Posts Tagged ‘Moody’s’

The Week Unpeeled

Sequester talk trumped the Harlem Shake and remained top topic all week, with no quick budget resolutions in sight, which only means US spending cuts will start in the coming weeks.  Even so, the Dow finished up only slightly (0.1 percent) this week after a strong rally Friday to end at 14,000, with a few strong earnings reports and a hint of optimism over the increased number of deals announced or in the works. (Add to the roster Office Depot and OfficeMax intent to merge.)

Elsewhere:

  • On the TV front, CNBC said it was buying the “Nightly Business Report” from Atalaya Capital Management.  The PBS show is seen in 96 percent of the homes in the US.  Format is expected to remain the same and Tyler Mathisen of CNBC will be the anchor;
  • Martin Zweig, the investor, newsletter author, and TV pundit who predicted the 1987 stock-market crash died;
  • Somewhat interesting:  Ads during the Oscars are rivaling SuperBowl ads, according to Stuart Elliott, in his weekly New York Times column, with 30-second slots costing as much as $1.8 million;
  • Even more interesting:  Time magazine published one of its longest if not its longest articles ever last week, “Why Medical Bills Are Killing Us” by Steven Brill, in a fastening piece on waste in the industry and a testament to need for long-form journalism (36 pages and very readable!);
  • Moody’s downgraded UK’s credit rating to Aa1 from triple-A
  • Spring training officially began over the weekend; and
  • The other Oscar (Pistorius) is out on bail in a case that really only gets weirder. End of Story
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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

Not a great week for the banks, it seems.  Moody’s downgraded five of the six largest banks in the US and a similar number overseas based on increased risk and lower profits, lending anything but support for choppy markets last week that saw the Dow lose about 1 percent to end Friday at 12,640.  (Banks did trade higher, though. Buy the fact?) Euro banks aren’t faring well either, with Spain and Italy in bailout cross-hairs. Moody’s since has been on the defense on such argument as why the industry as a whole and why so late. Elsewhere:

  • Google chief Larry Paige “lost his voice,” which caused some to scream (especially some headline writers:  WSJ: “What’s Ailing Google Chief?”); he also missed the company’s annual meeting, btw, so don’t we kinda have to speak up about, in a best-practice corporate comms speaking sort of way;
  • Microsoft unveiled a tablet last week, the first computer the company ever made;
  • Nokia announced it would slash 10,000 jobs by end of next year;
  • NBC news division suffered several media blows about its slumping viewership numbers amid reports that Anne Curry of “Today” will likely depart;
  • King James took home an NBA championship for the Heat; and
  • Artist LeRoy Neiman, known for his impressionistic paintings of sport figures, died. CJP
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The Week Unpeeled

Financial news was dominated by Facebook’s launch last week and its apparent blemished opening (“glitched-filled market session, New York Times) with commentators placing blame with Nasdaq and the underwriter, Morgan Stanley. It’s kind of ironic that stories before the launch focused on concerns about whether a young and inexperienced CEO could run a $100-billion-plus company and not whether established institutions could handle a listing. Who should be wearing the hoodies now?)

The headlines did not nudge out JP Morgan’s trading problems, which seemed to grow in size and seemed to make almost certain a big Wall Street/Beltway Volcker Rule shoot out.  Maybe, as Floyd Norris noted on Friday, there will be a thing as “too big to hedge.”

(By the way, interesting read in Friday’s WSJ called “Inside JP Morgan’s Blunder,” which reads at times like a thriller – “He barked, throwing down the papers, ‘I want to see the positions.’”  The themes of too big and too complacent throughout the article and even a tie to Facebook.)

Elsewhere:

  • Hewlett-Packard plans to cut 30,000 jobs;
  • Warren Buffett bought 63 newspapers from Media General (good sign for print?), adding to his media presence, with The Wall Street Journal printing a very appropriate headline: “Call It Berkshire Hathaway Ink.”);
  • European stock markets fell after the credit rating agency Moody's downgraded 16 Spanish banks along with Santander's UK arm;
  • Greece’s exit from the eurozone, dubbed the “Grexit” looks more likely as it was rumored that European officials have began drawing up emergency plans to safeguard the euro;
  • The Olympic flame arrived in the UK on Friday evening, ready for the start of the London 2012 torch relay;
  • Rebekah Brooks, former executive under Rupert Murdoch, was charged over allegations that she tried to conceal evidence from detectives investigating phone hacking and alleged bribes to public officials; and
  • Queen of Disco and Hot Stuff and Bad Girls Donna Summer dies and deservedly earns front-page NYT obit. CJP
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The Week Unpeeled

The markets continued their upward march, albeit at a steady pace, amid what seems like a slight bit of cautious optimism in the US with the White House predicting that 2.0 million jobs will be created (caveat!) if its policies are enacted. Still, the Dow ended at a 52-week high at 12,939 (also in part because of signs of some progress of a Greek bailout).

Elsewhere:

  • A few Congressmen called on the FTC to investigate Google following a story in The Wall Street Journal last week that the company was overriding privacy settings;
  • UPS made a bid ($6.4BB) for Dutch shipper TNT Express;
  • News Corp announced that it will launch a Sunday edition of its popular Sun;
  • UK Prime Minister met Scotland’s First Minister to discuss the future of Scotland and to broker a deal over the referendum on Scottish independence from the United Kingdom;
  • Moody's Investors Service sent shock waves through the global banking system and sparked fury in the City of London as the ratings agency threatened to slash the credit scores of more than 100 banks in the wake of Europe's debt crisis. The agency has put the ratings of 114 banks in Europe under review, as well as 17 investment banks;
  • Germany’s President, Christian Wulff has announced his resignation following a home loan scandal;
  • New York Times correspondent Anthony Shadid died in Syria of an apparent asthma attack;
  • The world and most networks remembered Whitney Houston, whose funeral was Saturday; and
  • The biggest winner at this year’s Baftas (the British Academy of Film and Television Arts awards) in London was French silent film The Artist, which picked up seven awards. And Bafta's highest accolade, a fellowship, went to Martin Scorsese for a lifetime achievement in cinema.

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