced if you plan to keep the vehicle for a long time.

"Are you planning to keep the vehicle for six, seven, eight years?" he asks. "Then you aren't so concerned with resale."
(Source finance.yahoo.com)

The Shape of Things to Come (and Gone)



The start of 2008 prodded market bloggers to offer a few startling predictions for the upcoming year and look back at 2007's machinations. The broad negative sentiment we're currently hearing is important for all investors to note -- but could also be understood as a contrarian indicator that 2008 will offer significant upsides for savvy investors.

Let's meet back here in 12 months and see what happened.

2008: Pessimism Abounds

Wall St. Journal blogger David Gaffen notes that strategist Byron Wien had some dead-on predictions for 2007, and summarizes Wien's largely bearish calls for 2008, including the S&P 500 index falling 10 percent and the United States suffering its worst recession since 2001.

Fellow skeptic Tim Iacono is confident that despite the widespread housing weakness last year, housing prices will fall another 10 percent nationally, and "this is not one of those cases where it would be better to go against the crowd." Iacono believes the dollar will continue to fall, crude oil will spike to $130 a barrel, U.S. equities will suffer, and inflation "will be the least of the country's problems by summer." Iacono predicts that with job growth turning negative, "help-wanted signs at coffee shops and restaurants will slowly disappear -- which will be unfortunate for those teenagers who finally have to start looking for low-paying jobs to buy their next iPod or cell phone because their parents have spent all their home equity."

CNBC and TheStreet.com personality Jim Cramer echoes Iacono's expectations for rising oil prices and, as a hedge, suggests buying the stock of the company under whose sign you filled up your car today. Alternatively, Cramer suggests buying a driller -- Transocean (RIG) is his favorite -- "then sit back and make money." Other 2008 predictions from Cramer: Apple (AAPL) stock will reach $300 and take over the music business, and European companies will take advantage of the weak dollar and "swoop in" to snap up U.S. giants Merrill Lynch, JP Morgan, Colgate, Clorox, Whirlpool, and Black & Decker.

Barry Ritholtz takes a quick run through fund manager Doug Kass' yearly predictions, ranging from a drop in corporate profits and higher market volatility to a resurgence of the Japanese market and an acceleration of the housing bust. Stock-wise, Kass expects "bubble status" for Research in Motion, Apple, and Google. In the M&A department, Kass suggests Yahoo! and eBay will merge, as will Amazon and Overstock.com.

Portfolio's Felix Salmon has two trade ideas for 2008. One is highly speculative -- to go long the ABX subprime index on the assumption that it's oversold; the other is highly defensive -- to buy 10-year inflation-indexed Treasury bonds, as Salmon believes official inflation figures have been artificially low of late.

Matt Callow encourages further exposing portfolios to China in 2008, buying the Canadian dollar, and panning for gold. Callow's fully behind the "Ag boom," as he expects "just about anything tied to agriculture (from machinery, to food production) to do well in 2008." Given this and related trends, macro expert Gary Dorsch says the commodity "super cycle" should be "ready to rumble" in 2008.

ETFtrends' Tom Lydon says global markets will no longer be in sync with slower-growing U.S. markets, and that international exchange traded funds are the most compelling method to capture this trend. Lydon's looking at ETFs tracking Europe and Asia, fixed-income ETFs, and the entrance of big players like Fidelity and T. Rowe Price to the ETF provider market. He believes that as more investors learn about ETFs, they'll be running to their financial advisors, asking, "Why aren't these in my portfolio?!"

IndexUniverse's Matthew Hougan offers his wish list of five such ETFs he'd like to see hit the market this year, and notes that the remarkable recent growth of the ETF marketplace enables individuals to buy "a diversified portfolio that includes everything from Emerging Markets stocks to commodities futures ... for just 13.4 basis points [0.13 percent in yearly fees]."

David Fry says "good riddance" to a "sloppy" 2007 and, noting the growing importance of international Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs), speculates that this year SWFs may begin buying up precious metals miners as a hedge against the declining dollar.

Trader Charles Kirk says that despite the weak opening so far to 2008, "we are far from being oversold... and have a good way to go before we are again." Kirk's current plan? "[T]o wait until we are [oversold] again or until I have information and analysis to indicate a different plan of attack."

Finally, alternative energy expert Tom Konrad has a multipart series on investor "gambles" in that emerging sector for 2008. Konrad is bullish on the LED market with Cree, Inc., and Lighting Science Group, which got great publicity in Times Square on New Year's Eve. If that's not an incentive for the new year, what is?

2007: Meltdowns, Volatility, Globalism, and Deal-making

For financial bloggers, the major event of 2007 was the housing crisis, or as Trader Thoughts phrases it, watching "the world of structured finance go upside down and unravel faster than a ball of wool in a basket of kittens." The "contagion spread" as more than 25 subprime lenders declared bankruptcy and S&P and Moody's (belatedly?) downgraded more than $12 billion worth of bonds backed by subprime mortgages. Meanwhile, the European banking system suffered a credit crunch while U.S. inflation surged at the year's end.

The market may have seemed very volatile in 2007, with the big late-summer drop and Fall recovery, but Bespoke Investment Group notes that by one standard, the S&P 500 was actually less volatile in 2007 than its long-term trend.

PlanetQuant demonstrates that "anyone who made the decision to invest internationally in recent years has been well rewarded," and brings hard numbers that suggest this "golden age of global investing" will continue.

David Schrader's grandfather believes he should be depressed about the state of global economic and political events. Yet Schrader is an optimist. Retail was weaker than expected, while the state of the housing market remains "bent, but not yet broken." Financial institutions "need transfusions" to stay alive, but the stock markets were, all-in-all, positive. Schrader's hoping that the lesson of 2007 is that "things may be better than they seem."

Some bloggers measure 2007 by the deals that got done -- NewsVisual votes for Rupert Murdoch as this year's "king of deal-making" for his take over of Dow Jones. New media commentator Ashkan Karbasfrooshan couldn't agree more, calling Murdoch's Dow Jones acquisition "one helluva deal." Karbasfrooshan has a list of top M&A deals in web-oriented sectors -- he likes Yahoo!'s acquisition of Zimbra to improve offline office suites. WSJ's Stephen Grocer says deal-making in 2007 was "the tale of two halves" of the year and offers a "by-the-numbers look" at what was the biggest M&A year on record.

Himanshu Pandya deems 2007 a "Solar Year on Wall Street," with leader First Solar's stock up nearly 800 percent and 11 other publicly traded stocks in this sector up over 100 percent on 2007.

Finally, David Gaffen plays the blame game, looking back at the situations in which a company or executive decided that the ultimate responsibility for a problem lay with someone else. At Morgan Stanley, CEO John Mack blamed a massive $9 billion write down on just "one desk," while some housing industry players, amidst the worst downturn in decades for their business, preferred to blame the media for their current woes.

That's a sign that regardless of what 2008 has in store, market bloggers will play an important role in defining and chronicling it for the individual investor.

(Source finance.yahoo.com)

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Oil Futures Rise to $100 a Barrel




Crude Futures Hit Record $100 a Barrel on Supply Concerns After Violence Breaks Out in Nigeria NEW YORK (AP) -- Crude oil prices briefly soared to $100 a barrel Wednesday for the first time, reaching that milestone amid an unshakeable view that global demand for oil and petroleum products will outstrip supplies.

Surging economies in China and India fed by oil and gasoline have sent prices soaring over the past year, while tensions in oil producing nations like Nigeria and Iran have increasingly made investors nervous and invited speculators to drive prices even higher.

Violence in Nigeria helped give crude the final push to $100. Bands of armed men invaded Port Harcourt, the center of Nigeria's oil industry Tuesday, attacking two police stations and raiding the lobby of a major hotel. Word that several Mexican oil export ports were closed due to rough weather added to the gains, as did a report that OPEC may not be able to meet its share of global oil demand by 2024.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery rose $4.02 to $100 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, according to Brenda Guzman, a Nymex spokeswoman, before slipping back to settle at a record close of $99.62, up $3.64.

Oil prices are within the range of inflation-adjusted highs set in early 1980. Depending on how the adjustment is calculated, $38 a barrel then would be worth $96 to $103 or more today.

The White House on Wednesday said it would not release oil from the nation's strategic reserves to drive prices lower.

"This president would not use the (Strategic Petroleum Reserve) to manipulate (prices) unless there was a true emergency," said White House press secretary Dana Perino.

As of early November, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve contained 694 million barrels of oil. The government is working to fill it to its 727 million barrel capacity.

Among the solutions to high prices are expanding domestic oil and gas production and increasing the nation's refining capacity, Energy Department spokeswoman Megan Barnett said.

Crude prices, which have flirted with $100 for months, have risen in recent days on supply concerns exacerbated by Turkish attacks on Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq and falling domestic inventories. However, post-holiday trading volumes were about 50 percent of normal Wednesday, meaning the price move was likely exaggerated by speculative buying.

"I would imagine the speculators are the biggest drivers today," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp., in Chicago.

It's hard to say whether prices would have risen as quickly on a normal trading day, Flynn said. While oil has soared on mounting supply concerns in recent months, speculators have often been cited as a reason for the swiftness of oil's climb.

Moreover, many of the concerns about supply disruptions have yet to materialize, but that hasn't stopped buyers from driving prices higher.

"Although the (Nigerian) violence has not impacted oil flow out of the country, it has reignited supply concerns as militant attacks have reduced Nigeria's crude output by roughly 20 percent since 2006," said John Gerdes, an analyst at SunTrust Robinson Humphrey in a research note. Nigeria is Africa's largest oil producer.

Separately, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said its member nations may not be able to meet demand as early as 2024, though OPEC also said that deadline could slide for decades if members increase production more quickly. Word that several Mexican oil export ports were closed due to rough weather added to the gains.

On top of those concerns, investors are anticipating that crude inventories fell by 1.7 million barrels last week, which would be the seventh straight weekly drop.

"(A decline) is not anything unusual for this time of year, but when it happens for seven weeks in a row, it starts to add up," said Amanda Kurzendoerfer, an analyst at Summit Energy Services Inc. in Louisville, Ky.

At the pump, meanwhile, gas prices rose 0.6 cent Wednesday to a national average of $3.049 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Gas prices, which typically lag the futures market, have edged higher in recent days, following oil's approach to $100.

Gas prices peaked at $3.227 a gallon in May as refiners faced unprecedented maintenance issues and struggled to produce enough gasoline to meet demand. A similar scenario is expected this spring, when gas prices could peak above $3.40 a gallon, according to the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration.

The EIA's inventory report, delayed until Thursday this week due to the New Year's holiday, is also expected to show gains in gasoline supplies and refinery activity, and a decline in supplies of distillates, which include heating oil and diesel.

In other Nymex trading Wednesday, February heating oil futures rose 9.1 cents to settle at a record $2.7404 a gallon after setting a trading record of $2.7465 while February gasoline futures climbed 7.81 cents to settle at a record $2.5689 a gallon after setting their own trading record of $2.5784.

February natural gas futures advanced 36.7 cents to settle at $7.85 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, February Brent crude rose $3.37 to settle at $97.84 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Associated Press Writers Dan Caterinicchia in Washington, George Jahn in Vienna and Gillian Wong in Singapore contributed to this report.

(Source finance.yahoo.com)