Financial life in a big town

February 27, 2012

Mild winter warms Lowe’s 4Q profit

Filed under: Finance, legal — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 5:04 pm

Lowe’s Cos. said Monday its fiscal fourth-quarter net income rose 13 percent, better than analysts expected, as homeowners took on more home-improvement projects during mild winter months.

The results are the latest sign that the housing sector may slowly be improving. Last week, Lowe’s larger rival Home Depot Inc. reported its fourth-quarter profit rose for similar reasons.

“We have seen an uptick in activity,” Lowe’s CEO Robert Niblock said in a telephone interview. “We did have favorable weather, but even beyond that there’s a greater willingness of the consumer to spend.”

Home repair and maintenance are still the biggest projects people take on, he said, with demand for larger-scale renovations such as kitchen remodeling still lagging, Niblock said.

The company has also been moving away limited-time sales in favor of lowering prices permanently in some areas to better compete with chief rival Home Depot. Niblock said the price-cutting is largely complete and now the company is working with vendors to lower costs.

He declined to give specifics on how much the company has lowered prices, but said some categories, like appliances, will still see periodic sales rather than across-the-board price cuts.

Lowe’s reported net income of $322 million, or 26 cents per share, for the period ended Feb. 3. That’s up from $285 million, or 21 cents per share, a year earlier.

The most recent quarter included 3 cents per share for store closings and other items. Removing those items, earnings were 29 cents per share.

Analysts predicted 24 cents per share, according to a FactSet survey. Analysts’ estimates typically exclude unusual items.

Revenue rose to $11.63 billion from $10.48 billion, topping Wall Street’s estimate of $11.35 billion.

The Mooresville, N.C., company said that an extra week in the period contributed $766 million to its sales and about 5 cents per share to its earnings.

Revenue at stores open at least a year rose 3.4 percent overall and 3.5 percent in the U.S. This metric is a key indicator of a retailer’s health because it excludes results from stores recently opened or closed.

For the full year, Lowe’s earnings declined 9 percent to $1.84 billion, or $1.43 per share, from $2.01 billion, or $1.42 per share, a year earlier. Annual revenue rose 3 percent to $50.21 billion from $48.82 billion.

Revenue at stores open at least a year was nearly flat for the year.

One analyst said Lowe’s was moving in the right direction.

“We continue to believe that a housing recovery is coming, and when it arrives we would expect even stronger (revenue in stores open at least one year) and margin expansion,” said Credit Suisse analyst Gary Balter, who rates the company “Outperform.”

Lowe’s predicts fiscal 2012 earnings of $1.75 to $1.85 per share. Revenue is expected to rise 1 percent to 2 percent, which implies $50.69 billion to $51.2 billion.

Analysts foresee full-year earnings of $1.81 per share on revenue of $50.23 billion.

Lowe’s had 1,745 stores in the U.S., Canada and Mexico at the quarter’s end.

Its shares rose 11 cents to $27.27 in morning trading.

Source

February 25, 2012

Buffett’s Berkshire posts 30 pct drop in earnings

Filed under: online, term — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 9:48 pm

A drop in the paper value of the financial instruments known as derivatives hurt profits at Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the conglomerate run by billionaire investor Warren Buffett.

Some of its subsidiaries performed well enough to offset some of the losses. Buffett detailed the company’s 2011 performance Saturday in his annual letter to shareholders.

Berkshire reported fourth-quarter net income of $3.05 billion, or $1,846 per Class A share. That was down from $4.4 billion net income, or $2,656 per share, a year ago.

Berkshire’s profit fell short of the $1,875 per share expected by the four analysts surveyed by FactSet, a provider of financial data. Quarterly revenue grew 5 percent to $37.96 billion from last year’s $36.17 billion.

The biggest difference in the quarter was the change in estimated value of Berkshire’s investments and derivative contracts. That fell to $382 million this year from last year’s $1.4 billion.

Derivatives are complex investments that have been blamed in part for the 2008 financial crisis and the recession. Berkshire’s derivatives are designed to operate like insurance policies, with some covering the risk of bond defaults by certain companies and some covering whether certain stock market indexes will be lower 15 or 20 years in the future.

Buffett reiterated Saturday that he believes Berkshire’s derivative contracts will ultimately prove profitable, but he said the company doesn’t plan to write any more major derivative contracts. Buffett said he does not want Berkshire to deal with new requirements for how much collateral companies must post when they hold derivatives payday lenders.

For 2011, Berkshire generated $10.3 billion in net income, or $6,215 per Class A share, down from nearly $13 billion, or $7,928 per share, in 2010.

Strength in the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad, MidAmerican Energy, and the Marmon Group helped offset insurance underwriting losses related to catastrophes like the Japan tsunami. Newly acquired chemical maker Lubrizol added $1.7 billion in revenues to Berkshire since September.

Stockbroker Andy Kilpatrick, who wrote “Of Permanent Value: The Story of Warren Buffett,” said Buffett managed to outperform the overall market in a tough year for Berkshire’s insurance and housing-related subsidiaries.

“It was not a great year, but he still beat the S&P. It’s still an incredible moneymaking machine,” Kilpatrick said.

Buffett’s preferred measure of Berkshire’s performance is the growth in its book value, which is a calculation of the company’s assets minus its liabilities. Buffett said Berkshire’s book value grew 4.6 percent to $99,860 per share in 2011. The S&P 500, which Berkshire is part of, gained 2.1 percent last year when dividends were factored in.

Berkshire owns roughly 80 subsidiaries, including clothing, furniture and jewelry companies, but its insurance and utility businesses typically account for more than half the company’s net income. It also has major investments in such companies as Coca-Cola, IBM and Wells Fargo.

Source

February 22, 2012

Alibaba wants to take Web unit private

Filed under: Uncategorized, news — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 3:56 pm

Chinese Internet giant Alibaba, which has been in the headlines lately for its tussles with stakeholder Yahoo, wants to take its publicly traded Web portal private.

Alibaba Group said Tuesday that it made an offer to Alibaba.com’s board of directors.

Alibaba Group owns about 73.5% of e-commerce leader Alibaba.com, which is the company’s only publicly traded subsidiary. Under the terms of the deal, Alibaba Group would buy the other 26.5% of the company for 13.50 Hong Kong dollars ($1.74 U.S.) per share in cash.

That’s a 55.3% premium above Alibaba.com’s average closing price over the last 10 days — but it’s the exact same price the company fetched in its initial public offering in November 2007.

Taking the web portal private "will allow our company to make long-term decisions that are in the best interest of our customers and that are also free from the pressures that come from having a publicly listed company," Alibaba Group CEO Jack Ma said in a prepared statement.

Alibaba has been in the news frequently over the past year for its contentious relationship with Yahoo (, Fortune 500).

Yahoo owns about a 40% stake in Alibaba, which is considered one of its most valuable assets. But Ma and former Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz had a public dispute over ownership of Alipay, an online payment unit similar to eBay (, Fortune 500)-owned PayPal.

The companies reached an agreement in July 2011, but tensions continued. Ma said at a conference in late September that Alibaba would be "interested" in buying all of Yahoo — a purchase that would essentially allow Ma to buy back control of that 40% Alibaba stake.

According to media reports, Yahoo had been in advanced talks with Alibaba and Japan-based Softbank to discuss selling its stakes in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan. But those talks reportedly collapsed earlier this month. 

Source

February 21, 2012

Boeing Apache vying for $10 billion Asian chopper market

Filed under: Loans, money — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 1:00 am

Boeing Co., Sikorsky, Eurocopter and Bell, the top four helicopter makers, are focused on Asia as 1,000 orders from countries spanning India to Korea are set to make it the fastest growing military-chopper market by 2015.

Tenders in half a dozen nations should produce sales of $10 billion over the next three years, Norbert Ducrot, executive vice president for the Asia-Pacific region at Eurocopter, the world’s No. 1 manufacturer of rotorcraft, said in an interview.

Key bids include naval tenders in Korea and India, for which Sikorsky, a unit of United Technologies Corp., is pitching its Seahawk antisubmarine model, a version of the Black Hawk.

Asian military spending rose 14 percent last year, funded by the world’s fastest-growing regional economy. The helicopter market is surging as nations race to replace aging Western, Soviet and home-grown models, led by emerging powers seeking the means to extend their military reach, according to Craig Caffrey, a defense analyst at IHS Jane’s DS Forecast in London.

“In China and India, the market is being driven by attempts to improve the mobility of their ground forces, which requires the procurement of large quantities of tactical transport helicopters,” said Caffrey, adding that Asia represents “one of the most open and diverse” markets for the aircraft.

While the U.S. will remain the biggest military-helicopter market over the next decade, its share of sales will dip to 38 percent from 50 percent with its exit from Iraq last year and a withdrawal from Afghanistan planned for 2014, according to London-based Visiongain no fax cash loans.

Competition intensified last week in Singapore, with major manufacturers pushing their products at the last major air show before a series of contract announcements begins with an Indian order for 197 light helicopters valued at $1.5 billion.

India, whose existing chopper fleet is dominated by Soviet models, also has a contest under way for 55 naval helicopters, worth $2.2 billion, for which France-based Eurocopter is pitching the NH90 against Sikorsky’s Seahawk and Textron Inc.’s Bell 429.

The south Asian nation is also seeking 22 attack choppers in a tender for which Chicago-based Boeing says its AH-64 Apache, built in Mesa, Ariz., has been selected as preferred bidder over the Russian Mil Mi-28 Havoc, together with 15 heavy-lift models that have attracted proposals from the Boeing Ch-47 Chinook, built in Ridley Park, Pa., and the Mi-26 Halo.

Boeing is offering the Chinook model used in Afghanistan.

Source

February 16, 2012

Medicare’s bill for artificial feet is questioned

Filed under: Uncategorized, management — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 4:28 am

It doesn’t compute: Medicare’s bill for artificial feet has jumped by more than half, although foot and leg amputations due to diabetes continue to decline dramatically.

Medicare paid $94 million for artificial feet in 2010, according to research conducted for The Associated Press. That was nearly $35 million more than in 2005, even though in 2010, Medicare covered about 1,900 fewer such prostheses.

It works out to a 58 percent cost increase over five years.

Artificial feet represent a tiny slice of the $550 billion Medicare spends on health care for 49 million older and disabled people. But the cost spike highlights basic questions about affordability, technology and appropriate care that confront lawmakers looking for a way out of Medicare’s financial troubles.

Program officials say they’re concerned. Medicare “is aware of and shares the concerns this research raises about lower limb prosthetics,” said spokesman Brian Cook.

Industry says there’s nothing wrong. Patients are benefiting from new technology in artificial limbs used for wounded troops returning from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Others dispute that conclusion, saying there’s no body of scientific evidence to back it up.

A doctor who works with amputees questioned whether a high-tech foot designed for an active person is appropriate for an elderly patient with diabetes, a major cause of lower-limb amputations. Losing a foot means the patient is at an advanced stage of the disease and probably dealing with other problems that limit physical activity.

“A lot of our patients are just trying to transfer from the wheelchair to the toilet,” said Dr. Howard Gilmer of National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington.

A report last year by the Health and Human Services inspector general found widespread questionable billing for lower-limb prostheses, a category that includes artificial feet.

In 2009, Medicare inappropriately paid $43 million for lower-limb prostheses that did not meet certain basic standards for accurate claims, investigators said. They found an additional $61 million in questionable billing in cases where it wasn’t clear that the Medicare beneficiary had seen the referring doctor in the previous five years, raising questions about whether the prosthesis was medically necessary.

Industry officials say they are committed to battling fraud and the AP’s statistics simply show the march of progress.

“We have had a huge improvement in the quality of devices that we can provide, thanks to all the knowledge that has flowed from providing care to soldiers,” said Thomas Fise, executive director of the American Orthotic & Prosthetic Association, a trade group. “That technology has now become available, and patients believe they should be entitled to it, and who is going to tell those Medicare beneficiaries they are not entitled?”

“What the government got for their money was value-added,” said Tom DiBello, president of the group, which represents professionals who fit artificial limbs as well as manufacturers.

The AP’s analysis was done by Avalere Health, a data-crunching firm serving private and government health care clients. It looked at Medicare spending on 13 codes for different types of artificial feet that the program covers, many with multiple manufacturers. The analysis suggests the sharp rise in spending is mainly due to a shift in the types of prosthetics being given to Medicare beneficiaries, from ones that cost several hundred dollars to more sophisticated types that run in the low thousands.

Medicare has started covering a computer-controlled ankle/foot that costs $15,000, about as much as a compact car. Some major private insurers still consider it experimental and do not routinely cover it.

Several doctors were surprised by the findings.

“The data are surprising because of the large increase over a short period of time,” said Dr. David Armstrong, a professor of surgery at the University of Arizona and diabetes expert who directs the Southern Arizona Limb Salvage Alliance.

Armstrong wonders if the dazzle of technology is the issue for some practitioners. “They can lose the forest for the trees and focus more on a high-end device because it’s high-end, rather than specifically on function for the patient,” he said

The AP’s data analysis showed a nearly threefold increase in Medicare coverage for one model of foot prosthesis that features a shock absorber and costs about $6,500.

That seemed puzzling to Gilmer. His clinic had recently fitted a patient with that same kind of foot. But the patient is in his 20s and rides ATVs, plays basketball and works on cars.

“Most of our Medicare patients are not going out playing hoops every day,” said Gilmer. Fitting a patient is an individualized process that takes into account many factors, not only physical activity.

Avalere senior vice president Nora Hoban said the data raise questions that need to be answered by further research.

Medicare spokesman Cook said the government is cracking down on fraud involving artificial limbs, saving taxpayers $867,000 in the past year.

But Medicare was unable to provide the AP the ages of beneficiaries who received the different types of artificial feet or the states where they live. Those two pieces of information could help start to find answers to the puzzle.

Officials acknowledge widespread deficiencies in documentation of medical necessity for all kinds of equipment, but they are concerned that tightening requirements could restrict access for seniors.

“We are committed to reducing improper payments and fraud, while ensuring that Medicare beneficiaries have access to the care and services that they need,” said Cook.

The inspector general’s report recommended that Medicare revise a scale of functional activity levels that clinicians use to help determine what kind of artificial limb is appropriate for a particular patient, based on that individual’s lifestyle. It said definitions of the patient’s potential for rehabilitation should be clarified.

“These changes would help ensure that prostheses are matched to beneficiaries’ needs and that (Medicare billing contractors) can assess the medical necessity of these devices,” the report said.

Meanwhile, the rate of diabetes-related foot and leg amputations continues to fall, due to better patient care. Among the Medicare population, it declined 66 percent from 1996-2008, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Source

January 29, 2012

APNewsBreak: UN weapons experts going to Tehran

Filed under: marketing, technology — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 7:56 am

The U.N. nuclear agency is including two senior weapons experts on its next mission to Tehran in an unusually clear statement on the team’s prime focus _ wresting information from Iranian officials about suspicions the country has secretly worked on atomic arms.

Iran has flatly refused to discuss such allegations for more than three years, saying they were based on phony intelligence from the U.S. and others seeking to harm the Islamic Republic.

But diplomats on Friday told The Associated Press that the weapons experts were part of the U.N team and that Iran had accepted their inclusion after some initial resistance. That suggested that the Islamic Republic was being more conciliatory on the issue of secret weapons work than usual as the International Atomic Energy Agency mission prepares to fly from Vienna to Tehran Saturday.

All six diplomats interviewed said Tehran had not committed to discussing the issue. But three of them added that Iranian officials indicated openness to talking about all topics during the IAEA mission that ends early next week _ a departure from standard reluctance by Tehran to exclude give-and-take on the arms allegations.

None of the diplomats expressed confidence of a breakthrough. But the Iranian stance at least allows the mission to have some home of making a dent into Iran’s wall of silence about its alleged clandestine nuclear weapons work.

Any progress on the issue would be significant.

Tehran has blocked IAEA attempts for more than three years to follow up on U.S. and other intelligence alleging covert Iranian work on nuclear arms, dismissing the charges as baseless and insisting all its nuclear activities were peaceful and under IAEA purview.

Faced with Iranian stonewalling, the IAEA summarized its body of information in November, in a 13-page document drawing on 1,000 pages of intelligence. It stated then for the first time that some of the alleged experiments can have no other purpose than developing nuclear weapons.

Iran continues to deny the charges and no change in its position is expected during the Tehran talks with IAEA officials. But even a decision to enter a discussion over the allegations would be a major departure from outright refusal to talk about them.

The diplomats said that the IAEA team was looking for permission to talk to key Iranian scientists suspected of weapons work, inspect documents relating to such suspected work and get commitments for future visits to sites linked to such allegations.

As most often the case, the IAEA team is headed by Herman Nackaerts, the chief agency official in charge of the Iran file _ but the makeup of the rest of the team reflects the importance attached by the agency to the trip.

Two diplomats said Friday that nuclear weapons experts Jack Baute of France and Neville Whiting of Britain would accompany Nackaerts.

While both fulfill IAEA functions not directly related to nuclear arms research, they were connected to their nation’s weapons programs before they came to the agency.

One of the diplomats _ who is familiar with the thinking that went into setting up the mission _ said their inclusion was meant to send a clear signal to the Iranians. He, like the five other diplomats, asked for anonymity in exchange for discussing privileged information,

Also on the team is Rafael Grossi, IAEA chief Yukiya Amano’s right hand _ another indication of the importance the agency has attached to the trip.

The three-day visit comes as anxiety grows daily about Iran’s nuclear capacities _ and what it plans to do with them.

Since the discovery in 2002 that Iran was secretly working on uranium enrichment, the nation has expanded that operation to the point where it has thousands of centrifuges churning out enriched material _ the potential source of both nuclear fuel and fissile warhead material.

Iran says it is enriching only to generate energy. But it has also started producing uranium at a higher level than its main stockpile _ a move that would jump start the creation of highly enriched, weapons grade uranium, should it chose to go that route. And it is moving its higher-enriched operation into an underground bunker that it says is safe from attack.

Israel in particular is concerned by Iran’s expanding enrichment capacities _ and increasing evidence of secret nuclear weapons work.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Friday the world must quickly stop Iran from reaching the point where even a “surgical” military strike could not block it from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Amid fears that Israel is nearing a decision to attack Iran’s nuclear program, Barak said tougher international sanctions are needed against Tehran’s oil and banks so that “we all will know early enough whether the Iranians are ready to give up their nuclear weapons program.”

The United Nations has imposed four rounds of sanctions against Iran, but veto-wielding Russia and China say they see no need for additional punitive measures. That has left the U.S. and the European Union to try to pressure other countries to follow their lead and impose even tougher sanctions.

“We are determined to prevent Iran from turning nuclear,” Barak told reporters during the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum.

“It seems to us to be urgent, because the Iranians are deliberately drifting into what we call an immunity zone where practically no surgical operation could block them,” he said, alluding to increased Iranian efforts to move their enrichment work deep underground.

Separately at Davos, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon urged a resumption of dialogue between Western powers and Iran on the nuclear issue. He said Friday that Tehran must comply with Security Council resolutions and prove conclusively that its nuclear program is not directed at making arms.

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George Jahn can be reached at http://twitter.com/georgejahn

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January 27, 2012

EU

Filed under: Business, Mortgage — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 7:12 pm

European Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said authorities are

January 26, 2012

Babacan Dismisses IMF Forecasts, Predicts Turkish Economy to Expand 4% - Bloomberg

Filed under: Finance, term — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 4:08 am

Turkey stands by its forecast of 4 percent growth this year, Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said, dismissing International Monetary Fund projections that the economy may barely expand.

The global environment is uncertain and there are major decisions to be taken in developed nations in the next four or five weeks that could change the outlook completely, Babacan said in a televised interview from Davos today. The IMF is

January 21, 2012

Novartis drug investigated after 11 deaths

Filed under: Loans, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 7:24 am

A multiple sclerosis drug made by industry giant Novartis is under investigation after at least 11 patients taking the medicine died.

The drug, Gilenya, was licensed last year in the European Union to treat patients with a severe type of multiple sclerosis.

The deaths raise concerns Gilenya could trigger heart problems after patients take their first dose, according to a statement issued Friday by the European Medicines Agency. The agency, which is now investigating the drug, said it isn’t clear if it caused the deaths.

One of the deaths was in the U.S., where a patient died within 24 hours of taking the first dose.

The European agency said it didn’t know where the other 10 deaths occurred, but that they were reported to its drug database, which monitors side effects from medicines in the European Union.

A spokeswoman at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it also is conducting a data analysis but has not made any definitive conclusions and does not know when its review will be complete.

More than 30,000 patients have taken Gilenya worldwide payday loan. The European Medicines Agency advised doctors to increase their monitoring of patients after the first dose of the medicine. The agency said the risk of a slow heart rate after the first dose of Gilenya was known when it was approved.

Novartis AG said it was advising doctors of new recommendations on using Gilenya. They had previously recommended all patients be monitored for six hours after their first dose, but are now tightening that to include continuous heart monitoring using electrocardiograms and measuring blood pressure and heart rate every hour. In certain patients, that monitoring should be extended, the drug maker said in a statement.

This new guidance applies only to patients taking their first dose, Novartis said in a statement.

The EU drug regulator hopes to finish its review of the drug by March.

Source

January 10, 2012

China Import Growth Misses Estimates as Export Gains Slow; Surplus Widens - Bloomberg

Filed under: Mortgage, news — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 9:44 am

China

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