Archive for

February 1st, 2010

The little bucket shop of horrors

The high risk nature of small cap shares is demonstrated in the sample of transactions reviewed, which covered 19 different small cap stocks. Analysis has shown that the value of these stocks has decreased significantly since the point of purchase to December 2009. More…

…this is an M&S pay deal

It has taken a couple of months, but Marks & Spencer has finally revealed the cost of luring Marc Bolland from Wm Morrison.

And he didn’t come cheap. In fact, this looks like it might trigger a couple of red-top alerts from the corporate governance brigade. More…

Volcker rule hits JPM’s Sempra deal

Ah, the Volcker rule: a godsend for non-bank associated market makers and trading houses — including the big physical commodity trading business — but not so good for trading divisions found within commercial banks. More…

The latest Fed-Web offering

Is a training site for bank directors. It looks like this:
 
Why the need?

Because:
“Many people who are asked to serve on bank boards have little training or experience to prepare them for their new roles,” More…

Introducing, the death index

We’ve written about the rise of death bonds before.

That term relates to the secondary-market trading of life insurance policies and securitisation trends within the general life-settlement industry. More…

Of vacuums and central bank policies

FT Alphaville noted earlier today the extent to which the US government is propping up the housing market. Programmes such as the Hamp are explicitly aimed at supporting house prices; while the Federal Reserve is due to buy $1.25 trillion worth mortgage-backed securities (MBS). More…

Lunch Wrap

On FT Alphaville Monday morning,

- Taking (a) Notice in Greece.

- US Housing Bubble v2.0.

- The Asian anti-inflationary effect.

- Is this the big one? (Bear, that is).

- Our man in Indaba. More…

The UK/US natgas divergence

See that. That’s the rather spectacular divergence between UK NBP gas prices and US Henry Hub prices of late.

According to Goldman Sachs it’s all weather related. In fact, the banks’ analysts put it down to thawing cold weather in the US and the re-emergence of the dreaded cold snap in Britain. More…

How do you say ‘Notice’ in Greek?

Mark Wednesday in your European Sovereign Struggle calendars.

For that’s the day, February 3, that the European Commission is expected to publish its review of Greece’s Stability Programme. EU members are required to submit these programmes to the Commission every January for review, More…

Markets Live transcript 1 Feb 2010

Markets Live chat transcript for the chat ending at 12:21 on 1 Feb 2010. Participants in this chat were: Neil Hume, FT Bryce Elder   NHGood morning    NHand welcome to Markets Live  More…

The Asian anti-inflationary effect

Last Friday, the Indian central bank surprised markets by holding rates while lifting its cash reserve ratio by 75 bps to 5.75 per cent. They had been anticipated to hike rates by 25bps while lifting the cash reserve ratio by 50 bps. More…

US Housing Bubble v2.0

Here’s one thing that the Sigtarp’s quarterly report to Congress, released on Saturday, made very clear: propping up house prices is now an explicit goal of the US government.

So explicit in fact, that the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program has knocked up this little chart to show how various policy programmes (Hamp, More…

Shock, horror: ‘irresponsible’ pricing in China IPOs

Beijing’s regulators have injected a few more jitters into China’s nervy but always hyperactive stock markets – taking a swipe at “irresponsible” pricing of IPOs.

As the FT notes on Monday, the statement has fuelled speculation that Beijing could temporarily halt the new issue market in order to introduce fresh pricing rules. More…

Is this the big one?

Two big investment banks, UBS and JPMorgan, are on Monday asking themselves whether the current bear is “the big one” in terms of market corrections, or just a minor hiccup.

There’s a host of things that could be making markets nervous — the sovereign situation in Europe, More…

What a difference six months makes, in the CEE

In early 2009, central and eastern Europe (CEE) was the region “most blighted by the financial crisis”, as Lex reminded us last week. There were real concerns for foreign banks with big CEE exposure – above all from Austria, More…

[Mining Indaba 2010] Preview (Frank Timis update)

By Matthew Kennard, our man-on-the-ground at the mining industry’s annual jamboree in South Africa.
Welcome to the Mining Indaba 2010; I’ll be your guide through the biggest industry junket of the year taking place in sunny Cape Town over the next week. More…

Further reading

Elsewhere on Monday,

- The stock market as Greek tragedy.

- Should Germany bail out ‘Club Med’?

- The curse of the January markets barometer returns.

- One year of futility, the chart. More…

Pink Picks

Comment, analysis and other offerings from Monday’s FT,

Clive Cook: America can square its fiscal circle
American voters want more public services than they are willing to pay for, writes the FT’s Crook. More…

Snap news

Breaking pre-market news on Monday,

- Citigroup said to plan sale of $10bn private-equity unit – Bloomberg.

- Ryanair Q3 loss falls to €11m versus €102m year before – statement.

- Gazprom profit falls to 479bn roubles in nine months ended September versus 752bn year before – statement. More…