Friday, June 13, 2008

ASSET PROTECTION IMPORTANT PART OF PLANNING

* Other editions:
* Mobile |
* News Feeds |
* E-Newsletters |
* Text Messaging |
* E-Edition

* Find it:
* Jobs |
* Cars |
* Real Estate |
* Apartments |
* Shopping |
* Classifieds

news-press.com

Search
All

* All
* Local News
* Calendar
* Jobs
* More »

* Directory
* Classifieds
* Archives
* Cars
* Blogs
* Coupons
* Movies
* Obituaries
* Shopping


Sponsored by:

close
HomeLocal NewsNews topicsSportsEntertainmentPhotos/VideosVoices & ViewsWeatherClassifiedsCustomer Service
Bonita SpringsCape CoralEsteroFort MyersLehigh AcresNorth Fort MyersSanibel IslandSouth Fort MyersOther communities

Comment, blog & share photos
Log in | Become a member

The News-Press

* Your browser's security settings are preventing some features from appearing. See instructions for fixing the problem.

Asset protection important part of planning

*
*
* Print this page
* E-mail this article

* Share this article:
* Del.icio.us
* Facebook
* Digg
* Reddit
* Newsvine
* What's this?

Last week, I began my discussion of asset protection. In Florida, property owned by both spouses and purchased by both spouses while married is considered tenancy by the entireties property, which is not subject to the debts of one spouse. Many couples rely on tenancy by the entirety property as their primary source of asset protection. However, reliance on this concept may be misplaced.
Advertisement

First, a creditor may be able to obtain a judgment against both spouses and then be able to collect from their joint assets. For example, perhaps the spouse works as the bookkeeper for the business and is listed in the Secretary of State's records as the assistant treasurer of the business in order to be able to write checks. The disgruntled plaintiff could then sue both spouses as officers of the corporation. Or perhaps the automobile is owned in joint name, subjecting any vehicle accident caused by either spouse to liability for both spouses as owners of the car or truck. Each spouse should be the sole owner of the vehicle he or she drives in order to insulate the other spouse from liability. If both spouses are sued, tenancy by the entirety property will offer no protection from judgment creditors.

Second, what if the non-debtor spouse dies while the action is pending against the debtor spouse? What if the non-debtor spouse dies while the plaintiff is able to pursue the collection of the judgment for the 20 years the judgment may remain on the record? If the couple becomes divorced, any outright disposition of property received by the debtor spouse will be lost to the judgment creditor. If a parent of the debtor spouse dies, without a proper dynasty trust, any inheritance left outright to the debtor will be lost to the creditor. What if the law changes to weaken tenancy by the entireties protection?

NOTE: ASPECT OF ASSET ALLOCATION MUST BE STUDIED CAREFULLY.

This raises another aspect of asset protection called entities planning. When deciding how to organize your business or how to own investment property, the attorney should educate the client on the amount of asset protection that various business entities afford. Conducting your business as a sole proprietorship has no asset protection. Conducting your business as a general partnership not only offers no asset protection, but may obligate a partner for the mistakes and liabilities of their other partner.

Conducting your business as a corporation may offer some asset protection for inside liabilities. If, for example, an employee in a home remodeling corporation causes a work-related vehicle accident, the injured party can collect against the assets owned by the corporation but not from the outside investments of the owners or shareholders of the corporation, unless there is independent liability or wrongdoing by the owner or shareholder. Whether the corporation is a Sub-S corporation or a traditional C corporation does not matter. That distinction is relevant only to the manner of paying income taxes. The problem is if an owner has a judgment entered against him or her for wrongdoing that has nothing to do with the business, called an outside liability, the creditor may eventually seize the stock of the corporation owned by that person and take control of the business, even liquidating the business to pay off the judgment. Corporate ownership offers no protection from outside liabilities.

If the business is conducted as a Limited Liability Corporation, or LLC, or by a Family Limited Partnership, or FLP, there is some protection from outside liabilities. A judgment creditor who obtains a judgment against one of the owners of a LLC or a FLP is limited to obtaining a charging order against the partnership. The law says that a partnership cannot be forced to accept an unwanted person as the partner. The charging order is like a lien on distributions only when the partners elect to make a distribution, but cannot force the partners to make distributions. If the creditor obtains a judgment, they must wait to collect until the partners make a distribution to the partners, which could be many years. This inability to collect may bring about a more favorable settlement.

The charging order protection does not protect from inside liabilities. For example, if a person is injured in a store or rental home, the owner may be sued. If the store or rental is owned by a LLC or FLP, the assets of the entity are liable for any judgment. Good entity planning would be to have every store or every rental owned by a separate LLC. If one LLC is sued, the other stores or rental homes owned by other LLCs would not be at risk, as long as the formalities of the entity are followed and there is no co-mingling among the entities. Hot assets, such as boats or airplanes, are often owned by a separate LLC and each LLC is owned by a FLP. Each LLC can be set up with very little equity if the equity is borrowed out by the FLP or individual owner of the LLC, called equity-stripping. The owner of the LLC can be an offshore trust set up in a jurisdiction which makes penetration by U.S. courts more difficult. In 10 states, an individual may use an irrevocable asset protection trust which allows persons to place their assets beyond the reach of their creditors during their lifetime. At present, Florida does not have legislation to allow this method of asset protection.

Some have suggested that even tenancy by the entireties property can be owned by a LLC or FLP, so that if the tenancy by the entirety property is compromised by law change, by death of one spouse or by divorce, there would at least be charging order protection.

Although the primary purpose of leaving assets at death in a dynasty trust is to make sure the assets are not added to the size of the beneficiary's estate for estate tax purposes, the dynasty trust also provides asset protection for future generations, although not for the trustmaker. For example, if a widow or widower leaves his or her $2 million estate to his or her two children, and if either child already has his or her own estate in excess of the $2 million lifetime exclusion, or unified credit amount, the extra million inherited would cause more than $450,000 in estate tax when the child dies and leaves the estate to the grandchild, under present law. This tax can be avoided if the funds are not left outright to the child, but instead left in a dynasty, or generation skipping trust.

Because the trust is designed to avoid the assets being considered the assets of the beneficiary for future estate tax and generation skipping tax purposes, by making the assets available only in the discretion of the trustee on an ascertainable standard, the assets cannot be seized by judgment creditors of the beneficiary. The assets are also protected from divorce proceedings or the bankruptcy of the beneficiary. Upon the death of the trustmaker, the surviving spouse may also receive this asset protection for assets passing through the family or by-pass trust. Anyone considering a revocable trust for estate planning should ask the attorney to explain the important benefits of this asset protection planning for a spouse and children.

Another type of asset protection for the assets of a disabled person is the d(4)a special needs trust authorized by federal law, about which I have written extensively in past articles, available through the archives section of www.news-press.com.


NOTE: IMPORTANT TO LEARN FROM TAX ATTORNEY.

-William Edy is a tax attorney, a certified financial planner and a certified elder law attorney in Lee County. He may be contacted online for article ideas and questions. Since e-mail is not secured, do not send confidential information by e-mail. This article should not be a substitute for advice from your own attorney.
In your voice
Read reactions to this story
Add your comment (max {maxchars} characters)
You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login | Register

{staffMark}
{authorIcon}
{authorHandle} wrote:
{commentBody}
{commentTimestamp}
{commentBody} {authorNameHandle}
{recommendLink} {newpostLink} {replylink} {reportAbuseLink}
Report item as: (required) X
Comment: (optional)
Missing input fields.
You must fill out the comment body in order to submit a comment.
Comment too long.
The comment you have entered is too long. Please limit your post to {maxchars} characters or less.

Advertisement
Advertisement
More Business headlines

* Housing legislation likely
* Market scoreboard tells the tale
* Asset protection important part of planning

Service Experts

* Gannett Co., Inc.
* USA TODAY
* apartments.com
* cars.com
* CareerBuilder
* HomeScape
* shopLocal.com

* Partners:
* Jobs: CareerBuilder.com
* Cars: Cars.com
* Apartments: Apartments.com
* Shopping: ShopLocal.com

* Home |
* Local News |
* News topics |
* Sports |
* Entertainment |
* Photos/Videos |
* Voices & Views |
* Weather |
* Classifieds |
* Customer Service |
* Site Map

* Terms of Service |
* Privacy Policy |
* Contact Us |
* About Us |
* Work for Us |
* Subscribe

Copyright ©2007 ...

Use of this site signifies your agreement to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy , updated March 2007.

FOREX-DOLLAR SLIDES AS JOBS REPORT DIMS RATE HIKE OUTLOOK

Reuters
Thomson Reuters

Login
My Profile Logout
Photo
Deals Today

The latest Reuters articles on M&A, IPOs, hedge funds and more
Subscribe Now
Broker Center sponsored links
You are here: Home > Business & Finance > Currencies > Article
Home
Business & Finance
Markets
Deals
Industries
Industry Summits
Stocks
Stock Buzz
Funds
ETFs
Currencies
Commodities
Options
Bonds
Analyst Research
Portfolio
News
Do More With Reuters
RSSRSS Feed
Widgets
Mobile
Podcasts
Newsletters
You Witness News
Partner Services
CareerBuilder
Affiliate Network
Professional Products
Support (Customer Zone)
Reuters Media
Financial Products
Find a financial adviser
About Thomson Reuters
FOREX-Dollar slides as jobs report dims rate hike outlook
Fri Jun 6, 2008 12:26pm EDT

Email | Print |
Share
| Reprints | Single Page| Recommend (-)
[-] Text [+]

powered by Sphere Sphere
Market News
Oil, CPI could spell rough ride for stocks | Video
Oil zooms nearly 9 percent higher to record $139 | Video
Dow falls 394.64 points on jobless rate, record oil | Video
More Business & Investing News...

(Recasts, updates prices, adds comment, byline)

* Dollar falls as U.S. jobless rate jumps in May

* Dollar set for worst weekly loss vs EUR since late March

* Non-farm payroll losses total 49,000

By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

NEW YORK, June 6 (Reuters) - The dollar fell across the board on Friday as a big jump in the U.S. jobless rate underscored the economy's weakness, which could prevent the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates later this year.

The Labor Department report, which also showed job losses for a fifth straight month, further undermined the outlook for the dollar, whose interest rate yield has shrunk as the Federal Reserve slashed benchmark overnight rates by a total of 325 basis points since September.

NOTE: JOBLESS RATE IN THE U.S. ARE EFFECTS OF DOLLAR SHRINKAGE.

The data also revived debates about the chances of a U.S. recession, and analysts said the Fed may have to address the economy's persistent sluggishness with another quarter-point easing.

"Today's unemployment report was the first time in recent memory that the unemployment rate overshadowed the non-farm payrolls number," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist, at Bank of New York Mellon in New York. Continued...
View article on single page
Previous Page 1 | 2 | 3 Next Page

Share:
Del.icio.us
Digg
Mixx
My Web
Facebook
Newsvine


Next Article: FOREX-Dollar falls as US jobless rate shoots up


More US Dollar Report
FOREX-Grim jobs data, ECB rate hike talk pummel dollar
FOREX-Dollar falls as US jobless rate shoots up
CORRECTED-FOREX-Dollar falls after jump in jobless rate
FOREX-Trichet's rate shocker keeps euro on firm ground
More US Dollar Report News...
Related Blog Posts
Euro Surges After ECB's Trichet Signals July Rate Hike
Grace Cheng's Finance Blog
Dollar implodes as Trichet tips July hike
Thomson FX Hub | Where money talks
Dollar implodes as Trichet tips July hike
Thomson FX Hub | Where money talks
Bernanke Says Rate `Well Positioned,' Watching Dollar
FeedTheBull - Stock Market News
Unemployment rate jumps to 5.5 percent in May
Latest News

Powered by BlogBurst
Views in these blog posts are those of the author and not of Reuters.
Also on Reuters
PhotoPlay VideoVideo
Africans keep a keen eye on Barack Obama
Photo
Seniors get special rates at new Woodstock museum
PhotoPlay VideoVideo
Holyfield on the ropes over financial troubles
Ads by Google
What's This?

Trade World Currencies
Real-Time Charts, News & Research. 24/6 Support, $250 to Start.

www.Forex.com


HSBC Premier
Be open to a world of possibilites where ever you are. Apply online!

www.hsbcpremier.com


Invest Online
Get Stable Income. Up to 6.25% Daily.
henrygordon.com/?ref=brian
Editor's Choice

* Pictures
* Video
* Articles

Photo

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours. View Slideshow
Photo
Obama's girls
Photo
social media
Photo
And Finally...
Environment: America looks to solar energy
Technology: Ninjas, Legos start summer gaming
Film: Sandler returns to ridiculous with "Zohan"

Thursday, June 12, 2008

HOW TO DEAL WITH KNEE-JERK MARKET REACTIONS

Search Money and Markets





To receive your Money and
Markets FREE investment
newsletter subscription,
type in your email address.
We respect your privacy.

Please Wait


* *


You're Subscribed to Our Email List!
* Indicates Required Field
Email:
First Name * <
Last Name * <
Home Address * <
Home Address Line 2
City * <
State * <
Postal Code * < <
Country
Phone Number *< <

Please Wait



2008 Issues

2007 Archives

2006 Archives

2005 Archives

2004 Archives

2003 Archives

Special Reports


Issues
Search
Author Keyword Start Date * End Date *

*



Newsletters
<< Go Back • Print This Page


How to Deal with Knee-Jerk Market Reactions
by Jack Crooks 06-07-08


Jack Crooks

This past week was a roller coaster ride in the currency markets, and it sure ended with a bang. I'll get to the big news in a second. And I'll also tell you what to make of this market.

NOTE: CROOKS IS FAMOUS IN ANALYZING THE MARKET. HENCE, HIS COMMENTARY ALWAYS GIVES WEIGHT.

But first, I want to do a quick day-by-day rundown of what happened in the currency markets ...

Tuesday:

Ben Bernanke revealed new concern over inflation and spoke directly about the weaker dollar.

Knee-jerk reaction in the currency markets: The dollar jumped.

Thursday:

European Central Bank President Trichet signaled interest rate hikes may come as early as July.

Knee-jerk reaction in the currency markets: The euro soared.

Yesterday:

U.S. Non-farm Payrolls were reported down 49,000 (better-than-expected) for the month of May. But U.S. unemployment leapt by half a percentage point to 5.5% (worse-than-expected).

Knee-jerk reaction: The dollar tumbled. The Dow lost almost 400 points. And on the same day, crude oil skyrocketed by more than $10 a barrel!

Looks like it's time to queue up the recession talk again. And don't forget that inflation is a big concern — Big Ben even said so!

Did this tag-team of Fed inflation rhetoric and freshly disappointing economic data open up the flood gates? Sure might have.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's leadership ability is being called into question as crude oil prices explode and unemployment soars.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's leadership ability is being called into question as crude oil prices explode and unemployment soars.

Stocks don't like it when the Fed gets lovey-dovey with inflation. In an already tight lending environment, if the Fed leans toward drying up access to money (or away from doling it out freely), who's going to keep what little leftover cash they have invested in bogged-down companies that still may be many months away from honest-to-goodness recovery?

It's been surprising how well stocks have held up so far. It's likely the keep-hope-alive mentality was buoying the Dow and the S&P. But with every new fundamental defeat how long can investors' minds stay focused on the light at the end of the tunnel? It's dimming rather quickly and should be practically invisible if the Fed keeps its attention on rising prices.

And for the buck, it comes down to one thing: Sentiment. We can argue all day for a dollar rally, or a collapse to new lows. And we have. But what matters is how the dollar is perceived by those who are trading it.

If you're off trading solo it's not always easy to keep a firm grip on market sentiment.

But protecting against most of the bad and positioning for most of the good is a crucial step toward successful trading.
External Sponsorship

Smart Investors Profit Overseas ...

Live in real luxury where waves roll into your "backyard" ... where your own gardener prunes your hollyhocks and your own maid serves your dinner in your own piece of paradise. You don't need to be a millionaire to afford this ... in fact, you can live this life on just $19 a day ...

Click here for more information ...


Here's a little guideline for today's markets ...

Hope Can Hurt; Fear Can Help

I read a book on trading many years ago that said before every trading day begins, you must ask yourself: How badly can I screw-up my account today?

It sounded a bit blunt, and an odd way to start the morning. But I've found this simple approach is a great way to focus on the key element that will determine long-term success in any asset market — stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, and even real estate.

It's risk.

In terms of the risks today, you probably have your own personal checklist. You might be including:

* Inflation fears brewing.
* Potential time-bomb of derivatives.
* An overvalued stock market.
* Falling real estate values.
* On and on into infinitum ...

John Pierpont Morgan (April 17, 1837 – March 31, 1913) was an American financier, banker, philanthropist, and art collector who dominated corporate finance and industrial consolidation during his time.
John Pierpont Morgan (April 17, 1837 – March 31, 1913) was an American financier, banker, philanthropist, and art collector who dominated corporate finance and industrial consolidation during his time.

No doubt these are market risks. And they do inspire fear. But there's nothing we can do to fully eliminate risks. We can neither keep them from happening, nor forecast them with complete accuracy. But you can control the small stuff, like your individual account risk.

It's obvious some of us can handle more risk than others. The best single phrase about how much investment risk one should take comes from J.P. Morgan, who told a worried friend, "sell down to your sleeping point."

Translation: If you're lying awake at night, worrying about your investments, you are carrying too much risk.

I have found the simple "screw up your account" mantra very useful for risk control, so much so that I have it printed across the top of my "trade sheets" where I record each of my trades, risk levels, and reasons for the trade.

Why does it help me? Because it forces me to define the level of risk I will take BEFORE I enter an investment position. The reason I have capitalized "before" is because before you enter the investment you still have at least a degree of objectivity left in your brain.

AFTER you enter an investment position, your objectivity is flushed down the drain and replaced with something very dangerous — hope.

NOTE: IMPORTANT CONSIDERATION BEFORE TRADING...

Here's an example of how I define my risk in a currency trade BEFORE putting on a trade ...

I look for a key technical level — some type of chart support area, or basic trend line that will tell me that the dynamics of supply and demand in the market have changed. Or put another way: if prices reach this level I am wrong because the market has proven me wrong.

At this point I'm out of the trade with a loss, period, end of story. I can always reenter the trade if it makes sense. But because I have exited, I somewhat regain that modicum of objectivity to better evaluate price action.

Always remember: Being in cash is an investment position; and it's sometimes the best position!

There is an old market adage: Bull markets climb a wall of worry, while bear markets flow down a river of hope. It's natural to hope our losses will subside and be afraid our profits will go away. And it's also why we are tricked by Mr. Market.

Legendary Wall Street trader Jesse Livermore summed it up best when he talked about reversing our natural impulses in the market:

"When the market goes against you, you hope that every day will be the last day — and you lose more than you should had you not listened to hope. And when the market goes your way, you become fearful that the next day will take away your profit and you get out — too soon. The successful trader has to fight these two deep-seated instincts."

We must turn hope and fear inside out. We must fear our losses will get bigger and cut them short. And we must hope that our profits get bigger and let them run. In these choppy markets, defining risk beforehand is the best thing you can do.

Best wishes,

Jack



About Money and Markets

For more information and archived issues, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com


Money and Markets (MaM) is published by Weiss Research, Inc. and written by Martin D. Weiss along with Tony Sagami, Nilus Mattive, Sean Brodrick, Larry Edelson, Michael Larson and Jack Crooks. To avoid conflicts of interest, Weiss Research and its staff do not hold positions in companies recommended in MaM, nor do we accept any compensation for such recommendations. The comments, graphs, forecasts, and indices published in MaM are based upon data whose accuracy is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Performance returns cited are derived from our best estimates but must be considered hypothetical in as much as we do not track the actual prices investors pay or receive. Regular contributors and staff include Kristen Adams, Andrea Baumwald, John Burke, Amber Dakar, Dinesh Kalera, Mathias Korzan, Red Morgan, Maryellen Murphy, Jennifer Newman-Amos, Adam Shafer, Julie Trudeau and Leslie Underwood.

Attention editors and publishers! Money and Markets issues can be republished. Republished issues MUST include attribution of the author(s) and the following short paragraph:

This investment news is brought to you by Money and Markets. Money and Markets is a free daily investment newsletter from Martin D. Weiss and Weiss Research analysts offering the latest investing news and financial insights for the stock market, including tips and advice on investing in gold, energy and oil. Dr. Weiss is a leader in the fields of investing, interest rates, financial safety and economic forecasting. To view archives or subscribe, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com.


From time to time, Money and Markets may have information from select third-party advertisers known as "external sponsorships." We cannot guarantee the accuracy of these ads. In addition, these ads do not necessarily express the viewpoints of Money and Markets or its editors. For more information, see our terms and conditions.

© 2008 by Weiss Research, Inc. All rights reserved.


15430 Endeavour Drive, Jupiter, FL 33478
<< Go Back • Print This Page
Click here to read more issues Click here to read more issues Click here to read more issues Click here to read more issues Click here to read more issues

About Us|Site Map|Legal|Privacy|Whitelist|Advertising|Add to Favorites|Printer-Friendly Version Of This Page

© 2008 Money And Markets. All Rights Reserved
Sean Brodrick▶ John Burke▶ Jack Crooks▶ Amber Dakar▶ Larry Edelson▶ Mike Larson▶ Nilus Mattive▶ Tony Sagami▶ Martin D. Weiss Ph.D.▶ Guest Editors
Countries and Regions▶ Sectors and Areas▶ Investments and Styles▶
Investment Newsletters▶ Trading Services▶ Books▶ Investor's Glossary Links Public Service
Readers Comments - Testimonials Press Releases Money and Markets In the News Upcoming Events Interview a Money and Markets Analyst Upcoming Media Media Archive▶
2008 Issues 2007 Archives 2006 Archives 2005 Archives 2004 Archives 2003 Archives Special Reports
Sean Brodrick John Burke Jack Crooks Amber Dakar Larry Edelson Mike Larson Nilus Mattive Tony Sagami Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D. Guest Editors
Countries and Regions Sectors and Areas Investments and Styles
Investment Newsletters Trading Services Books Investor's Glossary Links Public Service
Reader's Comments Press Releases Money and Markets in the News Upcoming Events Interview a Money and Markets Analyst Upcoming Media Media Archive
2008 Issues 2007 Archives 2006 Archives 2005 Archives 2004 Archives 2003 Archives Special Reports
AOL GMail Hotmail Yahoo Other
Sean Brodrick's Page Sean Brodrick's Blog
John Burke's Page
Jack Crook's Page Jack Crook's Blog
Amber Dakar's Page
Larry Edelson's Page Larry Edelson's Blog
Mike Larson's Page Mike Larson's Blog
Nilus Mattive's Page Nilus Mattive's Blog
Tony Sagami's Page Tony Sagami's Blog
Martin Weiss's Page
Asia Australia Brazil Canada China Europe India Japan International
Consumer Energy Financial Gold Mining Natural Resources Real Estate Silver Technology Uranium
Bear Market Protection Bonds Currencies Dividends and Stocks Dollar Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) Interest Rates International ETFs Large-Caps Mid-Caps Mutual Funds Options Small-Caps Stocks
Asia Stock Alert Dividend Superstars Real Wealth Report Safe Money Report World Currency Alert
Crisis Opportunity Speculator Crisis Opportunity ETF Trader Elite Stock Trader Global ETF Options Trader International ETF Trader Red-Hot Canadian Small-Caps Red-Hot Commodity ETFs Red-Hot Global Small-Caps Resource Options Alert World Currency Options Alert
The Ultimate Safe Money Guide Investing Without Fear
2008 Media Archive 2007 Media Archive 2006 Media Archive

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

DOLLAR MAY EXTEND DROP AGAINST EURO BEFORE U.S. PAYROLL REPORT

Bloomberg
Bloomberg Anywhere
Updated: New York, Jun 08 03:30
London, Jun 08 08:30
Tokyo, Jun 08 16:30
Search
Symbol Lookup

&lt;A TARGET="_blank" HREF="http://ad.de.doubleclick.net/click%3Bh=v8/36d9/17/ab/%2a/f%3B202895083%3B2-0%3B0%3B26985490%3B3454-728/90%3B26552294/26570151/1%3B%3B%7Esscs%3D%3fhttp://ads.bloomberg.com/RealMedia/ads/click_lx.ads/bloomberg/news/regions/japan/story/L34/1492583888/x70/Bloomberg/1762675/1762675_.html/656a56767645684c69664141446c5544?http://www.etracker.de/rdirect.php?et=5mKSpV&amp;et_cid=2&amp;et_lid=18&amp;et_url=http://www.confident.allianz.com/?ctry=eng&amp;section=1"&gt;&lt;IMG SRC="http://m.de.2mdn.net/1232834/AZ_moments_bridge728x90.gif" BORDER=0&gt;&lt;/A&gt;
Home News Market Data Investment Tools TV and Radio About Bloomberg Careers Contact Us
News

* Exclusive
* Worldwide
* Regions
* Africa
* Asia
* Australia & New Zealand
* Canada
* China
* Eastern Europe
* Europe
* France
* Germany
* India & Pakistan
* Italy
* Japan
* Latin America
* Middle East
* U.K. & Ireland
* U.S.
* Markets
* Industries
* Economy
* Politics
* Law
* Invest
* Science
* Opinion
* Spend
* Sports
* Muse Arts
* Audio/Video Reports
* Bloomberg Markets Magazine
* Special Report


RESOURCES

* Bloomberg TV
* Bloomberg Radio
* Bloomberg Podcasts
* Bloomberg Press



Dollar May Extend Drop Against Euro Before U.S. Payroll Report

By Ye Xie
Enlarge Image/Details

June 6 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar may extend its drop against euro before a government report forecast by economists to show the U.S. lost jobs in May for a fifth consecutive month.

The currency fell from a four-week high versus the 15- nation euro yesterday after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said an interest-rate increase in July is ``possible.'' The yield advantage of two-year German bunds over Treasuries increased to the widest since 1993, making dollar- denominated assets less attractive.

``If the fundamental data in the U.S. turns weak, the interest rate differential will be working in favor of the euro,'' said Paresh Upadhyaya, who helps oversee about $50 billion in currency assets as a senior vice president at Putnam Investments in Boston.

NOTE: UPADHYAYA IS A MAJOR PERSONALITY IN THE PUTNAM INVESTMENTS IN BOSTON.

The dollar traded at $1.5597 per euro at 6:06 a.m. in Tokyo, after falling 1 percent yesterday, the most since March. It touched $1.5365 before Trichet's comments, the strongest level since May 8. The yen was at 165.22 per euro, following a 1.7 percent drop yesterday. Japan's currency traded at 105.93 per dollar, after falling 0.7 percent and touching 106.43, the weakest level since Feb. 28.

The ECB kept its main refinancing rate at a six-year high of 4 percent, where it has been since last June. The Federal Reserve has cut its target seven times since mid-September to 2 percent to stave off a recession.

Two-year German bunds yielded 2.11 percentage points more that comparable-maturity U.S. Treasury notes yesterday, up from 1.89 percentage points on June 4. It was the biggest increase in the spread since March 25.

Euribor Futures

The implied yield on the September Euribor futures contract jumped 0.30 percentage point to 5.23 percent as traders added to bets the ECB will raise borrowing costs to curb inflation.

``It's not excluded that, after having carefully examined the situation, that we could decide to move our rates by a small amount at our next meeting,'' Trichet said at a press conference in Frankfurt after yesterday's rate decision. ``I don't say it's certain. I said it's possible.''

The U.S. Dollar Index on ICE futures in New York, which tracks the greenback against the currencies of six major trading partners, erased some of the gains that came after Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said on June 3 that the central bank is ``attentive'' to the implications of the currency's decline. The index fell 0.5 percent to 73.038 yesterday.

Bernanke `Undone'

``Trichet has undone any good work Bernanke put on for the dollar,'' said Alan Ruskin, head of international currency strategy in North America at RBS Greenwich Capital Markets Inc. in Greenwich, Connecticut. ``It pulls us back to the reality that we not only get a U.S. story, but also a European story driving the euro-dollar.''

The pound fell yesterday against the euro after the Bank of England kept its key interest rate at 5 percent. Sterling dropped as much as 0.9 percent to 79.64 pence per euro, the lowest level since May 27. Against the dollar, the pound traded at $1.9583, after increasing 0.1 percent yesterday.

The ECB has cited accelerating inflation as a reason for not cutting rates as the U.S. economic slowdown spreads to Europe. The inflation rate reached 3.6 percent last month, the fastest since the euro's inception in 1999.

U.S. employers probably shed 60,000 jobs in May after a drop of 20,000 in the prior month, according to the median forecast of 79 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Labor Department's report is due at 8:30 a.m. in Washington.

NOTE: U.S. ECONOMIC SLOWDOWN AFFECTS THE MAJORITY.

Fed Rate Outlook

Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade showed a 69 percent chance the Fed will raise the target rate for overnight lending between banks by at least a quarter-percentage point by December, compared with 55 percent odds a month ago.

The dollar has lost 11 percent against the euro since the central bank started lowering the fed funds target from 5.25 percent on Sept. 18. The U.S. currency has increased 3 percent since touching the all-time low of $1.6019 per euro on April 22 as the Fed signaled rate cutting is over.

Citigroup Global Markets Inc. reversed its bet yesterday on the euro's decline. The 15-nation currency will form a ``double bottom'' on the trend line tracking its rally since November, a pattern that would suggest an increase to $1.63 in eight to 10 weeks, wrote Tom Fitzpatrick, New York-based global head of currency strategy at Citigroup, and his London-based colleague Shyam Devani in a research note.

``You have the Fed and Treasury in the business of platitudes regarding rates and currency but doing nothing,'' the analysts wrote. ``On the other side, you have the ECB, who, like it or not, has been consistent and true to its word.''

The dollar will strengthen to $1.49 against the euro and trade at 105 yen by the end of the year, according to the median forecast of 39 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: June 5, 2008 17:11 EDT


Email this article Printer friendly format


Advertisement: Do stocks outperform bonds? Learn about the power of an all-bond portfolio.


Sponsored links



Related Video and Graphics

* Trichet Says ECB May Raise Interest Rates Next Month

* Tom Sowanick Says U.S. Dollar at `Critical' Pivot Point

* Bloom of HSBC Says Sell Pound; Favors Dollar Over Euro

* Bernanke Says Rates Are `Well Positioned' to Spur Growth

* Battle, Trader, Sees `Dangerous Time to Raise Rates'


More News

* Ota Says She's `Very Cautious' About Japanese Economy as U.S. Slows Down

* Mitsui, Challenger to Start Fund Targeting Emerging Nations, Nikkei Says

* Oil Prices Topping $130 a Barrel May Slow Global Economies, Japan Warns

Bloomberg.comNEWS | MARKET DATA | INVESTMENT TOOLS | TV AND RADIO | ABOUT BLOOMBERG | CAREERS | CONTACT US | LOG IN/REGISTER
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Trademarks | Site Map | Help | Feedback | Advertising | 日本語サイト

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

POLITICS ON SOVEREIGN WEALTH

*
*
*
*
* More
o BigCharts
o Virtual Stock Exchange
o WSJ Asia
o WSJ Europe
o WSJ Americas
o WSJ Chinese

SEARCH
SEARCH

*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*

Choose a topic to search news:

*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*

The Wall Street Journal Home Page
User Name: Password:
Remember Me Log In
Forgot your username or password? | Subscribe
WELCOME | Log Out
My Account Messages Preferences
As of Saturday, June 7, 2008 Set My Home Page | Customer Service

News

Today's Newspaper

My Online Journal

Multimedia & Online Extras

Markets Data & Tools

Classifieds

OTHER FREE CONTENT
FROM THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL
EDITORS' PICKS
China's Odyssey
Pint-Size Problem
Olympic Stage
The Roar of ... Phil
Film Review
The Flubbing Dutchmen
Indexing
Basketball
Reply to All
MORE EDITORS' PICKS
BLOGS
Most Popular Posts
1. Jargon Tracker: News About 'Dry Drowning'; Summer 'Staycations'
2. Political Wisdom: President Obama? Place Your Bets.
3. Jargon Tracker: Is 'C-diff' a Superbug?; Talk of '$5 Gas'
4. Clinton Says Words Establishment, but Not Everyone, Dying to Hear
SEE ALL BLOGS
MORE FREE CONTENT
>> Personal Journal
>> Personal Finance
>> Leisure
>> Markets Data Center
>> Video
>> Blogs
>> Forums
>> Interactives
>> Autos
>> CareerJournal
>> Real Estate
>> Small Business
>> OpinionJournal
>> MarketWatch
>> AllThingsDigital

[back to MSN Money]
MSN Money Homepage
MSN Money Investing
MORE FROM TODAY'S JOURNAL
$ Subscription may be required | Subscribe Now
PEOPLE WHO READ THIS...
Also read these stories:
Go to Page WHAT'S NEWS
• Recession Fears Reignited
• Kerkorian Could Dent Fords' Control
• 'Friends of Angelo' Get Good Loans
• G-8 Energy Chiefs Meet as Oil Soars
• India Squeezes Influential Bank
MORE
Go to Page WHAT'S POPULAR
1. Opinion: Recoil Election
2. Oil Surge Is a Fresh Hit to Economy
3. Clinton Concedes, Backs Obama
4. Recession Fears Reignited
5. Opinion: Principle Beats Pork in California
MORE
OPINION

The Politics of Sovereign Wealth
By PETER MANDELSON
June 7, 2008; Page A11

Brussels

Sovereign wealth fund managers are not the type to court publicity. They are even more wary of controversy. For the last six months they have had both.

In a political climate in Europe and the United States that is increasingly defensive about globalization, the funds have become the target of anxiety about foreign investment and, in particular, about the growing economic strength of Russia and China. With the size of the funds set to grow hugely, publicity for the funds is a given. The question is how to avoid the controversy and to maintain business as usual. The basis for a deal is now taking shape.

NOTE: RUSSIA AND CHINA HAS BEEN NAMED AS THE SLEEPING GIANTS OF THE WORLD.

In my meetings with them, sovereign fund managers have often bridled at being the subject of suspicion. They rightly point out that for more than five decades they have been quietly investing the proceeds of oil and gas wealth for future generations without raising the slightest concern. Some have standards of transparency that are exemplary.

Although it is often made, the comparison of sovereign wealth funds to state-run businesses, especially powerful state-controlled monopolies like Gazprom, is misleading. A state acting like a business – throwing the resources of government behind a company that competes with others – is a different proposition from a state looking to invest its surplus capital in the most commercially advantageous way.

But the funds risk getting the facts right and the politics wrong. The explosion of resources under sovereign wealth-fund management and a shift by some into stocks rather than the more traditional bonds have made them front-page players. Some recipient countries feel that they should know more about their investment objectives or of their precise relationship with their sponsor governments. The possibility that a state might seek to use its investments for political leverage is very slim, but because recipients are not quite sure of the rules of the game, they can't exclude it entirely.

NOTE: FUND MANAGERS DOESN'T ONLY PLAY BASED ON THEIR CAPACITY, THEY ALSO LEARN MORE STRATEGIES TO BE MORE COMPETITIVE.

The smart move from the funds would be to confound the suspicions. If sovereign wealth funds want to manage the politics of their dramatic rise, they should study the experience of the hedge-fund and private-equity industries in Britain. When growing public anxiety about their intentions and business models put them on the defensive, hedge funds and private equity moved quickly to reassure the public with voluntary codes of conduct. Sovereign wealth funds should do the same.

Norway, which already sets a high standard for transparency and governance in sovereign wealth investment, has said it would work with the International Monetary Fund on a voluntary, world-wide code of conduct. Singapore and Abu Dhabi have both signed up to some basic investment principles agreed with the U.S. that could become a steppingstone to a wider global agreement.

Work between the funds and the IMF on such a code has gotten off to a prickly start. Some funds are suspicious of the IMF's motives. But the IMF is not, and will never be allowed to become, some sort of second International Criminal Court. The funds should grit their teeth and agree to a basic code that would cut the ground from under their critics. Sovereign wealth funds have a good track record as benign investors. Fund managers know that any attempt to use their investments for political leverage could backfire badly on them. So a voluntary and limited code of conduct would only formalize what they already do. Any fund unwilling to sign up to a reasonable code would have trouble explaining why.

Still, the funds are absolutely right to insist that such responsibility for transparency and fair treatment goes both ways. Assurances from the funds on transparency and openness deserve equivalent guarantees from OECD members that they will treat fund investments fairly and without discrimination. The OECD this week adopted a declaration welcoming investments by sovereign wealth funds, and recommitting members to principles of openness and nondiscrimination. The funds should see this as a gesture of good faith, and OECD politicians should stand by it. It is the essential quid pro quo that could seal this code and allow governments to turn down the heat under this issue.

Europe and the U.S. have no interest in turning away sound investment or encouraging public skepticism about foreign investment. So long as its capital is invested for no other goal than a good commercial return, a sovereign wealth fund is not different from a pension fund, and its investments are likely to be much longer-term.

But it would be a mistake for the sovereign wealth funds to believe that this will stop some more populist politicians from calling for discrimination or greater controls if public anxiety seems to demand them. Rather than responding with resentment or indifference, the funds should step up and show that if people want reassurance, they can have it.

Mr. Mandelson is the European Union's trade commissioner.

See all of today's editorials and op-eds, plus video commentary, on Opinion Journal.

And add your comments to the Opinion Journal forum.
Click to format this article for printing Click to format this article for printing View a list of most popular articles on our site Find out about distributing multiple copies of this article Find out about distributing multiple copies of this article

Monday, June 9, 2008

GLOBAL JORDAN SUCCESSFULLY MANAGES THE USD20 MILLION COMMERCIAL PAPER ISSUE FOR MIDDLE EAST COMPLEX FOR ENGINEERING, ELECTRONICS AND HEAVY INDUSTRIES

Home Page
Mail


Algeria Bahrain Cyprus Egypt Iran Iraq Jordan Kuwait Lebanon Libya Mauritania
Morocco Oman Palestine Qatar Saudi Arabia Sudan Syria Tunisia Turkey UAE Yemen





Search




Main
News
Entertainment
Business
Kids
Travel
Forums
E-cards
Albawaba's Email
Blogs
Music
Webguide


Popular E-cards

Red Rose

A love Virus

Happy Birthday


Main Countries Jordan


Global-Jordan successfully Manages the USD20 Million Commercial Paper Issue for Middle East Complex for Engineering, Electronics & Heavy Industries P


Saba Mubarak overcomes her sadness with love


Jordan-based Artists Have Less than Two Weeks Left to Apply for World's Richest Art Prize


Umniah Deploys Microsoft Server 2008 in its Operations


Mayor of Amman Receives Daegu City's Vice-Mayor for Economic Affairs


ADC Honors Winners of Distinguished Small Projects Award 2007





Global-Jordan successfully Manages the USD20 Million Commercial Paper Issue for Middle East Complex for Engineering, Electronics & Heavy Industries P

Posted: 07-06-2008 , 18:32 GMT


Global Investment House – Jordan (Global – Jordan) announced the successful private placement of a six-month, USD20 million commercial paper issue for Middle East Complex for Engineering, Electronics & Heavy Industries PLC (MEC).

A number of reputable financial institutions and commercial banks such as Union Bank, Jordan Ahli Bank, and Blom Bank participated in the issue. Global- Jordan acted as lead manager and structuring agent and Union Bank was the underwriter.

Click Here!
Mr. Sami Nabulsi, Head of Investment Banking, at Global-Jordan said, "We are proud to have worked with Union Bank on this deal for MEC, the leader in the electric appliances market in Jordan and a strong regional player."

note: Union Bank is a well respected bank worldwide.

He added, "We wanted to provide MEC with the funds required to expand its operations while reducing its financing costs at the same time. The best vehicle was a commercial paper issue because they are short-term fixed income securities that are flexible, relatively easy to structure, and usually a cheaper means to finance operations."

The USD20 million commercial paper will be used by MEC to improve the cost of its short-term borrowing and finance its working capital needs. According to Nabulsi, the commercial paper was denominated in USD in order to capitalize on the dollar's low interest rates.

note: MEC is one of the largest companies in the Middle East and North Africa regions.

MEC's CFO, Mr. Mashhour A. El Basha, said that, "Through its long experience and in partnering with well known brands like; LG, Daewoo, and Haier in addition to developing its own brands (mainly Acma), MEC has become one of the largest companies in the Middle East and North Africa ("MENA") regions. Our announcement of the new project, which is considered the first of its kind in the region, has further reinforced our status as a regional heavyweight. With an initial investment JD117 million, projected average annual sales of JD213 million, and ROI of 27%, production is scheduled to begin in early 2009."

He added, "MEC always cares to finance its working capital needs in co-operation with the best investment companies in the region such as Global-Jordan".

It is worth mentioning that Global-Jordan is fully owned by Global Investment House (Global), one of the leading asset management and investment banking companies in the GCC and the wider Middle East and North Africa ("MENA") regions.

With over 45 employees and total assets exceeding JD35 million, Global-Jordan is growing to be a full-blown investment company providing services in asset management, investment banking, wealth management, research, and brokerage. Global-Jordan's Investment Banking division provides a wide array of services that include private placements, M&As, privatizations, advisory services, and initial public offerings (IPOs) to name a few.

Nabulsi, ended by saying that "the successful closing of this deal is a testimony to Global's commitment to excellence through its delivery of financial and investment products and services that exceed market expectations. Establishing a solid track record and an excellent reputation over the past few years is one of the main reasons MEC selected Global for its investment needs".



About Global Investment House "Global"
Global Investment House "Global" is a full-fledged investment company incorporated in 1998, and falls under the regulation of the Central Bank of Kuwait. Its underlying foundation is to meet the high expectations of local and international clients, and to enhance the investment service industry and the capital market in Kuwait and the region. Today, Global stock lists on the Kuwait, Bahrain, and Dubai Stock Exchanges. Global plays an important role in promoting investment opportunities in the MENA region to investors through expert financial engineering, in-depth research and reports to advance the capital market in the region. Thus, Global's achievements have been recognized on local, regional, and international levels. The company's current assets under management reached KD2.5 billion (USD 9.3 billion) by 31 March 2008.

For more information, please visit our website on www.globalinv.net








© 2008 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)
Printable Version
Top of Page
Printable Version

Opinions - No Opinions found for this article


Keep your contributions civil, tasteful and relevant. Albawaba reserves the right to be selective in publishing readers' comments
Name: *

Location:
Email:
Subject: *

Comment:

Clear Send


Thank you for participating. Your comment has been saved and will be visible after our moderator's approval





About Us Advertising Contact Us Privacy
© 2008 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)
Place Your Space Banner Here!

Sunday, June 8, 2008

DOW STOCK INDEX FALLS NEARLY 400 POINTS IN OIL

Hello Visitor Register Sign-In

* LAT Home
* |
* My LATimes
* |
* Print Edition
* |
* All Sections

* More Classifieds
* |
* Real Estate
* |
* Cars.com
* |
* Jobs

Business

SEARCH




You are here: LAT Home > Business > Money & Investing

Business
»Advertising
»Autos
»The Biz
»Money
»Real Estate
»Small Business
»Technology
»Video Games
»Wealth
»Work & Careers
»Your Money
Blogs
»Money & Co.
»Technology
»LA Now
»LA Land
Business Tools
»Business A-Z
»Investor Tips
»Law Resources
»Money Library
»Money Q & A
»Bank Rates
»Press Releases
News California | Local National World Entertainment Business Sports Campaign '08 Science Environment Opinion Columnists Print Edition Readers' Rep Corrections
The Guide new The Envelope Travel Magazine Home & Garden Health Food Autos Books Image Arts & Culture Living Green Video Photography Obituaries Crossword, Sudoku Your Scene Blogs All Sections
Buy, Sell & More Jobs Cars Real Estate Apartments Personals Deals at Local Stores Coupons Newspaper Ads
Place an Ad In the Newspaper Online
Settings & Services Sign In Register Personalized News E-Mail Newsletters RSS Feeds Help Contact Us L.A. Times Archives Reprint Requests Work for Us
Home Delivery Customer Support Subscribe
MARKETS
Dow stock index falls nearly 400 points on oil, jobs news
Major indexes plunge 3%. Indicators have been mixed, stirring volatile trading.
By Walter Hamilton, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 7, 2008
NEW YORK -- Illustrating the stock market's deep confusion about the economy, bad news about oil prices and jobs sent the Dow Jones industrials tumbling almost 400 points Friday, a day after the index rallied strongly on optimism about jobs and consumer spending.

The sharp reversal reflects a pattern of uncertainty that is leading investors to react frantically to each day's helping of news.



* Graphic: Spike in unemployment rate
Graphic: Spike in unemployment rate
* Graphic: Volatility
Graphic: Volatility

* Chart: Crude oil prices rise sharply

"It goes to show how bipolar the attitude is," said Paul Hickey, co-founder of investment research firm Bespoke Investment Group in Harrison, N.Y. "One day things can be great, and the next day things can be bad."

The Dow plummeted 394.64 points Friday, or 3.1%, to 12,209.81. It was the blue-chip average's biggest drop since February 2007.

NOTE: STOCKMARKET NEEDED TO BE STUDIED WELL FOR IT'S EFFECT IS WORLDWIDE.

Other major indexes suffered similar declines.

Stock/fund symbol or name:

empty
The Standard & Poor's 500 sank 43.37 points, or 3.1%, to 1,360.68. The Nasdaq composite index lost 75.38 points, or 3%, to 2,474.56.

The market fell sharply in the morning, after the Labor Department reported that the unemployment rate jumped in May to 5.5%, its highest level since 2004. The half-point increase from 5% in April marked the rate's biggest monthly increase in 22 years. Economists had expected only a tick up to 5.1%.

After absorbing the job news, stocks gradually extended their losses as oil prices ballooned throughout the day.

Crude futures rocketed up $10.75 to settle at $138.54 a barrel, exceeding their record close set two weeks ago. It was the biggest one-day rise in dollar terms in the New York Mercantile Exchange's history.

Oil's rally was triggered in part by an analyst's prediction that crude would hit the $150-a-barrel mark by the Fourth of July.

The stock sell-off was the opposite of Thursday's trading, which boosted the Dow 214 points. Benign economic data and impressive retail sales raised hopes that the economy would sidestep the worst-case scenario.

But that optimism may have set the market up for disappointment. Though the economy shed fewer jobs last month than expected -- 49,000 versus analysts' consensus estimate of 60,000 -- so-called whisper numbers circulating on Wall Street had raised hopes for a better showing.

"That budding optimism in a lightly traded summer market was vulnerable to a correction on bad news," said Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist at RidgeWorth Capital Management in Richmond, Va. "And when the jobs report came in, the market got crunched. The exclamation point was the over $10-a-barrel rise in crude prices."

NOTE: ANALYSTS ARE VERY CRITICAL WITH THEIR STUDIES ON THE SEESAW MOVEMENT OF THE STOCKMARKET.

The seesaw action shows that investors can't figure out which way the economy is going and are simply listing with each day's news.

"You're getting a lot of mixed signals out there," said Georges Yared, chief investment strategist at Yared Investment Research in Minneapolis. "The dots of bad news and good news just aren't connecting yet."

The market losses were widespread. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by more than 4 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange. All 30 of the stocks in the Dow industrials lost ground, as did all 10 major industry groups in the S&P 500. And all 91 financial stocks in the S&P 500 fell, tumbling 5% as a group, dropping below their March low. The 24-member BKX bank index slid 5.3% to a five-year low.

Credit card stocks fell on concern that rising unemployment will lead to more defaults among cardholders. American Express dropped $2.78, or 5.9%, to $44.65. Capital One Financial retreated $3.47, or 7%, to $46.15.

Among brokerages, Morgan Stanley led the declines, tumbling $3.78, or 8.5%, to $40.81.

Washington Mutual sank $1.08, or 13%, to $7.53, losing its title as the largest U.S. savings and loan by stock value to Hudson City Bancorp. WaMu is still the largest thrift by assets.

Midwest regional bank National City dropped 40 cents, or 7.5%, to $4.95 after the Wall Street Journal reported that regulators had effectively put the company on probation.


* Single Page
* |
* 1
* |
* 2
* |
* Next »


Save/Share [Mixx] [Google] [Digg] [Del.icio.us] [Reddit] [Facebook] [Yahoo] [Newsvine] Post to MySpace!


Tell us where to go contest
Here's your chance to tell The Times Travel staff where to go. If we like your idea, we'll send a reporter out to write about it.

Meerkat Manor season 4
How will the Kalahari burrows recover from the death of its fearless leader Flower in Season 3? Follow the drama of these furry critters. Story

Save over 50% off the newsstand price. Click here to subscribe to The Times.


* Email
* |
* Print
* |
* Text increase text size increase text size decrease text size decrease text size
* |
* Single Page
* |
*
RSS

ADVERTISEMENT

Most Viewed
Most E-mailed


Real Estate Headlines
1. Steel cuts costs in prefabricated homes
2. Bachelor expands his 1942 home in Windsor Hills
3. It's OK to check a potential renter's criminal record
4. Arm yourself with info before mortgage rate resets
5. Bad credit-file data? There is no magic wand
Cambodian eats
Chhom Nimol, singer for the psychedelic L.A. rock band Dengue Fever, lists her 10 favorite Cambodian restaurants.
Your Scene: Reader Photos
View our readers' photos of Four-Legged Friends and share your own at Your Scene.
Submit your photo »





More on LATimes.com
Advertising | Investing Tools | Technology | Work and Careers

Partners
Hoy | KTLA | Metromix | ShopLocal | Shopping Grocery Coupons

Classifieds
Career Builder | Cars.com | Apartments.com FSBO (For Sale By Owner) | Open Houses
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertise | Home Delivery | Reprint Requests | Help & Services | Contact | Site Map

Thursday, June 5, 2008

2nd UPDATE: NASDAQ OFFERS FREE, REAL - TIME STOCK-PRICE DATA

CNNMoney.com

*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*




* Subscribe to Fortune
* Make CNNMoney my Homepage
* Add to Favorites

* Home
* Business News
* Markets
* Personal Finance
* Real Estate
* Technology
* Small Business
* Luxury
* Fortune

* My Portfolio
* CNN.com

Companies Economy International Corrections Pre-market trading After-hours trading Winners/losers/actives Bonds Currencies Commodities Money Magazine Retirement Mutual Funds Taxes Ask the Expert Money 101 Autos Loan Center Best Places to Live Calculators Mortgage Rates Personal tech Big Tech blog Techland blog Sectors and stocks Fortune 500 techs Tech Talk 100 best places to launch Ultimate resource guide Small biz makeovers FSB 100 Ask & Answer Fortune 500 Technology Investing Management Rankings Main Create portfolio Edit portfolio Create Alerts Edit Alerts
TRADING
CENTER



2nd UPDATE: Nasdaq Offers Free, Real-Time Stock-Price Data
Dow Jones
June 02, 2008: 03:19 PM EST

(Updates throughout to note it is a one-month trial program, adds comments from Nasdaq executive, context on dispute over access to market information and latest share prices.)

By Doug Cameron

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. (NDAQ) announced plans Monday to provide free, real-time stock-price data through online vendors such as Google Inc. (GOOG) as part of a one-month trial program, a move that comes amid a debate over access to stock- market information.

Retail investors had been limited to price data with a 15-minute to 20-minute delay from the major U.S. equity exchanges, which derive a large part of their revenue from charging institutional clients and online brokerages for more- detailed information.

Under the pilot program announced Monday, Nasdaq will allow its online partners to redistribute real-time stock-price data this month, at no cost to the online partners or the end user. After that, Nasdaq will charge the vendors up to $150,000 per month for the right to distribute the real-time data, leaving the partners to determine whether they will continue to provide the information free of charge.

NOTE: NASDAQ IS A WELL RESPECTED COMPANY IN THE STOCKMARKET INDUSTRY.

Nasdaq said it will provide "last quoted price data" for stocks on its own bourse, the New York Stock Exchange and the American Stock Exchange. Professional traders will still be charged for "depth of book" data such as trading volumes at particular prices.

Adena Friedman, Nasdaq OMX's executive vice president, said the move was " overdue," claiming to be the first U.S. stock exchange to offer free, universal access to real-time data.

The move comes more than a year after efforts by Nasdaq and the NYSE to publish free price data foundered amid opposition from some online vendors represented by the NetCoalition, an industry lobby group. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has also failed to sign off.

Nasdaq has refiled to the SEC for permission to provide free, real-time quotes. Meanwhile, NYSE, a unit of NYSE Euronext (NYX), said Monday its own plans to offer free data have been awaiting approval from the SEC since January 2007. The SEC didn't return calls seeking comment on Nasdaq's latest move.

"We have returned (to the idea) as a pilot project," Nasdaq's Friedman told Dow Jones Newswires, noting that Nasdaq will waive charges to its online partners during June.

In addition to Google, vendor partners for the free data include business TV channel CNBC, a unit of General Electric Co. (GE), Xignite, an online quote service, and WSJ.com, a unit of News Corp. (NWS), which also publishes The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires.

Friedman said the pilot would allow online vendors to develop a business model for providing the service. After June, Nasdaq will charge online vendors $100, 000 a month for access to data from its own platform, plus $50,000 a month for prices from NYSE and the Amex.

Friedman said the last quote price data had become an "innocent victim" of a wider debate at the SEC over ownership and access to depth-of-book data. She described the new initiative as "a safe way to start."

Nasdaq Doesn't Expect Revenue To Suffer

Nasdaq's move also reflects intensifying competition in the U.S. cash equities market, with Nasdaq and NYSE Euronext losing market share to electronic rivals such as Kansas City-based BATS Trading.

BATS last week launched real-time price quotes via Yahoo Inc. (YHOO), though it said it had never charged for data as part of its pitch to undercut trading costs on established exchanges. BATS has lifted its share of U.S. equities trading above 10% and is applying for regulated exchange status, with plans to launch a European platform later this year.

"We believed that market data - including full depth of book, not just last quotes - should be free to investors," said Randy Williams, a BATS spokesman.

Nasdaq OMX generated 22% of its revenue from market data related to its U.S. and European exchange platforms in the first quarter of 2008, its second-largest business segment after issuer services, which accounted for 23%. U.S. equities trading fees accounted for 16% of sales in the quarter.

NOTE: NASDAQ'S MONEY MAKING SCHEMES ARE NOT ONLY EFFECTIVE BUT ALSO BENEFITS IT'S CO PLAYERS..

Friedman said the trial wasn't expected to have a negative impact on revenue. Nasdaq plans to launch a similar trial for data from its European exchanges this month.

Nasdaq shares were recently down 3.7% at $33.73, in line with a broader downturn for exchange sector stocks.

-By Doug Cameron, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4135; doug.cameron@dowjones.com

(Shara Tibken contributed to this report.)

(END) Dow Jones Newswires
06-02-08 1519ET
Copyright (c) 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Top of page

More Markets
Stocks fumble on bank woes
June could be crazy month for stocks
Treasurys rise on economic contraction
The Hot List
100 best places to start a business
Diesel: The truck stops here
'You're working for gas now'

Top Stories
Bush: 43M families hurt if tax cuts expire
Stocks fumble on bank woes
Milberg Weiss top gun sentenced
Abandoned homes: Lenders foot the bill
Rising rates? Not too late to refi
Get a FREE TRIAL Issue!
Cover
Outside the U.S. and
Canada, click here.

*
*
*
*
*
* Privacy Policy

© 2008 Cable News Network. A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Privacy Policy
Home Portfolio Calculators Contact Us Newsletters Podcasts RSS Mobile Widgets Press Center Site Map User Preferences
Advertise with Us Magazine Customer Service Download Fortune Lists Reprints Career Opportunities Special Sections Conferences Business Leader Council
Live Quotes automatically refresh, but individual equities are delayed 15 minutes for Nasdaq, and 20 minutes for other exchanges. Market indexes are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET.
* : Time reflects local markets trading time. † - Intraday data delayed 15 minutes for Nasdaq, and 20 minutes for other exchanges. Disclaimer
Copyright © 2008 BigCharts.com Inc. All rights reserved. Please see our Terms of Use.
MarketWatch, the MarketWatch logo, and BigCharts are registered trademarks of MarketWatch, Inc.
Intraday data delayed 15 minutes for Nasdaq, and 20 minutes for other exchanges. All Times are ET.
Intraday data provided by Interactive Data Real-Time Services and subject to the Terms of Use.
Historical, current end-of-day data, and splits data provided by Interactive Data Pricing and Reference Data.
Fundamental data provided by Hemscott.
SEC Filings data provided by Edgar Online Inc..
Earnings data provided by FactSet CallStreet, LLC.
Home | Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Corrections | Career Opportunities | Press Center | Site Map
RSS | Email Delivery | Portfolio | Podcasts | Mobile | Widgets | User Preferences | Special Sections
Subscribe to Fortune | Magazine Customer Service | Download Fortune Lists | Reprints | Conferences | Business Leader Council

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

US INSURANCE CHIEFS UNVEIL ALTERNATE MUNI RATING

Reuters
Thomson Reuters

Login
My Profile Logout
Photo
Reuters Widgets

Get the latest news, videos, pictures and more on your site!
Download
You are here: Home > News > Special Coverage > Article
Home
Business & Finance
News
U.S.
Politics
International
Technology
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
Oddly Enough
Environment
Health
Science
Special Coverage
Video
Pictures
You Witness
Blogs
Reader Feedback
&lt;A TARGET="_blank" HREF="http://ad.doubleclick.net/click%3Bh=v8/36d3/3/0/%2a/a%3B167253584%3B3-0%3B1%3B20179552%3B3-125/125%3B24259090/24276943/1%3B%3B%7Eaopt%3D2/1/9e/1%3B%7Esscs%3D%3fhttp://features.us.reuters.com/?src=int_mktg_lifestyle125_content_auto_082007"&gt;&lt;IMG SRC="http://m1.2mdn.net/800437/125_autos.gif" BORDER=0&gt;&lt;/A&gt;
Do More With Reuters
RSSRSS Feed
Widgets
Mobile
Podcasts
Newsletters
You Witness News
Partner Services
CareerBuilder
Affiliate Network
Professional Products
Support (Customer Zone)
Reuters Media
Financial Products
Find a financial adviser
About Thomson Reuters
U.S. insurance chiefs unveil alternate muni rating
Mon Jun 2, 2008 3:06pm EDT

Email | Print |
Share
| Reprints | Single Page| Recommend (-)
[-] Text [+]

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A group representing state insurance regulators on Monday said it will offer a substitute rating for municipal bonds backed by downgraded insurers so that insurance companies are not pressured to sell such debt.

Insurance companies have long been among the biggest players in the $2.6 trillion muni market. Currently, ratings on municipal bonds can rise and fall with their bond insurers.

NOTE: INSURANCE COMPANIES ARE KNOWN TO INVEST IN THE STOCKMARKET FOR OVER A CENTURY.

This was not a problem until this spring when several insurers lost the top "AAA" ratings their business requires because of their money-losing plays in the subprime mortgage market.

The National Association of Insurance Commissioners said it will begin offering a substitute rating on July 1.

Relieving the pressure on the insurance companies to sell their muni bonds should benefit the states, cites, agencies and hospitals that sell this debt by helping to prevent their borrowing costs from spiking, the group said.

An insurance company that holds a muni bond that is downgraded might have to reserve more capital for it, and if the rating falls below investment grade "some insurance companies will no longer want to hold them," the group said.

"We know that many municipal bond credit ratings are no longer accurate because they are based on the downgraded rating of the bond insurer, not of the municipal issuer," said Wisconsin Insurance Commissioner Sean Dilweg in a statement. Dilweg said he made the proposal.

NOTE: DILWEG IS A WELL RESPECTED PERSONALITY IN THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY.

New York State Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo said in a statement that "removing the current restrictions on our rating unit will permit insurance companies to submit downgraded municipal securities to it." He noted, "The unit, where appropriate, will now be able to assign the correct rating to those municipal bonds."

Bond insurers that have lost the highest rating from at least one credit agency includes: MBIA (MBI.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Ambac Assurance Corp (ABK.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Financial Guaranty Insurance Co., Security Capital Assurance XL Capital Assurance (SCA.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Radian Asset Assurance (RDN.N: Quote, Profile, Research), CIFG Guaranty, and ACA Financial Guaranty Corp ACAH.PK.

(Editing by Leslie Adler)

© Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

Share:
Del.icio.us
Digg
Mixx
My Web
Facebook
Newsvine


Next Article: Rating agencies should form industry body: regulator


Global Markets News
New Issue - Humana sells $750 mln in 2 parts
REFILE-PREVIEW-Toll, Hovnanian seen reporting Q2 net loss
UPDATE 1-Tyson withdraws raised without antibiotics labels
CORRECTED - CORRECTED-UPDATE 1-Mitcham Q1 earnings rise; reaffirms 2009 earn
More Global Markets News...
Also On Reuters
Photo
Mom's behavior impacts father's child rearing: study
PhotoPlay VideoVideo
La Nina may be responsible for Pacific shark attacks
Photo
Small PCs are big news as U.S. economy slows

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

MARKET TO STAY BEARISH THIS WEEK

Tuesday, Jun 03, 2008


SMS Bnews to 57007

Section Home
News
Features
Daily Stockwatch
Market Technicals
Market Trends
Stock Performance
Company Financials
Research & Analysis
Mutual Funds
Personal Finance
Commodities
Money & Forex










Insurance is the subject matter of solicitation. For more details on risk factors, terms and conditions please refer to the sales brochure before concluding the sale



Have Q4 FY08 results been disappointing?
Yes
No





Take Control of your Money
Business Standard Columnists


Comment Print Email this Article

Market to stay bearish this week
Press Trust Of India / Mumbai June 02, 2008, 4:39 IST

The capital market that moved up marginally last week is likely to be sluggish this week as expectations of fuel price hike and fears of negative cues from global markets weigh heavily, say analysts.

The BSE benchmark index, Sensex, managed to gain just 67 points last week and settled at 16,415.57 on Friday, while the National Stock Exchange's (NSE) Nifty closed at 4,870.10, up 34 points.

Analysts believe market sentiments is likely to remain bearish in the coming week as the bourses are at a vulnerable stage. Any negative cue from the global market can send them on a downward frenzy.

"This week, the stock market is likely to remain volatile with a negative bias, as foreign institutional investors (FIIs) are on a selling spree in uncertain times. The domestic market can go in for a sharp fall if there is any negative trigger from global markets," domestic brokerage firm SMC Global's Vice President Rajesh Jain said.

NOTE: STOCK MARKET REMAINS VOLATILE THEREFORE IT'S IMPORTANT TO WATCH AND STUDY CAREFULLY.

The only positive trigger for the markets could be the better-than-expected fourth quarter gross domestic product, which was at 8.8 per cent in the last quarter of 2008 from a year earlier, led by strong expansion in the services sector.

However, analysts are unsure as to how much it would help the domestic bourses to stabilise and restrict the downward slide.

Buoyancy in agriculture has pushed economic growth to 9 per cent, up from 8.7 per cent as estimated earlier, even as the performance of the manufacturing sector has been deteriorating.

Also, in the absence of any major domestic trigger, the market is likely to track the global equities and increase in crude oil prices.

Last week, the market had succumbed to selling pressure as weak global equities and soaring crude oil prices had worried investors. An imminent hike in domestic retail fuel prices owing to the record crude oil prices could further weigh on market sentiments this week, analysts believe.

The government is expected to take a decision on whether to raise fuel prices in the next few days as crude prices hover near $126 a barrel in the global market after dropping $4 on May 29.

NOTE: INCREASE IN OIL PRICES HAS BEEN IMPLEMENTED ALL OVER THE WORLD.

Last week, crude prices had touched a record $135 a barrel in the global market.

Meanwhile, according to latest government data, inflation rose to a 45-month high of 8.1 per cent for the week ended May 17. The Wholesale Price Index-based inflation was 7.82 per cent a week ago and 5.3 per cent in the corresponding week last year. However, the stock market seemed to remain unperturbed by surge in inflation and on Friday, the BSE Sensex climbed 100 points.

FIIs continued their selling spree and made a net sale for eight days in a row last week. FIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 5011.50 crore in May while in the year, so far, they have sold shares worth Rs 15,369.60 crore.

Domestic mutual funds sold shares worth Rs 387.60 crore in May.

Also, some more companies are left to announce their results such as GMR Industries, PVR, Mcleod Russell, Engineers India, Balmer Lawrie, Berger Paints and Sundaram Fasteners.

Share Your Comments Print this page Email this Article
NEWS NOW TODAY'S PAPER OPINION MARKETS
FII-TO-FII: Tata Steel traded at 5% premium FII-TO-FII: Tata Steel traded at 5% premium
New compact car models boost sales New compact car models boost sales
8 lakh cases of cancer reported in India 8 lakh cases of cancer reported in India
Tata Motors completes Jaguar Land Rover deal Tata Motors completes Jaguar Land Rover deal
Jet Airways announces fare hike Jet Airways announces fare hike
Mobile towers may get safe space in Orissa Mobile towers may get safe space in Orissa
MCL privatisation move hits TU roadblock MCL privatisation move hits TU roadblock
Dabur Group forms JV With Liberty Mutual Dabur Group forms JV With Liberty Mutual
Merger of SBS into SBI soon Merger of SBS into SBI soon
IDCO faces law and order problem IDCO faces law and order problem
Videocon invests Rs 12,000 cr in telecom Videocon invests Rs 12,000 cr in telecom
More
NEWS NOW TODAY'S PAPER OPINION MARKETS
Oil firms` losses to hit a new high in June Oil firms` losses to hit a new high in June
IIT Bombay cuts back on foreign internships IIT Bombay cuts back on foreign internships
DE Shaw makes debut in amusement park business DE Shaw makes debut in amusement park business
Outdoing China`s Three Gorges project Outdoing China`s Three Gorges project
Maruti, Hyundai car sales spurt in anticipation of price rise Maruti, Hyundai car sales spurt in anticipation of price rise
Now, Carrefour cajoles Indian realtors in partner quest Now, Carrefour cajoles Indian realtors in partner quest
RBI proposes higher capital adequacy for NBFCs RBI proposes higher capital adequacy for NBFCs
Exports in April up 31.5% Exports in April up 31.5%
Yes, Axis Bank securitise Rs 1k cr oil company loans Yes, Axis Bank securitise Rs 1k cr oil company loans
RBI aid for oil firms lifts Re RBI aid for oil firms lifts Re
Realty, power push Sensex down 352 pts Realty, power push Sensex down 352 pts
More
NEWS NOW TODAY'S PAPER OPINION MARKETS
<B>Editorial:</B> Public sector pay Editorial: Public sector pay
<B>Editorial:</B> Revitalised cricket Editorial: Revitalised cricket
Tata Tea: Mixed flavours Tata Tea: Mixed flavours
<B>M Govinda Rao:</B> Policy inaction and looming crisis M Govinda Rao: Policy inaction and looming crisis
<B>Ajai Shukla:</B> Defining `self-reliance` for defence Ajai Shukla: Defining `self-reliance` for defence
<b>Surinder Sud:</b> Unwanted appendage Surinder Sud: Unwanted appendage
<b>Vanita Kohli-Khandekar:</b> Going global Vanita Kohli-Khandekar: Going global
Licence to shill: James Bondage Licence to shill: James Bondage
<b>Editorial:</b> Two thresholds Editorial: Two thresholds
<b>Editorial:</b> Bleeding to death Editorial: Bleeding to death
Sun Pharma: Shining on Sun Pharma: Shining on
More
NEWS NOW TODAY'S PAPER OPINION MARKETS
Realty, power push Sensex down 352 pts Realty, power push Sensex down 352 pts
UTI Ventures plans to raise $450 mn fund UTI Ventures plans to raise $450 mn fund
Indian firm in S&P Asia Property 40 Index Indian firm in S&P Asia Property 40 Index
Bears prove their supremacy yet again Bears prove their supremacy yet again
Nifty futures trade at a discount Nifty futures trade at a discount
Essar Oil soars on debt-raising plans Essar Oil soars on debt-raising plans
Zandu Pharmaceutical in fine fettle on stake increase Zandu Pharmaceutical in fine fettle on stake increase
Gujjar stir hits jeera arrivals in Gujarat Gujjar stir hits jeera arrivals in Gujarat
Coffee exports up 3.57% in Jan-May Coffee exports up 3.57% in Jan-May
Two exporters under US review Two exporters under US review
Hindustan Copper raises prices marginally, down 6% on LME Hindustan Copper raises prices marginally, down 6% on LME
More
Add To Favorites Default Page Top
BS Primer
Understanding the basics
Indian Premier League
The business of cricket
Inflation
Centre's woes mount
More Specials

The Smart Investor
Melting under pressure
The Strategist
Swift Makeover
The Weekend
On the road to China

Advanced Search
Sensex 16063 (-352)
Nifty 4740 (-130)
Rs-$ 42.34
Gold (Rs) 12319 (120)
Silver (Rs) 23440 (64)
Updated:02-06-08 23:34 hrs IST
Most Popular

Read

Emailed

Commented
Jet, Spice, Kingfisher to cut flights, routes to prune losses
Outdoing China`s Three Gorges project
IIT Bombay cuts back on foreign internships
Maruti, Hyundai car sales spurt in anticipation of price rise
M Govinda Rao: Policy inaction and looming crisis
More

Read

Emailed

Commented
Outdoing China`s Three Gorges project
Tata Motors completes Jaguar Land Rover deal
More

Read

Emailed

Commented
Editorial: Bleeding to death
Subir Gokarn: Stress scenario
BS Primer: Oil prices and subsidies
Srei plans 25,000 kiosks
Thrice as agile
More

StatsGuru
Economic indicators

Your Money
Personal finance

Time Out
Books,fashion...

SEZs
Boon or Bane?

Retail
The Indian Story
More

Main Section
BS Online | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance |
Economy & Policy | Opinion & Analysis | Life & Leisure | SME

ABOUT US PARTNER WITH US CODE OF CONDUCT JOBS@BS ADVERTISE WITH US TERMS & CONDITIONS SITE MAP CONTACT US
Business Standard Ltd. Copyright & Disclaimer
feedback@business-standard.com | Designed and Developed by E Dot Solutions I Pvt Ltd
Site best viewed in IE4 & above with a screen resolution of 800 x 600 pixels

Monday, June 2, 2008

NOMURA TO ENTER U.S. RETAIL MUTUAL FUND MARKET

Reuters
Thomson Reuters

Login
My Profile Logout
Photo
Deals Today

The latest Reuters articles on M&A, IPOs, hedge funds and more
Subscribe Now
Broker Center sponsored links
You are here: Home > Business & Finance > Article
Home
Business & Finance
Markets
Deals
Industries
Industry Summits
Stocks
Stock Buzz
Funds
ETFs
Currencies
Commodities
Options
Bonds
Analyst Research
Portfolio
News
&lt;A TARGET="_blank" HREF="http://ad.doubleclick.net/click%3Bh=v8/36d3/3/0/%2a/e%3B167253584%3B2-0%3B1%3B23263254%3B3-125/125%3B24259126/24276979/1%3B%3B%7Eaopt%3D2/1/9e/1%3B%7Esscs%3D%3fhttp://features.us.reuters.com/?src=int_mktg_lifestyle125_content_health_082007"&gt;&lt;IMG SRC="http://m1.2mdn.net/800437/125_health.gif" BORDER=0&gt;&lt;/A&gt;
Do More With Reuters
RSSRSS Feed
Widgets
Mobile
Podcasts
Newsletters
You Witness News
Partner Services
CareerBuilder
Affiliate Network
Professional Products
Support (Customer Zone)
Reuters Media
Financial Products
Find a financial adviser
About Thomson Reuters
Nomura to enter U.S. retail mutual fund market
Mon Jun 2, 2008 2:12am EDT

Email | Print |
Share
| Reprints | Single Page| Recommend (-)
[-] Text [+]

powered by Sphere Sphere
Market News
Credit concerns flare up, sending stocks lower | Video
BCE shares rise on court decision
Oil rises as hurricane season start rallies natgas | Video
More Business & Investing News...
Featured Broker sponsored link
Money Center
Learn to Trade with a FREE Guide.

TOKYO (Reuters) - Nomura Holdings Inc (8604.T: Quote, Profile, Research) has inked a deal to become the investment manager of a U.S. mutual fund specializing in Japanese issues, marking its full-scale entry into the U.S. retail mutual fund market.

Nomura Asset Management said it would invest significant resources to market and distribute The Japan Fund, the oldest independent U.S. fund focused on investing in Japan and which has over $300 million in assets under management.

NOTE: JAPAN HAS BEEN KNOWN FOR IT'S INDEPENDENCE AND TALENT IN ALL MONEY MAKING INDUSTRIES.

Japan's largest brokerage group replaces Fidelity as the fund's asset manager. Fidelity has its own fund specializing in Japanese issues.

"This alliance provides Nomura Asset Management with an expedited entrance into the U.S. retail mutual fund market. It allows us to leap frog to a leadership position in the marketplace," Shigeru Shinohara, Chief Executive of Nomura Asset Management U.S.A., said in a statement on Monday.

Nomura also hopes to offer several other funds specializing in stocks from other Asian countries such as China and India, a spokesman for Nomura Asset said.

The broker is eager to expand its overseas presence and also

said on Monday that has started a fund worth 2.1 billion euros ($3.3 billion) to buy unsold loans and undervalued companies in Europe.

(Reporting by Yuka Obayashi and Edwina Gibbs)

© Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

Share:
Del.icio.us
Digg
Mixx
My Web
Facebook
Newsvine

More Business News
Wachovia ousts CEO Thompson after losses mount
Bank downgrades, Wachovia ouster rocks markets
Class action king Weiss sentenced to 30 months
Gas prices a risk for casual restaurants, Starbucks
More Business News...
Related Blog Posts
Strata of Mutual Fund Expense Ratios
My Retirement Blog
Digital Asset Management Global Market
Digital Lifescapes | by David H. Deans
Mutual fund industry suffers
FierceFinance
How Do You Benchmark a 130/30 Mutual Fund?
Wheredoesallmymoneygo.com
Creating a Personal Micro Mutual Fund
Hilo Living

Powered by BlogBurst
Views in these blog posts are those of the author and not of Reuters.
Also on Reuters
Photo
Japanese robot weathers rain to climb Grand Canyon
Photo
Full Coverage: The real costs of rising food prices
Photo
Gas prices a risk for casual restaurants, Starbucks
Ads by Career Builder
What's This?

Finance Executive Recruiter
Details: ...individuals in the specialty skill areas of information technology, finance & accounting, human resources, engineering, pharmaceutical...

Client Finance Analyst
Details: ...seeking a client finance analyst for its...senior accounting/finance team. If you are...information technology, finance & accounting, human...

Finance & Performance Management Senior 3
Details: ...Ernst & Young's Finance & Performance Management...services, including Finance Function Strategy, Finance Organizational Design...

Finance Manager - Tradebook Team
Details: ...Geller & Company provides finance, accounting, and tax outsourcing...trading industry working in finance and/or strategic planning groups...
Editor's Choice

* Pictures
* Video
* Articles

Photo

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours. View Slideshow
Photo
Clinton defiant
Photo
Baby racing
Photo
Spanish diet
US: Texas lets kids return to polygamist homes
Health: Vaccine doubles survival of brain cancer
Lifestyle: Fashion king Yves Saint Laurent dies