Posts Tagged ‘Dow’

The Week Unpeeled

It became than more than lonely at the top of the financial world last week; it became a “cesspit” (Paul Tucker, depy gov of BoE on rate-rigging mess.)  Liborgate claimed more bonuses as accusations mounted and talk increased of lawsuits from pension funds, hedge funds and municipalities.  This will be big no doubt.  Francesco Guerrera in The Wall Street Journal last week outlined potential scenarios in “Libor Drama Isn’t Over Yet: Watch for 5 Aftershocks,” Tuesday, July 10. (“The probe will claim more bank chiefs” and “Regulators should shoulder some blame,” among others.)

Other Related News and Other Gaze-Worthy Stories

  • Bob Diamond gave up bonuses worth up to £20m after resigning from Barclays amid the bank Libor scandal; however, he will still receive his salary and benefits worth in excess of £2m. Diamond is claiming it is “terribly unfair” and “unfounded” claims that he misled the committee over Libor rigging;
  • Tucker denied that ministers, officials or the BoE sanctioned the fixing of bank borrowing costs at the height of the financial crisis at  a Treasury Select Committee hearing;
  • According to Morgan Stanley, 12 global banks linked to the Libor scandal face as much as $22bn in combined regulatory penalties and damages to investors and counter parties;
  • HSBC could face a fine of up to $1bn (£645m) in the US for failing to combat money laundering;
  • JPMorgan Chase announced second-quarter losses of $4.4bn and that the “whale” losses hit as much as $5.8bln;
  • Moody's cut Italy's credit rating by two notches overnight, to Baa2 - just two notches above junk status;
  • Peregrine’s CEO confessed to fraud in a suicide (failed) note where he claimed to have been bilking customers more than $100m over a 20-year period;
  • China’s growth fell to 7.6 percent in the second quarter, its lowest rate since depths of financial crisis in 2009;
  • The Dow ended a six-day losing streak Friday by closing up 203 points to close at 12,777;
  • The British government is racing to resolve a major security blunder two weeks before the London Olympics and is calling in up  to 3,500 extra military troops;
  • The banking scandals headlines seemed to overshadow any scoops last week out of Allen and Co.’s annual media/tech/money mash up in Sun Valley, Idaho;
  • Financier Leon Black was unmasked as the mystery buyer of “Scream,” for which he paid $120m for the pastel. (BoE officials screaming, too, right?);
  • And the Rolling Stones as a band turned 50 last week!!!  Amen to that. End of Story
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The Week Unpeeled

New and old media alike seemed to be in splitsville last week, with New Corp’s board unanimously approving a plan to split the company into two: one for entertainment and one for publishing; Facebook analysts who were heeding the 40-day ban on issuing research were split (not equally) on buys and neutrals, in essence giving a lukewarm reception with a higher number of holds than buys (“’Like’? Not So Much,” The Wall Street Journal headline Thursday) and Anne Curry called its splitsville for good (not voluntarily) as co-host on the “Today” show. (Now that was true media navel gazing.  Have you ever seen so much coverage -- much of it front page -- for a talking head’s departure for a show that is pretty irrelevant in today’s media market?)

Elsewhere:

  • The US Supreme Court upheld Obama’s health-care law;
  • EU leaders announced plans to reduce borrowing costs for Spain and Itlay and form a single supervisor to oversee banks;
  • Those headlines sent markets soaring with the Dow up 2.2 percent on Friday to end at 12,880; For the quarter, the Dow is down 2.5 percent, the first negative quarter in three quarters;
  • And just when we thought bankers could sink no lower, a scandal at Barclays and other banks hit the headlines. Namely:
    • More than £4bn was wiped from the value of Barclays’ shares following its £290m fine for trying to fix Libor rates; Chief Exec Bob Diamond rejected growing calls to resign as Barclays boss;
    • Court documents also revealed bankers at Lloyds and RBS have been accused of routinely distorting Libor data; Executives at HSBC are also among those being investigated
    • The scandal is estimated to have cost business, investors and consumers £30bn;
    • The New York Times reported that the JP Morgan trading loss could reach $9 billion from initial estimates from the bank of $2 billion;
    • Adding to negative headlines: Millions of customers were unable to move money or pay bills as UK accounts froze and wage payments failed to arrive when NatWest, which is owned by RBS, was struck by an IT glitch which sent the whole system into meltdown
  • Rupert Murdoch said he would prefer to invest News Corp's billions of dollars of cash in America than Britain as he formally distanced himself from his UK businesses - "There are billions and billions of dollars, and if Britain didn't want 'em, there are plenty of good places to put them here (in the US)";
  • Google launched its first tablet and other hardware;
  • London’s first cable car service opened, high across the river Thames near the Olympic Park the Emirates Air Line will help carry up to 2,500 people an hour in each direction;
  • Rafael Nadal lost (as No. 2) to Lukas Rosol (No. 100) in early Wimbledon rounds; and
  • David Beckham was left out of the Team GB football team, in a shock omission described by marketing experts as “commercial suicide.” CJP
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The Week (and Year) Unpeeled

It clearly was the year that was and wasn’t, with big big headlines that were heavy on drama (remember DSK?), natural disasters (Japan and the awful tsunami/earthquake), volatility (all markets, stocks and otherwise), corporate mishaps and CEO dismissals (Yahoo Bartz by phone!), political change (Arab spring the death of Osama bin Laden and Muammar Gaddafi, and Occupy everywhere.

But according to The Wall Street Journal, eight out of 10 of its “most-read” stories were about Apple products or Steve Jobs. Interesting that none was about finance, business or politics. (The other two were about the Border Group liquidation and Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen’s memoir where he dissed Bill Gates.)  Elsewhere: 

  • Almost $6.3 trillion was erased from global stock markets in 2011 as the Eurozone financial crisis reverberated across the world in the latter half of 2011, questioning the future of the world’s largest currency bloc;
  • The FTSE100 lost 5.5 percent on the year; Stock market historian David Schwartz will not make his annual prediction about the FTSE 100 for the first time in 15 years because of the eurozone crisis. "It could go up by 1,000 points, it could go down by 1,000 points. The problem is Europe. They are screw-ups, big time"; and
  • However, the Dow ended the year up six percent (kinda surprising, right?) amid average daily swings of 270 points between August and November.

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