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  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 10 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

Familiar worries of the U.S. economic malaise dragged mining and banks lower. Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton declined 6% after the weak trading in the U.S. and in the European region. Copper, zinc, and nickel, tin, and led prices in London declined. HSBC fell on the persisten uncertainty related to credit markets. Bovis Homes Group plunged 12% and led the home builder lower after it reported lower earnings and said that home prices may not rise in 2008. Persimmons dropped 4%, Taylor Wimpey lost 6%.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 10 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

Bear Stearns plunged 10% after rumors circulated that it faces liquidity crunch. The company denied the rumors. Banks, brokers and insurance companies are trading at their lows last seen five to ten years ago. Fears of more credit market losses dragged stocks in the banking sector to their seven year lows. Bear Stearns is trading at a level last seen in 2002, Fannie Mae is trading at 1993 level, Citigroup at 1998, Lehman Brothers at 2004 level, and Merrill reached 2000 level.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 10 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

U.S. stocks fell after two hours of trading as market worried about the weak economic conditions. Oil fell at the opening but quickly recovered from its loss of 1% to trade at intra-day record high. McDonalds reported a rise in same store sales in February on systemwide sales rise.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 10 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

Nationwide received $47.20 per share or $2.2 billion buyout bid from a controlling group of shareholder. The group consists of Nationwide insurance companies and Nationwide Corp. The stock rallied after the news and traded above the offer price. The Nationwide stock traded as high as $65.50 last year and as low as $32 in the last five years. The company offer may be revised above $52 per share according to our estimate.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 07 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

UK stocks fell after base metal prices declined. China reported a decline in copper inventories, prompting a decline in mining stocks. Broader market fell on probable fire sale of mortgage securities of 25 billion francs at UBS. JD Wetherspoon, pub operator reported 0.4% decline in sales to

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 07 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

Hang Seng fell 3.6% and closed down 7.5% for the week after the weakness in global markets dragged banks and energy companies. China Enterprise Index fell 9.5% for the week. China Netcom and Sun Hung Kai fell after brokers lowered their ratings on stocks.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 07 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

European marekts closed lower, dragged by a weakness in the U.S. stocks, rising euro, and worries related to the U.S. economic recession. Veolia Environment fell 10% after its earnings disappointed analysts. Mediobanca second quarter profit rose 57%. Telecom Italia dropped 9% after it forecasted 2008 revenue to match that of 2007. Piaggio, Vespa scooter maker, dropped after 2007 earnings dropped to 59.6 million euros.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 07 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

The Fed acted to bolster the liquidity in the credit market by increasing the size of the next two auctions to $50 billion each and also extended facility to lend $100 billion in the short term. The news helped to limit the declines in banks and brokerage stocks. The February payroll declined 63,000 after the revised employment in January fell 22,000. The sharpest decline in five years prompted economists to predict the arrival of recession. Thornburg Mortgage has margin call of $610 million.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 07 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

U.S. stocks reversed earlier losses after the Fed raised its limits and acceptance of wider collateral. The Fed now plans to provide $100 billion in TAF auction and also accepts agency debt for its collateral for the repurchase of short term debt for up to $100 billion. February payroll declined by 63,000. Ciena led the gainers in S&P 500 with a rise of more than 10%.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 07 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

Stocks in Tokyo declined as financial markets worried that the ongoing U.S. economic slowdown will impact exports from Japan. The new foreclosure data in the U.S. suggested record rise in filings and outlook for the rest of the year is gloomy. Nikkei 225 fell 3.27% or 432.62 to 12,782.80 down 6% for the week, and the broader Topix Index tumbled 3.1% or 39.78 to 1,247.77.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 06 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

The ECB left its key rate at 4% and lowered the growth rate for this and the next year. It also increased its inflation estimate on the rising food and energy prices. The Bank of England also left its key rate at 5.25%. On the rate news, dollar reached a new low against euro to $1.53. Royal Ahold reported fourth quarter profit increase of 9% to 260 million euros on unchanged sales of 6.6 billion euros.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 06 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

U.S. stocks closed lower after credit market worries and rising home foreclosures dominated trading sentiment. Home foreclosures nearly doubled in the last quarter as homeowners struggled with rising monthly payments. Thornburg fell 51% after it received loan default notice from JP Morgan. February same stores sales at JC Penney, Chicos, Limited, Kohls and Gap fell. Wal-Mart sales rose 2.6%. Jobless claims fell 24,000.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 06 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

U.S. stocks edged lower as mortgage securities related defaults fears spread to stocks. Thornburg received a default notice from JP Morgan which triggered other defaults of $320 million. Thornburg stock is now down 95% from its recent peak in July 2007. Carlyle Capital, a listed investment management company in London, controlled by Carlyle Group in Washington, received mortgage debt related default from one of its 13 lenders.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 06 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

The European Central Bank and the Bank of England left their key rates unchaged as both central banks fight rising inflation in the region. The ECB left rates at 4% and the BoE left its rates at 5.25%, highest among the G7 nations. Pound and euro rallied against the dollar after the rate decision. Euro has increased nearly 20% against dollar in the last fourteen months and continues to reach new highs on rate disparities.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 06 Mar, 2008
  • New York City

Hong Kong Clearing and Exchanges net income in 2007 jumped 145% to HK$6.2 billion from HK$2.52 billion in 2006. Media reports suggest that Bank of China has sold 500 million of its $7.95 billion of subprime loans linked to the international markets. Hong Kong stocks rose 1% tracking higher closings in the U.S. and Europe.