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Posts Tagged ‘exchange’

Crude oil drops slightly to $98 a barrel as natural gas rises

June 15, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Linda Young – AHN News Writer

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Oil futures on Wednesday were slightly lower in trading because of concerns over the strength of the global economic recovery.

July contracts for oil were down on the New York Mercantile Exchange by 0.5 percent, or 45 cents, to $98.92 per barrel before dropping slightly more. But prices were still hovering around $98 per barrel in trading.

The drop followed a 2.1 percent rise Tuesday. Still, oil prices are about 28 percent higher than last year at this time.

In the meantime, August contracts for Brent oil were down by 1.1 percent, or $1.29, to $118.06 in early trading on London’s ICE futures exchange.

Meanwhile, natural gas prices are going up again and could double in price over the next few years to top $8 per million British thermal units.

Last week, prices rose to $4.80 per million British thermal units. However, analysts do not expect natural gas to rise to its 2008 peak price above $13 per million BTUs.

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Egypt Keeps Its Stock Exchange Shuttered, Fearing Sell-Off, Capital Flight

March 16, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
The Media Line Staff

Cairo, Egypt (TML) – Husni Mubarak is gone and the mass protests at Tahrir Square are mostly history, but Egypt’s stock exchange remains closed – its trading floors empty and two tanks stationed outside its Cairo headquarters, serving as an all too conspicuous symbol of the country’s struggle to get back to business.

Officials have hinted repeatedly over the last few weeks that the market will open soon, most recently on Monday when Bloomberg News quoted exchange spokesman Hisham Turk and cabinet spokesman Magdy Raby as saying an announcement would come by the evening. As of late Tuesday, no announcement had been made and Turk was unavailable for comment.

“It’s an institution that is very public and visible. For it to be closed isn’t a positive sign. That’s why the opening of the stock market will be important. It provides a sense that the situation is returning to normal,” Angus Blair, head of research at the Cairo-based investment bank Beltone Financial, told The Media Line.

The Egyptian Exchange was shut January 27 as confrontations between the government and protestors unnerved investors and sent shares plummeting 17% in two trading sessions. But the army-led transitional government has since brought order to the country and economic activity has resumed.

Although the decision when to open and under what conditions is up to exchange officials, analysts say the government fears that resuming trading would give people a conduit for sending capital the country badly needs overseas. It could also send a bearish message about the economy if shares tumble in initial trading.

The authorities have taken some measures to address those issues. As of March 14, Egypt’s attorney-general has temporarily barred 52 people plus immediate family members in many cases, from trading shares. The list includes the Mubarak family, as well as top business people and former ministers.

To address concerns about a massive sell-off, Egypt’s Financial Service Supervisory Authority last Saturday eased rules for margin trading, the practice of buying securities with cash borrowed from a broker and using other securities as collateral. Investors now need only repay loans or add collateral when their debt reaches 70% of the shares’ value. That is 10 percentage points higher than previously.

To help small investors, who have been the most nervous about the fall-out of the exchange’s re-opening, a fund worth 250 million Egyptian pounds ($42 million) was formed on Sunday to offer them loans.

“We are getting close to a reopening in the sense that we are trying to ensure sufficient demand so that when the stock exchange opens there won’t be a strong crash. We expect a landing, but we want it to be a soft landing,” Egyptian Finance Minister Samir Radwan told the CNBC business television network on Monday. “I hope by mid week we will be functioning.”

Egypt lost several weeks worth of output during the peak of the unrest. Even today, strikes are frequent and two key sources of foreign income – tourism and the salaries of Egyptians working abroad – remain problem areas. Tourists are trickling back slowly, as travel to the Middle East suffers from unrest in places like Libya and Bahrain. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have fled Libya, depriving their families of income.

Radwan said last week that gross domestic product may grow as little as 3% in the year to the end of June if production does not get back on track. The economy grew by 5.1% in the 2009/10 financial year.

Meanwhile, stock markets across the Middle East have dropped in response to regional unrest. Globally, investors have been pulling out of emerging stock markets like Egypt’s. As of March 9, emerging-markets equity funds have suffered net withdrawals of more than $21 billion this year.

But there is some room for optimism. Shares of leading Egyptian stocks traded abroad in the form of global depository receipts have fallen since the exchange was shuttered, but they haven’t tanked. Orascom Construction Industries has shed 4.8%, Orascom Telecom 2.4%, EFG-Hermes 13.2% and Telecom Egypt 12.2%. “It’s not as bad as one would think,” said Beltone’s Blair.

Last Thursday, ratings agency Standard & Poor’s said it removed Egypt’s long-term foreign currency ratings from CreditWatch negative and affirmed its ratings of the country’s unsecured foreign currency sovereign debt.

Whether or not investors will look at the Egyptian cup as half full or half empty, the stock exchange faces something of a deadline from MSCI, whose securities index are used by global investors to benchmark their performance and decide how to apportion their investments.

Under MSCI rules, a market can’t be closed for more than 40 trading days, or it risks being expelled from the index. Frank Nielsen, MSCI’s executive director for equity and applied research, said this deadline was March 24. Expulsion would cause big institutions to divest their Egyptian stocks, although Nielsen declined to speculate on what the impact would be.

“What we are doing right now is talking to investors and other interested parties in Egypt and the rest of the world to get a sense of what investors feel about it, and what the plans are in Egypt,” Nielsen said in an interview on the Index Universe website. “Surely there will be an impact if we ultimately deleted Egypt from the Emerging Markets Index.”

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SEC inspector general probes regulator’s potential conflict of interest over Madoff fraud

March 7, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Inspector General H. David Kotz initiated over the weekend a probe into the regulator because of potential conflicts of interest in the latter’s investigation of the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme.

Kotz cited the recent lawsuit brought by Madoff trustee Irving Picard against SEC general counsel David Becker, whose deceased mother left Becker and his brothers a $2 million inheritance in a Madoff account several years before the discovery of the hedge fund’s scheme. When Becker liquidated the money, he was not connected with SEC, but rejoined the agency in 2009 and resigned again last week.

Kotz’s investigation comes a day after Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and Sen. Charles Grassley, member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said that SEC Chair Mary Schapiro allowed Becker to represent the agency on Madoff issues without a full proper examination of his financial interests in the case.

The house committee’s lawyer said legislators are determining if a criminal laws were violated by Becker because of a prohibition for federal officers from participating in proceedings where they have a financial interest.

The legislators also demanded that Schapiro explain why an SEC ethics official advised Becker that the general counsel did not have to recuse himself from matters involving Madoff.

Before he resigned from the SEC, Becker wrote to the House Republicans that he informed Schapiro of his inheritance and handled the Madoff case on advise of the ethics counsel. Becker helped craft the SEC’s position on how much money investors should be entitled to recover in the Madoff scheme under the clawback lawsuits filed by Picard.

Many investors want the full, bogus amount based on their last account statements, but the SEC sided with Picard that investors’ claim should be limited to what they put in, less what they withdrew. But the SEC favored an inflation adjustment on money deposited with Madoff, which the trustee disagreed with.

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Hong Kong Stock Exchange Trading Hours Extended From Today

by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

New trading hours will take effect from today at the Hong Kong stock exchange. The trading day will begin 30 minutes earlier while the lunch break will be moved forward by 30 minutes to noon and reduced to 90 minutes, from two hours.

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SEC eyes crackdown and regulation on exorbitant Wall Street bonuses

March 3, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

D.C., Washington, United States (AHN) – The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission joined legislators and stockholders who want to rein in exorbitant Wall Street bonuses, pinpointed as the prime incentive for large banks, brokerage companies and hedge funds to take excessive risks.

The excessive risk taking, in turn, is being blamed for the global financial crisis in 2008.

The SEC proposed to mandate companies to provide the regulator details of all bonuses paid out to staff as part of their incentive-based pay. The SEC would have the power to prohibit the award of excessive bonuses.

The regulator proposed the oversight over bonuses because of the 2008 global financial crisis, which highlighted the risks large banks place on the financial system and subsequently the national economy. The proposal is similar to regulations suggested by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and required by the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory law.

The SEC proposal came right after Wall Street firms handed out performance incentives amounting to millions to their staff while majority of Americans are still reeling from the impact of the crisis.

Bank of America Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan got a $9.05 million bonus in restricted stocks and Thomas Montag, head of BofA’s global banking and markets, got $14.3 million in restricted stocks and $900,000 in cash.

Other companies, in response to pressure from regulators on bonuses, increased instead base salaries. Goldman Sachs gave Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein a $12.6 million stock bonus and hiked his base salary to $2 million for 2011 from $600,000 last year.

Citigroup hiked CEO Vikram Pandit’s base pay to $1.75 million from $1 million.

The SEC proposal would give more teeth to shareholders’ opinion on compensation after the regulator allowed stockholders in January a nonbinding vote on salaries, bonuses and retirement packages.

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SEC files charges against former Goldman Sachs director for insider trading

March 2, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

D.C., Washington, United States (AHN) – The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed Tuesday charges against Rajat Gupta, a former director of American bank Goldman Sachs, for providing illegal insider information.

The SEC said Gupta passed illegal tips about Goldman Sachs to hedge fund billionaire Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of the Galleon Group who is scheduled to be tried next week for insider trading charges.

Gupta passed information about Goldman Sachs’s and Procter & Gamble’s earnings and Warren Buffett’s $5 billion investment in Goldman in 2008. Gupta was also a board member of Procter & Gamble, but resigned on Tuesday.

The charges against Gupta is part of the widening probe on insider trading initiated by the SEC against lawyers, consultants, accountants, corporate insiders and hedge fund managers.

The 62-year old Gupta, a senior executive at McKinsey & Company, is the most prominent business executive charged by the SEC. In the last 18 months, federal prosecutors in Manhattan have filed insider trading charges against 46 people, but most of them are junior traders, lawyers or midlevel executives.

The SEC said Rajaratnam used tips provided by Gupta to pocket more than $18 million of investment gains or avoided losses. The regulator said Gupta betrayed the highest trust given to him by leading public companies by disclosing their most sensitive and valuable secrets.

The SEC said Gupta called Rajaratnam right after Goldman Sachs directors met and approved a $5 billion infusion by Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway in September 2008. Rajaratnam then ordered Galleon funds to purchase Goldman shares and sold the stocks at a profit a day after the Berkshire investment was announced.

Gupta’s lawyer, Gary Naftalis, said the SEC charges were baseless. Naftalis said Gupta did nothing wrong and stands by his 40-year record of ethical conduct, integrity and commitment to keeping clients’ confidence.

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Madoff trustee goes after family of SEC general counsel to clawback funds

February 24, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Madoff trustee Irving Picard is sparing no one in getting back funds on behalf of victims of hedge fund operator Bernard Madoff.

On Wednesday, Picard filed a lawsuit against David Becker, the general counsel of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Becker is the executor of his mother’s estate, which Picard charged with earning over $1.54 million in fictitious profits from the Madoff Ponzi scheme.

The SEC lawyer’s mother, Dorothy Becker, died in 2004 with a reported balance of over $2 million in a Madoff account, based on court filings. Becker and his two brothers closed the account in 2005 and even withdrew more money than what was deposited by their mother in the Madoff account.

Becker, through an SEC spokesman, said he was not involved with his parents’ financial affairs and denied knowledge of any investment by his mother in a Madoff account until her demise in 2004. Becker said he will consult with a legal counsel regarding the lawsuit filed by Picard.

Becker was SEC deputy general counsel from 1998 to 2002. He returned to SEC in February 2009 as general counsel and senior adviser to Chairman Mary Schapiro. Becker, however, announced plans to return to the private sector by the end of this month.

At the time he took care of his mother’s estate, Becker was a partner at the Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton. But when he returned to SEC, Becker informed the agency of the Madoff link of his mother’s estate, according to reports.

Aside from Becker, Picard has filed lawsuits against major U.S. and foreign banks, including JPMorgan Chase, for their complicity in the Ponzi scheme of Madoff. Picard has recovered so far almost $10 billion of about $20 billion investors lost in the scheme.

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Major listings boost LSE

December 30, 2010 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

The London Stock Exchange says IPOs in 2010 soared by almost 600% compared to the previous year.

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Commodities Prices Fall On Chinese Interest Rates Fears

November 13, 2010 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Linda Young – AHN News Writer

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Commodities prices for precious metals, oil and agricultural raw materials took the hardest fall in 18 months on news that China might take steps to avert inflation. Prices of commodities futures fell by up to 3.8 percent on news that China’s central bank might increase interest rates. The step is to prevent further inflation there after consumer prices rose by 4.4 percent in October.

Precious metals had been at near record highs before plunging. Gold dropped 2.7 percent to $1,365.50 an ounce on Friday while silver plunged 5.3 percent to $25.94 an ounce and copper fell 2.8 percent to $3.91 an ounce.

Refined sugar in London dove down by a record 12 percent while corn and soybeans on the Chicago market plunged by the exchange limit.

Oil prices also took a dip. Prices for crude oil for December delivery fell 3.4 percent to $84.81 a barrel at midday on the New York Mercantile Exchange while futures in New York dropped by as much as $3.29 on Friday.

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What Is Money Really?

November 7, 2010 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Have you ever wondered what money really was? What is behind its mystique? Well, it is not gold coins. It is not a basket of fish, or a truck load of bread. Money is an idea. It is an idea backed by confidence. Nothing more. Once we had to have gold as the standard of that confidence, but now there is enough confidence in the production of products that money was backed by the production of the country and land instead. So what else is money? Money can be considered a negotiable receipt for deposited goods. How it once worked was that a goldsmith would accept somebody’s gold and give that person a receipt in exchange, which in turn became money. But then, one day, realising the goldsmith’s repute was good with these receipts and that they had become negotiable, he loaned a receipt based on the gold someone else, as had deposited. Then the goldsmith loaned out several receipts on the same gold. And that is how banking started. Today a bank will loan out against almost anything that can be produced.

The only real trouble comes when too many people want to cash in their receipts to get the gold or goods that have been deposited. If there is too much money loaned out and confidence downturns, then a run can start with the bank unable to honour the receipts, causing bankruptcy. Banks vary as to how many times they will loan out against what is deposited with them. Some are ten times and some are as much as 70 or more. Even a thousand is not heard of. The higher the amount loaned out compared to what is deposited the greater the risk of economic collapse. And that is what the current threatened financial collapse is about. But for money to work, and confidence to remain steady, there needs to be a simple recognition of exchange between giving and taking. Exchange builds confidence. When the world produces real products, then financial confidence goes high. But often then banks will issue more recipients per deposited goods and that starts inflation. As people go into ‘dealing’ in commodities and other things, buying and selling without adding real value to what is sold, then the so called production aspect diminishes and financial confidence begins to wane. With the exchange factor, there is what we refer to in Scientology as ‘exchange in abundance’. So, instead of giving a – as an example – a day’s labour for a committed return, a person could give an abundance for that same return. I have worked where I worked extra hard, I was extra courteous, and gave extra care. In return I was paid extra fast, got an extra tip with an extra meal and an extra smile. Try out exchange in abundance.

Nick G Broadhurst PhotoAbout Author
Nick Broadhurst is the Executive Director of the Church of Scientology of Canberra. He has been in Scientology for 20 years and has read over 20,000 pages, and listened to over 300 taped lectures on the subject. That Is Banking , Financial Success Course
 

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