Tuesday, July 31, 2012

GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH: Has the BIS gold pool succeeded the London Gold Pool?

Has the BIS gold pool succeeded the London Gold Pool?

1:22a ET Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
An inquiry tonight about the Bank for International Settlements led your secretary/treasurer back into GATA's documentation archive --
http://www.gata.org/taxonomy/term/21
-- where the bank has figured prominently over the last year.
First there was GATA's disclosure of the presentation made to central banks that were recruited for membership in the BIS during a meeting at the bank's headquarters in Basel, Switzerland, in June 2008, a presentation advertising BIS services including secret interventions in the gold market:
http://www.gata.org/node/11012
Then there was Zero Hedge's disclosure of a BIS gold trader's attempt to remove from his official biography a reference to his responsibility for those secret interventions:
http://www.gata.org/node/11257
And then there was the discovery by our Dutch friend, the economist Jaco Schipper of MarketUpdate.nl, of the memoirs of the late president of the Netherlands central bank and president of the BIS itself, Jelle Zijlstra, who wrote that, because of the insistence of the United States, "Gold is artificially kept at a far too low price":
http://www.gata.org/node/11304
But there was also something else from a bit farther back -- an extraordinary profile of the BIS by the investigative journalist Edward Jay Epstein, published in Harper's magazine in November 1983 after Epstein was given what appears to have been unprecedented access to the bank. Epstein described the BIS as running practically the whole world financially in virtual contempt of elected governments and in near-complete secrecy. But Epstein's references to the bank's involvement in the gold market are of greatest interest to GATA's work.

 Epstein reported that BIS headquarters in Basel has a floor of gold traders "constantly on the telephone arranging loans of the bank's gold to international arbitrageurs, thus allowing central banks to make interest on gold deposits."
Was the only purpose of that trading really just to earn a little interest on those gold deposits, as that sentence suggests?
The rest of Epstein's essay about the BIS suggests otherwise.

"The membership of this club," Epstein writes, "is restricted to a handful of powerful men who determine daily the interest rate, the availability of credit, and the money supply of the banks in their own countries. ... It was in the wood-paneled rooms above the shop and the hotel that decisions were reached to devalue or defend currencies, to fix the price of gold, to regulate offshore banking, and to raise or lower short-term interest rates."

Epstein goes on to quote the president of the BIS, Karl Otto Pohl, then also president of the German Bundesbank, complaining "about the repetitiousness of the meetings during the 'Basel weekend.'" Pohl says: "First there is the meeting on the Gold Pool. Then, after lunch, the same faces show up at the G-10, and the next day there is the board, which excludes the U.S., Japan, and Canada, and the European Community meeting, which excludes Sweden and Switzerland."

Of course the "gold pool" with which many gold market followers are familiar is the London Gold Pool, the mechanism by which the United States, United Kingdom, and six of their Western European allies co-ordinated, through the Bank of England, the dishoarding of their gold reserves to hold the dollar gold price at $35 per ounce from 1961 through March 1968, when the gold pool collapsed:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Gold_Pool
But Epstein is writing 15 years later, interviewing BIS President Pohl in 1983, so Pohl is talking about another gold pool, one operated by the BIS itself -- only, unlike the London Gold Pool, entirely in secret.
GATA's gold market rigging litigator, Reginald H. Howe, targeted the BIS in his groundbreaking lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Boston in 2000:
http://www.goldensextant.com/
And a month ago GATA consultant Robert Lambourne, a student of the BIS, reported that 41 percent of the bank's comprehensive income for fiscal 2011-12 came from gold:
http://www.gata.org/node/11502
Of course respectable people in the gold world may say that the BIS' involvement in the gold market is completely innocent. (To respectable people, everything is completely innocent, even today as corruption abounds.) But Epstein concludes that the great value of the BIS to its member central banks is that of a "convenient cloak" and a "disguise."
If there was any serious journalism about gold -- or, for that matter, any serious financial journalism at all today -- the BIS would be a ripe subject, plainly the center of vast and unaccountable power. But the bank's acknowledged secret dealings in the gold market may be enough to establish the general probability of market manipulation.
Epstein's report on the BIS is appended for safety's sake, lest it disappear from his own Internet site, from which it is copied.
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

Wall Street at Close Report


 NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock indexes fell Tuesday, trimming a second month of gains, as investors worried central banks would not come through with enough stimulus to stem worries about the global economy. "There's a lot more coming down the pipe here: the Federal Reserve policy meeting, then the European Central Bank, and job numbers at the end of the week," said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James & Associates. Tallying its ninth monthly rise out of 10, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 64.33 points, or 0.5%, to 13,008.68, up 1% from the end of June. The S&P 500 index retreated 5.98 points, or 0.4%, to 1,379.32, up 1.3% for July. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 6.32 points, or 0.2%, to 2,939.52, up 0.2% for the month.

 U.S. stock indexes finish second month of gains

ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin


ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

US Market Reports
Stocks Turning In Lackluster Performance In Early Trading
7/31/2012 10:05 AM ET
Stocks are turning in another lackluster performance in early trading on Tuesday, as traders seem reluctant to make any significant moves. The major averages have turned mixed after ending the previous session modestly lower.
The major averages currently remain on opposite sides of the unchanged line, with the Nasdaq posting a modest gain. While the Nasdaq is up 1.91 points or 0.1 percent at 2,947.75, the Dow is down 25.20 points or 0.2 percent at 13,047.81 and the S&P 500 is down 1.86 points or 0.1 percent at 1,383.44.
The choppy trading on Wall Street comes as many traders are staying on the sidelines as the Federal Reserve begins a two-day monetary policy meeting.
The Fed is due to announce its latest monetary policy decision on Wednesday, while the European Central Bank is due to hold its monetary policy meeting on Thursday.
Peter Boockvar, managing director at Miller Tabak, said, "For the next two days we'll sit and wait for what the Fed will tell us they'll do next as patience and sitting still are not virtues of theirs."
"But, Mario Draghi and the ECB last week stole the thunder and took the microphone away from the Fed, making Thursday's ECB meeting much more relevant to markets," he added. Traders have largely shrugged off a batch of U.S. economic data, including a recent report showing that Chicago-area business activity unexpectedly expanded at a faster rate in July.
While most of the major sectors are showing only modest moves, electronic storage stocks have come under pressure. The NYSE Arca Disk Drive Index is down by 2.3 percent, with Seagate Technology leading the way lower after reporting disappointing quarterly results.
Brokerage and housing stocks are also seeing early weakness, while strength has emerged among semiconductor and steel stocks.
In overseas trading, stock markets across the Asia-Pacific region moved mostly higher during trading on Tuesday. Japan's Nikkei 225 Index advanced by 0.7 percent, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index surged up by 1.1 percent.
Meanwhile, the major European markets are turning in a mixed performance on the day. While the German DAX Index is up by 0.1 percent, the U.K.'s FTSE 100 Index and the French CAC 40 Index are down by 0.3 percent and 0.4 percent, respectively.
In the bond market, treasuries have moved moderately higher, continuing to recovery from the sell-off seen last Friday. Subsequently, the yield on the benchmark ten-year note, which moves opposite of its price, is down by 2.6 basis points at 1.478 percent.

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TSX Poised For Higher Open Amid Soft GDP Data - Canadian Commentary
7/31/2012 9:01 AM ET
Canadian stocks are poised for a higher open Tuesday on firm commodities and on a mixed batch of corporate earnings reports. However, a soft economic growth data out of Canada may weigh on sentiment even as traders were cautiously optimistic on further stimulus after French and German leaders, and the ECB chief pledging to protect the euro zone.
U.S. stock futures were pointing to a marginally higher open.
On Monday, the S&P/TSX Composite Index snapped its three-session winning streak to edged down 8.48 points or 0.07 percent to 11,757.88.
The price of Crude oil was ticking higher Tuesday morning as traders await cues from a 2-day FOMC meeting, starts today Crude for September edged up $0.30 to $90.08 a barrel.
The price of gold continued to hover above the $1,600-mark Tuesday morning as the U.S. dollar was mixed ahead of the FOMC meeting. gold for December delivery added $4.90 to $1,628.90 an ounce.
In corporate news from Canada, electricity transmission systems operator Brookfield Infrastructure (BIP_UN.TO) announced that ti along with its institutional partners would acquire the remaining 45 percent of the Autopista Vespucio Norte or AVN toll road that they do not currently own for approximately $590 million.
Distribution utility company Fortis Inc. posted improved second quarter net earnings at C$62 million or C$0.33 per share compared to C$57 million or C$0.32 per share for the second quarter of 2011. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of C$0.33 per share.
Power company TransAlta Corp. (TA.TO) slipped into the red in second quarter, reporting net loss of C$797 million or C$3.51 per share versus profit of C$12 million or C$0.05 per share a year ago. Comparable loss was C$0.10 per share versus comparable earnings C$0.29 per share. Analysts were expecting the company to report loss of C$0.07 per share.
Oil fields services provider Trican Well Service (TCW.TO) slipped into the red in second-quarter, reporting a loss of C$50.9 million or C$0.35 per share compared to a profit of C$30.1 million or C$0.21 per share in the prior-year quarter. Adjusted loss was C$48.6 million or C$0.33 per share compared to a profit of C$33.3 million or C$0.23 per share last year. Analysts were expecting the company to report a loss of C$0.37 per share for the quarter.
BP plc (BP_UN.TO) posted second-quarter 2012 loss of $1.385 billion or 7.29 cents per share versus a $5.72 billion profit or 30.27 cents per share last year.
Hardware dealer RONA inc. (RON.TO) announced that its Board of Directors has unanimously determined that an unsolicited, non-binding $14.50 per share acquisition proposal recently received from U.S.-based Lowe's Companies, Inc. , is not in the best interests of RONA and its stakeholders.

7/31/2012 9:01 AM ET
News service provider Thomson Reuters Corp. reported a much improved second-quarter net earnings of $922 million or $1.11 per share compared to last year's $563 million or $0.67 per share. Adjusted earnings from continuing operations were $449 million or $0.54 per share, compared with $429 million or $0.51 per share .
In economic news, Statistics Canada said real gross domestic product edged up 0.1 percent in May, just missing consensus estimates for a 0.2 percent growth and lower than 0.3 percent growth recorded in April. The output of service industries rose 0.1 percent in May on the strength of retail trade and the finance and insurance sector.
From the U.S., the Commerce Department said that personal income in the U.S. had risen by $61.8 billion in June, an increase of 0.5 percent. The increase was higher than the 0.4 percent predicted by most economists and comes atop revised figures that showed the May increase in personal income of 0.3 percent was higher than the 0.2 percent initially reported. However consumer spending, known formally as personal consumption expenditures fell marginally in June, dropping $1.3 billion.
Elsewhere, today's data from the Eurostat revealed that euro zone inflation remained stable in July as expected by economists. The annual rate came in at 2.4 percent, above the central bank's target of "below but close to 2 percent." The final data is due on August 16.
A separate report from the agency said the euro zone unemployment rate remained unchanged at a record high in June. The jobless rate for June was 11.2 percent, the same as seen in May. The rate matched economists' expectations.
Unemployment in Germany increased in July as widely expected, data from the Federal Labor Agency showed. The number of unemployed rose by 7,000 in July from a month earlier. This was in line with economists' forecast and followed a similar increase in the previous month.
Meanwhile, Germany's retail sales dropped unexpectedly in June from the prior month, data from the Federal Statistical Office revealed. Retail turnover was down 0.1 percent from May, in contrast to a 0.5 percent rise expected by economists. Nonetheless, the rate of decline was slower than the 0.3 percent drop seen in May.


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European Markets Fell Again Tuesday Due To Lingering Economic Concerns
7/24/2012 11:56 AM ET
European markets struggled to find direction on Tuesday, but ultimately finished the session with modest losses. The increase in the Chinese manufacturing result was welcomed by investors, however the decision by Moody's to lower its outlook on Germany raised concerns. Concerns over the situation in Spain persisted, as well as the possibility of a Greek exit from the Eurozone. Shares of banks, insurers and telecoms were weak Tuesday, but technology stocks performed well.
An indicator of Chinese manufacturing activity rose to its highest level in five months in July despite suggesting contraction, with the modest improvement hinged on a rebound in output, which rose to a nine-month high.
Flash estimates released by Markit Economics revealed that the purchasing managers' index came in at 49.5 in July, up from 48.2 in June, suggesting the slowest contraction in manufacturing activity in five months.
Moody's Investors Service has warned Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg that they may lose their coveted triple-A credit ratings due to intensified uncertainty regarding the outcome of the debt crisis.
The agency cut the outlook on the sovereigns' Aaa rating to 'negative' from 'stable' and said the revision is driven by its view that the level of uncertainty about the outlook for the euro area and the potential impact of plausible scenarios on member states are no longer consistent with 'stable' outlooks.
Moody's said the risk of a Greek exit from the euro area has increased relative to its expectations earlier this year. A Greek exit from the monetary union would pose a material threat to the euro, it warned.
Moody's said these sovereigns are impacted by the "rising uncertainty regarding the outcome of the euro area debt crisis and the increased susceptibility to event risk stemming from the likelihood of Greek exit, including the broader impact that such an event would have on euro area members, particularly Spain and Italy."
Spain paid a hefty premium to sell its short-term debt on Tuesday as investors remained worried that the country is on the brink of seeking a full-blown bailout. Italy also saw its benchmark yield climb.
The Spanish Treasury raised EUR 3.05 billion from the sale of its 3- and 6-month treasury bills, which was slightly more than the EUR 2 billion - EUR 3 billion target. The agency sold EUR 1.63 billion of the 3-month bill to yield 2.434 percent, which is higher than the 2.362 percent paid in the previous auction on June 26.
The euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks declined by 0.95 percent, while the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, dipped by 0.38 percent.

7/24/2012 11:56 AM ET
The DAX of Germany fell by 0.45 percent and the CAC 40 of France decreased by 0.87 percent. The FTSE 100 of the U.K. dropped by 0.41 percent and the SMI of Switzerland lost 0.06 percent.
In Frankfurt, SAP AG increased by 3.86 percent. The company reported a higher profit in its second quarter, boosted by strong software revenue growth in all regions.
Kontron AG sank by 14.87 percent, after it posted second-quarter net income of 2.3 million euros, a decline from 7.7 million euros reported a year ago.
In Paris, Publicis Groupe rose by 0.56 percent, after Barclays upgraded its rating on the stock to "Overweight."
In London, BP plc fell by 0.35 percent. The company confirmed it would begin negotiations with Rosneft for the potential purchase of BP's shareholding in TNK-BP.
Man Group increased by 3.98 percent, after the company announced that it would make $100 million in annual savings over the next 18 months.
Aberdeen Asset Management gained 1.14 percent. Societe Generale upgraded its rating on the stock to "Buy" from "Hold."
Croda International added 7.22 percent, after its strong than expected second quarter report.
Consumer confidence in Eurozone deteriorated in July amid further escalation of the debt crisis, the latest figures from the European Commission showed Monday. The flash estimate of the consumer confidence indicator decreased sharply to -21.6 in July from -19.8 in June in euro area.
The Eurozone private sector economy contracted for the tenth time in the last eleven months, with the rate of decline unchanged on June, Markit Economics said Tuesday. The flash composite Purchasing Managers' Index remained unchanged at 46.4 and matched the consensus forecast. A reading below 50 suggests contraction in the sector.
While the manufacturing PMI fell to 44.1 from 45.1 in June, the services PMI rose to 47.6 from 47.1. Economists were forecasting the manufacturing index to rise to 45.2 and the services PMI to remain stable at 47.1.
French business confidence declined in July, the latest data from the statistical office Insee showed Tuesday. The headline synthetic index for the manufacturing sector fell to 90 in July from a revised reading of 91 in June. Economists expected the reading to remain at June's original score of 92.
Germany's private sector continued to shrink in July, marking the weakest performance since June 2009, Markit Economics said Tuesday. The flash composite output index fell for the sixth month running in July, to 47.3 from 48.1 in June. The index has posted reading below 50 in each month since May.
7/24/2012 11:56 AM ET
The flash manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index dropped unexpectedly to 43.3 from 45 a month ago. The reading was below the consensus 45.1. Likewise, the services PMI fell to 49.7 from 49.9 in June. The reading was forecast to rise to 50.
Germany's leading economic indicator decreased for the second consecutive month in May, hurt mainly by negative contributions from stock prices and new residential construction orders, data released by the Conference Board showed Tuesday. The leading economic index dropped 0.1 percent to 104.3 in May, after decreasing 0.5 percent in the previous month.

Asia Market Reports
Asian Markets Mostly Trade In Positive Territory
7/31/2012 12:05 AM ET
Asian stock markets are mostly trading in positive territory on Tuesday with investors picking up stocks, betting on hopes that the U.S. Federal Reserve and central banks in Europe will come out with further stimulus to boost their sagging economies. Some regional economic data too is contributing to the rise in stock prices.
After a somewhat shaky start, the Australian market rallied smartly as investors shrugged off economic concerns and picked up stocks, betting on fresh stimulus from global central banks.
Energy, mining, financial, consumer staples and information technology stocks are moving higher, while healthcare and consumer discretionary stocks are trading mixed.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index is up 32.8 points or 0.8 percent at 4,278.5. The broader All Ordinaries index is trading at 4,297.5, up 30.6 points or 0.7 percent from its previous close.
Duet Group shares are up nearly 5 percent. Lynas Corporation is trading 4.8 percent up. Bluescope Steel, Paladin Energy, Origin Energy and Qantas Airways are up 3 to 4 percent.
Incitec Pivot, Atlas Iron, Beach Energy, JB Hi-Fi, Westfield Group, Woodside Petroleum, Dexus Property Group, Rio Tinto (, RIO.L) and Monadelphous Group are also trading sharply higher.
Campbell Brothers is plunging by over 12 percent. Fairfax Media and Boart Longyear are trading lower by over 4 percent.
Panaust is down with a loss of 2.8 percent. Arrium, Whitehaven Coal and ResMed Inc () are also trading notably lower. In addition, Regis Resources, Iluka Resources, Challenger, Macquarie Group and Bank of Queensland are trading lower.

Caltex Australia said it plans to raise A$300 million through capital markets to help fund changes to its operations. The oil refiner will issue subordinated notes, priced at A$100 each, to retail and institutional investors to raise the funds. The company's shares are currently trading flat.
Metcash Ltd. said it has paid A$46.5 million to take complete ownership of hardware chain Mitre 10. The stock is currently trading lower by about 0.3 percent.
In economic news, the number of dwelling units approved in Australia dropped in June, but the rate of decline was weaker than expected by economists, according to data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
As many as 13,336 dwelling units were approved in June, which was 2.5 percent less than a month earlier on a seasonally adjusted basis. Economists expected a decline of 15 percent after a strong 27 percent gain in the previous month.
The seasonally adjusted estimate for private sector houses fell 1.1 percent in June following a rise of 7.3 percent in the previous month. Year-on-year, total dwelling permits increased 10.2 percent. Approvals for private houses declined 7.7 percent annually.


Commodities
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Dollar Recovering From Recent Losses Versus European Rivals
7/30/2012 1:20 PM ET
The dollar is bouncing back from some recent weakness against its major European rivals on Monday. The euro rallied late last week, after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi stated that the ECB is ready to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro. Investors are looking for some crucial action from the European Central Bank, which holds its rate-setting session later this week.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti have vowed to defend the euro amid escalating tensions in Eurozone, close on the heels of a similar agreement between Merkel and French President Francois Hollande.
During a telephone conversation on Sunday, Merkel and Monti agreed that both the countries "will do everything possible to protect the euro area," reports said.
The dollar has rebounded from Friday's 3-week low of $1.2389 versus the Euro, to around $1.2250 Monday.
Eurozone economic sentiment deteriorated more-than-expected in July due to lower confidence in all sectors and marked the fourth consecutive month of downturn. The economic sentiment index fell to 87.9 from 89.9 a month ago, survey data from the European Commission showed Monday. The reading was also below expectations for a score of 88.9.
German wholesale trade turnover rebounded in June after declining for the past three months, the latest figures from the Federal Statistical Office showed Monday. Wholesale sales increased 4 percent year-on-year in June following a 2.8 percent fall in May. In March and April, sales fell 1.1 percent and 0.9 percent respectively.

Spanish economic output sank further in the second quarter, deepening the recession in the euro area's fourth largest economy, which is already hit by a banking sector crisis and the government's tough austerity measures.
The gross domestic product fell 0.4 percent in the second quarter of 2012 after a 0.3 percent decline in the first quarter of 2012 and in the fourth quarter of 2011. The outcome was in line with the Bank of Spain's estimates released early last week.
The greenback has also bounced back from Friday's low of $1.5767 versus the pound sterling, to around $1.5675.
UK's high street sales increased for the third consecutive month in July, but the rate of growth slowed from the previous month, data from a survey by the Confederation of British Industry showed Monday.
The balance of the survey came in at 11 percent in July, with 44 percent of surveyed retailers reporting an increase in sales volumes and 33 percent reporting a decline. Economists were looking for a balance of 20 percent. The latest figure was also far below the 32 percent balance retailers had expected.

ADVFN III Morning Euro Markets Bulletin


ADVFN III Morning Euro Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news
Tuesday, 31 July 2012

London Market Report
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London open: Footsie flat despite falls for BP, Weir and Fresnillo
Market Movers
  • techMARK 2,086.11 -0.09%
  • FTSE 100 5,691.29 -0.04%
  • FTSE 250 11,229.40 -0.08%
- BP, Weir and Fresnillo provide some downward pressure
- UK consumer confidence remains subdued
- Markets await the Fed and ECB

Some disappointing results from BP, Weir Group and Fresnillo were preventing gains for the Footsie on Tuesday morning; meanwhile, consumer confidence data in the UK showed that sentiment remained subdued in July.

The GfK consumer confidence index was unchanged this month at -29, in line with consensus forecasts. Analysts at Barclays Capital said this morning: "Consumer confidence remains subdued and it has been at these low levels (between -29 and -33) for over a year now. Although inflation has fallen and the unemployment rate has edged down, we think the uncertainty about the economic outlook, the continued austerity measures and weak earnings growth are likely to keep consumer sentiment at subdued levels in the near term."

Investors were also showing caution following some strong gains the day before as markets hope for central bank action in the US and Europe this week. The Federal Reserve kicks off its two-day policy meeting today, while the European Central Bank (ECB) will reveal its decision on Thursday.

Many are expecting the ECB to resume bond-buying after its President Mario Draghi said last week that the bank will do "whatever it takes to preserve the euro…and believe me, it will be big enough".

FTSE 100: Heavy falls from BP, Weir and Fresnillo early on

Weaker oil and gas prices and a cut in output due to an extensive maintenance programme hit BP's profits hard in the second quarter. Shares dropped over 3% early on.

Scottish engineering firm Weir tumbled after advising that full-year profits are likely to come in below market expectations if there is no pick-up in the upstream Oil & Gas markets.

Mexico-focused precious metals miner Fresnillo dropped after being hit by the falling price of silver and reduced ore quality, leading to a significant fall in first-half profits.

UK banking groups Barclays and RBS were heavy fallers after earnings from their European counterparts UBS and Deutsche Bank came up short of forecasts.

Holiday Inns operator InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) fell after the findings of an Office of Fair Trading (OFT) investigation criticised the hotel group's arrangements with two online booking agents.

UK engineering giant GKN was lower in spite of seeing profits jump in the first half as it benefitted from a broad exposure to global markets.

Heading the other way was precious metals miner Polymetal after its produced more than half a million ounces of gold equivalent in the first half of 2012, with production reaching a new high in the second quarter. Sector peer Randgold also made gains.

Xstrata was also on the up after seeing stronger second-quarter production in coal, nickel, zinc and lead compared with the first quarter.

FTSE 100 - Risers
Vedanta Resources (VED) 947.00p +2.05%
Randgold Resources Ltd. (RRS) 5,890.00p +1.46%
Polymetal International (POLY) 898.00p +1.30%
Amec (AMEC) 1,130.00p +1.07%
Xstrata (XTA) 852.90p +1.01%
Anglo American (AAL) 1,934.00p +0.86%
Royal Dutch Shell 'A' (RDSA) 2,189.50p +0.83%
Vodafone Group (VOD) 183.95p +0.79%
Glencore International (GLEN) 320.90p +0.79%
Royal Dutch Shell 'B' (RDSB) 2,266.00p +0.78%

FTSE 100 - Fallers
BP (BP.) 430.40p -3.16%
Weir Group (WEIR) 1,651.00p -3.11%
ITV (ITV) 74.80p -2.60%
Fresnillo (FRES) 1,426.00p -1.86%
Barclays (BARC) 167.65p -1.70%
Shire Plc (SHP) 1,892.00p -1.61%
Wolseley (WOS) 2,334.00p -1.52%
CRH (CRH) 1,213.00p -1.46%
Schroders (SDR) 1,301.00p -1.44%
International Consolidated Airlines Group SA (CDI) (IAG) 160.40p -0.99%

FTSE 250 - Risers
Elementis (ELM) 212.90p +6.45%
Grainger (GRI) 91.35p +2.47%
Petra Diamonds Ltd.(DI) (PDL) 130.00p +2.36%
Tullett Prebon (TLPR) 273.40p +2.28%
Rank Group (RNK) 119.00p +2.15%
COLT Group SA (COLT) 115.60p +2.03%
Hiscox Ltd. (HSX) 443.50p +1.72%
BlackRock World Mining Trust (BRWM) 557.50p +1.55%
Inmarsat (ISAT) 497.50p +1.47%
Rathbone Brothers (RAT) 1,288.00p +1.42%

FTSE 250 - Fallers
Inchcape (INCH) 379.50p -2.39%
African Barrick Gold (ABG) 371.80p -2.24%
Savills (SVS) 357.60p -2.21%
Perform Group (PER) 367.50p -2.00%
Diploma (DPLM) 411.70p -1.98%
New World Resources A Shares (NWR) 299.30p -1.87%
Phoenix Group Holdings (DI) (PHNX) 484.44p -1.72%
Bwin.party Digital Entertainment (BPTY) 108.50p -1.63%
Home Retail Group (HOME) 76.90p -1.60%
UK Event Calendar
Tuesday July 31

INTERIMS
BP, Brammer, Burford Capital Ltd., Capital & Counties, Devro, Dignity, Elementis, Erste Group Bank AG, Fresnillo, GKN, Hutchison China Meditech Ltd, Inchcape, Jcdecaux SA, LSL Property Services, Man SE, Rotork, Tullett Prebon, Weir group

INTERIM DIVIDEND PAYMENT DATE
Aer Lingus Group, Chrysalis VCT

QUARTERLY PAYMENT DATE
JP Morgan Chase & Co, Middlefield Canadian Income PCC, Schroder Income Growth Fund

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
Chicago PMI (US) (13:45)
Consumer Confidence (US) (15:00)
GFK Consumer Confidence (GER) (07:00)
International Reserves (EU) (11:00)
Personal Consumption Expenditures (US) (13:30)
Personal Income (US) (13:30)
Personal Spending (US) (13:30)
Retail Sales (GER) (07:00)
Unemployment Rate (EU) (10:00)
Unemployment Rate (GER) (08:55)

Q2
BP, Wolfson Microelectronics

GMS
Evolve Capital, Lighthouse Group

FINALS
Allocate Software, Games Workshop

ANNUAL REPORT
Dart Group

AGMS
Better Capital Pcc Ltd (2009), Better Capital Pcc Ltd (2012), Cazenove Absolute Equity Ltd, Creon Resources, e-Therapeutics, Hansa Trust, Metro Baltic Horizons, Schroder UK Growth Fund, Strategic Natural Resources, Water Intelligence

UK ECONOMIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
Consumer Confidence (09:30)

FINAL DIVIDEND PAYMENT DATE
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US Market Report
US close: Stocks drift lower as markets await the Fed
    Dow Jones: 13,073 (-0.02%)
    Nasdaq: 22,946 (-0.41%)
    S&P 500: 1,385 (-0.05%)
US stocks failed to follow their European counterparts higher on Monday as investors showed caution ahead of a domestic policy decision and monthly jobs report this week.

Meanwhile, optimism was driving gains on equity markets across the pond after European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi pledged last week to do "whatever it takes to preserve the euro…and believe me, it will be big enough".

The Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting begins tomorrow, and investors are hoping that the poor labour, manufacturing and GDP data as of late have added to expectations that the Fed will act.

"Both ECB and Fed announcements will be key drivers of price-action in the near term, so we can expect volatility to continue head of the central bank actions later this week," said Ishaq Siddiqi, market strategist at ETX Capital.

The US Government is also due to release an employment report this week that most observers expect to show a slowdown in recruitment in July.

COMPANIES

Drinks titan Coca-Cola gained as investors celebrated the company's plans to restructure the company's division. At the end of the year, the business will be divided into three units: Coca-Cola International, Coca-Cola Americas and Bottling Investments Group.

Investment bank JPMorgan Chase & Co was among the worst performers on the Dow after analysts at Deutsche Bank downgraded their rating on the stock from 'buy' to 'hold'.

Apple was gaining as the company begins a major court battle with rival Samsung over smartphone technology patents. Apple is demanding $2.5bn in damages from the South Korean firm.


S&P 500 - Risers
Supervalu Inc. (SVU) $2.24 +12.56%
Sprint Nxtel Corp. (S) $4.51 +4.64%
Southwestern Energy Co. (SWN) $34.27 +3.82%
QEP Resources Inc (QEP) $30.25 +3.03%
Franklin Resources Inc. (BEN) $115.39 +2.83%
Southwest Airlines Co. (LUV) $9.15 +2.81%
SAIC Inc. (SAI) $11.46 +2.69%
Range Resources Corp. (RRC) $64.29 +2.55%
Cardinal Health Inc. (CAH) $43.31 +2.29%
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. (COG) $42.99 +2.28%

S&P 500 - Fallers
Citrix Systems Inc. (CTXS) $73.25 -5.86%
Loews Corp. (L) $39.54 -5.18%
Avon Products Inc. (AVP) $15.45 -4.45%
Salesforce.Com Inc. (CRM) $125.87 -4.27%
MEMC Electronic Materials (WFR) $1.82 -4.21%
Apollo Group Inc. (APOL) $27.22 -4.12%
DeVry Inc. (DV) $19.04 -3.79%
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF) $35.39 -3.70%
Red Hat Inc. (RHT) $53.76 -3.67%
Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) $49.96 -3.65%

Dow Jones I.A - Risers
Coca-Cola Co. (KO) $81.12 +1.39%
Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) $15.87 +1.15%
United Technologies Corp. (UTX) $74.97 +0.93%
Travelers Company Inc. (TRV) $63.21 +0.78%
AT&T Inc. (T) $37.43 +0.78%
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) $74.98 +0.62%
Chevron Corp. (CVX) $109.82 +0.51%
McDonald's Corp. (MCD) $89.33 +0.16%
International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) $196.68 +0.15%
Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) $87.56 +0.13%

Dow Jones I.A - Fallers
JP Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) $36.14 -2.03%
Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) $18.26 -1.64%
Merck & Co. Inc. (MRK) $44.48 -1.36%
Intel Corp. (INTC) $25.76 -1.00%
Boeing Co. (BA) $74.86 -0.86%
Home Depot Inc. (HD) $53.25 -0.86%
General Electric Co. (GE) $20.80 -0.57%
Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) $85.69 -0.55%
Pfizer Inc. (PFE) $23.71 -0.48%
3M Co. (MMM) $91.28 -0.47%

Nasdaq 100 - Risers
Expedia Inc. (EXPE) $56.12 +2.22%
Staples Inc. (SPLS) $12.74 +2.17%
Logitech International S.A. (LOGI) $8.93 +1.71%
Apple Inc. (AAPL) $595.03 +1.69%
Seagate Technology Plc (STX) $30.43 +1.40%
Microchip Technology Inc. (MCHP) $33.36 +1.40%
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. (VRTX) $49.96 +1.30%
Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) $15.87 +1.15%
Foster Wheeler AG (FWLT) $17.92 +0.96%
eBay Inc. (EBAY) $45.60 +0.85%

Nasdaq 100 - Fallers
Citrix Systems Inc. (CTXS) $73.25 -5.86%
Apollo Group Inc. (APOL) $27.22 -4.12%
Check Point Software Technologies Ltd. (CHKP) $48.32 -3.97%
Nll Holdings Inc. (NIHD) $6.79 -3.96%
Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) $49.96 -3.65%
Sandisk Corp. (SNDK) $41.17 -2.99%
Symantec Corp. (SYMC) $15.47 -2.89%
Adobe Systems Inc. (ADBE) $31.01 -2.77%
Marvell Technology Group Ltd. (MRVL) $11.33 -2.45%
Altera Corp. (ALTR) $35.21 -2.30%
Newspaper Round Up
Tuesday newspaper round-up: BP, Yahoo, Lloyds
The US Treasury Secretary urged Europe's leaders to follow through on their promises to do "whatever it takes" to save the euro as he embarked on a whirlwind round of diplomacy in Germany. Tim Geithner stoked speculation about a co-ordinated transatlantic push to bolster the single currency as he met Wolfgang Schäuble, the German Finance Minister, at a holiday resort island in Schleswig-Holstein. In a joint statement, the pair "expressed confidence in euro area member states' efforts to reform and move towards greater integration", before Mr Geithner flew to Frankfurt to see Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank's President, The Times says.

Bankers found to have rigged Libor could face jail after the Serious Fraud Office said it will look to bring criminal charges against those who attempted to manipulate Libor, a key global borrowing rate. David Green QC, director of the SFO, said existing legislation could be used to bring criminal actions against banks implicated in the Libor rigging scandal. Mr Green did not specify the precise charges that could be brought but it is possible bankers found guilty of manipulation could receive prison sentences of up to 10 years, according to The Telegraph.

BP's oligarch partners in TNK-BP have piled pressure on the oil major ahead of its half-year results on Tuesday by refusing to approve the payment of a $1bn (£637m) dividend by the Russian joint venture. BP's oligarch partners in TNK-BP have piled pressure on the oil major ahead of its half-year results on Tuesday, by refusing to approve the payment of a $1bn (£637m) dividend by the Russian joint venture. BP proposed earlier this month that TNK-BP pay the special dividend, which would have provided a welcome boost to its coffers at a time when the venture's regular payouts are suspended amid disagreement between the partners. The proposal required the approval of the four oligarchs of the Alfa-Access-Renova (AAR) group who sit on the joint venture's board - and who yesterday announced they had voted against it, The Telegraph reports.

Ross Levinsohn, the interim chief executive of Yahoo! is leaving the company today, two weeks after the company announced that he had lost out on the top job to Google executive Marissa Mayer. He will leave with the payments outlined in his 2010 offer letter and 2011 severance agreement, plus an equity award of 67,000 restricted stock units and 250,000 stock options. The options have an exercise price of $15.80, the closing price on Friday, giving them a value of just over $5m. Mr Levinsohn took temporary control in May after Scott Thompson left unexpectedly over inaccuracies in his CV. He had been the principal internal candidate for the chief executive position. His sudden departure is regarded as a setback for Ms Mayer and many staff had apparently hoped that he would stay to run the company in tandem with his new boss, writes The Times.

It's time for investors in pub group Greene King to stop filling their glasses, according to Liberum Capital analyst Patrick Coffey, who called last orders on his stock recommendation and cut the company to "hold" from "buy". "Having rallied strongly over the last two months, we believe the shares are likely to pause for breath," Mr Coffey said, although he boosted his target to 593p from 575p. Indeed, the stock has had a good run, climbing 24% since the start of June. Greene King also reported a 7% increase in full-year pre-tax profit last month, bolstered by growth in food sales. However, Liberum's change of heart put pressure on the pub group and the stock slipped 3½ to 607½p, The Telegraph reports.

Lloyds Banking has pledged to lend £5bn to first-time buyers over the course of 2012, creating more than 140 new homeowners every day. This should mean more than 50,000 of them will be able to buy their own property this year. In the first six months of the year, the Group has already helped more than 25,000 people take their first steps onto the property ladder. It provides one in three mortgages on affordable housing schemes and new build properties in the UK and 25 per cent of the funding for the Government's NewBuy scheme, which is targeted at first-time buyers. Last week Lloyds cut rates by up to 0.2 percentage points on a range of loans, including some aimed at first-time buyers, The Times says.

Monday, July 30, 2012

DealBooK | DealB%K Today's Top Headlines: HSBC Sets Aside $2 Billion for Legal Woes as Profit Falls



Monday, July 30, 2012
TODAY'S TOP HEADLINES
 
Top Story
HSBC Sets Aside $2 Billion for Legal Woes as Profit Falls Profit at HSBC Holdings dropped nearly 9 percent in the first half of the year, as the big bank deals with the fallout from a money laundering investigation and a settlement over selling inappropriate financial products.

On Monday, HSBC said that it had set aside $700 million to cover the potential fines, settlements and other expenses related to a money-laundering inquiry in the United States. The bank made a further $1.3 billion provision toward a regulatory settlement related to payment protection plans for credit card loans, home mortgages and other consumer borrowings.

The legal woes weighed on the company's financial results. In the first half the year, HSBC announced net income of $8.4 billion, down from $9.2 billion in the previous year. HSBC's operating income rose slightly, to $43.6 billion, over the same period.

"I very much regret HSBC's past failures and I apologize for them. Our controls should have been stronger and more effective,'" Mr. Gulliver said Monday. '"We are committed to doing whatever it takes to make sure the organization is able to detect and prevent unacceptable behavior."

Even so, HSBC's final legal bills could rise. On Monday, the British bank's chief executive, Stuart Gulliver, indicated there was "tremendous uncertainty" around the money laundering case, and the "number could be significantly higher." He called the $700 million provision "a best estimate based on the facts that we currently know."
  • DEALBOOK »
  • DEAL NOTES
    A Tech Giant Defies Conventional Wisdom James B. Stewart, the Common Sense columnist for The New York Times, writes that if eBay can turn itself around, it would have "big implications for struggling companies like Yahoo and AOL, not to mention more recent sensations that have already lost some luster."
    The Deal Professor breaks down the compensation for Marissa Mayer, the new chief of Yahoo.
    Adding Up Marissa Mayer's Pay at Yahoo Marissa Mayer can earn at least $117 million over five years at Yahoo - and much more if Yahoo's stock price rises, the Deal Professor writes.
    Real Estate Mogul Fears a Revolution Jeff Greene, a real estate billionaire who successfully shorted the housing market and then started buying up mortgage bonds, tells New York magazine that his "real, legitimate fear" is that the less-fortunate will "take over this country."
    U.S. Economic Recovery Loses Momentum Figures released on Friday showed the United States economy grew at an annual rate of 1.5 percent in the second quarter, making the recovery more vulnerable to shocks at home and in Europe.
    MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS »
    Protesting Coup at Duke Energy, 2 Board Members Step Down In separate statements, two former directors of Progress Energy said the merged company needed a new chief to restore confidence among investors and regulators.
    Apple Officials Said to Consider Stake in Twitter Apple, which has stumbled in its efforts to get into social media, has talked with Twitter in recent months about making a strategic investment in it, Evelyn M. Rusli and Nick Bilton report in The New York Times.
    Apple to Acquire AuthenTec for $356 Million The acquisition of the company, which designs security products for mobile devices such as fingerprint sensors, could help Apple bolster the security of its products,
    Universal Said to Offer to Sell Prized Label The Universal Music Group, which is trying to get approval for a takeover of EMI Music, has offered to sell the bulk of EMI's Parlophone division, Reuters reports, citing three unidentified people familiar with the matter.
    Northern Iron of Australia Gets Rival Bid The Australian mining firm Northern Iron said it received a bid from the Swiss trading house Prominvest valuing it at about $550 million, Reuters reports. The bid competes with a lower offer from the Indian conglomerate Aditya Birla.
    Aviva Said to Receive Unsolicited Offers for Unit The British insurer Aviva, which is said to be preparing its United States business for a sale, received unsolicited approaches for the unit, which could be worth about $1.57 billion, The Sunday Telegraph reported, according to Reuters.
    Russian Co-Owners Oppose TNK-BP Dividends The vote put pressure on BP to resolve ownership issues at TNK-BP, its joint venture in Russia, Reuters reports.
    INVESTMENT BANKING »
    The Bond Market's Crown Prince Mohamed A. El-Erian, the chief executive of the bond house Pimco, is in line to take the reins one day from his co-chief investment officer, William H. Gross, The New York Times reports. But some in the industry have doubts about whether Mr. El-Erian, whose trading background is thinner, can replicate Mr. Gross's success.
    After Huge Loss, JPMorgan Rearranges Top Officials
    After Huge Loss, JPMorgan Rearranges Top Officials Matthew Zames and Frank Bisignano were promoted to co-chief operating officers of the bank, while Jes Staley moved from being chief executive of the corporate and investment bank to chairman.
    Jamie Who? A poll by "60 Minutes" and Vanity Fair found that only 14 percent of respondents could correctly identify Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase.
    Bank of America Said to Have Mulled a Breakup The Wall Street Journal reports: "Long before Sanford Weill suggested last week that big banks should split up, Bank of America executives and directors considered the idea and then decided against it, said people close to the nation's second-biggest bank by assets."
    With Departure of Barclays Chief, End of an Era Fortune writes that the resignation of Robert E. Diamond Jr. over the Libor scandal "carries far broader significance than the demise of a single talented executive. It may, in fact, signal the death of his dream. That dream is the model of the universal bank."
    German Banks Stand Out in Survey Floyd Norris writes in The New York Times: "German banks are overwhelmed with deposits, and see continuing strong demand for loans to purchase homes. Other banks see deposits flowing out, and say they are tightening credit standards at the same time that fewer and fewer customers want to borrow."
    Deutsche Bank Trading Executive Departs Antoine Cornut, who ran flow-credit trading for Deutsche Bank in the Americas and Europe, has left the German lender for a hedge fund, Bloomberg News reports.
    Profit Falls at South Korean Banks Combined, lenders in South Korea reported a 59 percent decline in profit in the second quarter compared with a year earlier, Bloomberg News reports.
    • BLOOMBERG NEWS 
    •  
    • PRIVATE EQUITY »
      K.K.R.'s Quarterly Profit Surges The investment firm said on Friday that its profit more than doubled in the second quarter as the value of its holdings -- and one in particular, Alliance Boots -- rose significantly.
      Buyout Firms Get in the Olympics Spirit The British firm Phoenix Equity Partners recently held its own version of the Olympics, called the "Phoenix Olympics," while other firms, like K.K.R., are closely following the actual events, The Wall Street Journal reports.
      WL Ross Misses Target for Fund The firm run by Wilbur L. Ross Jr. raised about $640 million for a new private equity fund, falling short of a $2 billion goal, Bloomberg News reports.
      3 Private Equity Firms Consider Final Bids for Getty The Carlyle Group, CVC Capital Partners and TPG Capital remain in the auction for Getty Images and are considering final bids, Reuters reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter.
      HEDGE FUNDS »
      Hedge Fund Industry Takes a Shine to Mutual Funds As the asset management industry changes, more hedge funds are offering products for individual investors, Barron's writes.
      SkyBridge Plans a Push Into Asia SkyBridge Capital, an American fund that invests in hedge funds, plans to open a Singapore office next year with a new fund focused on Asia, the trade publication AsianInvestor reports. It is also considering opening a Hong Kong office the following year.
      South Korea to Lower Barrier to Starting Hedge Funds The Yonhap news agency reports that South Korea has decided to lower the minimum amount of money that asset managers must have in order to start a hedge fund.
      Hedge Funds Extend a Bet on Commodities The moves came amid speculation that the Federal Reserve might increase its economic stimulus measures, Bloomberg News reports.
      I.P.O./OFFERINGS »
      Twilight of the Tech Bubble of 2012? Shares of Facebook and Zynga were battered last week, and Netflix and Groupon were also under pressure, as investors and analysts lost some enthusiasm for the companies that were supposed to underpin a new Internet era. The New York Times writes: "There were instant echoes of the crash of 2000, when the money stopped flowing, the dot-coms crumbled and Silicon Valley devolved into recriminations and lawsuits."
      Facebook Stock Continues to Fall After Earnings Report Facebook probably wishes it could unfriend its stock ticker symbol right about now, Nick Bilton reports for The New York Times Bits blog.
      Horse Racing Deal Fails to Leave the Gates A plan to allow ordinary investors to back racehorses was scrapped due to market conditions, The Wall Street Journal reports.
      Markit Group Decides Against I.P.O. This Year The decision ended speculation that the financial information company might go public during the next 12 months, Financial News reports.
      VENTURE CAPITAL »
      A Tech Hub Emerges in the West Bank With companies like ASAL Technologies, a tech firm with 120 employees, the West Bank city of Ramallah is aiming to become a Middle Eastern version of Silicon Valley, The New York Times reports. Unlike other industries, the technology sector is less affected by impediments like barriers, checkpoints and permit requirements.
      When Craigslist Snuffs Out Innovation Craigslist recently accused Padmapper, which places apartment listings on a map, of infringing on copyright and trademark. And it wasn't the first time the classifieds site has claimed such violations, writes Nick Bilton on the Bits blog.
      Learning Entrepreneurship in School A training program called the Founder Institute, which charges tuition of less than $1,000, requires students to create a fully operational company before they can graduate, The New York Times reports.
      At the Olympics, Twitter Users Told to Refrain The committee running the Olympics asked people attending the games in London to "kind of take it easy" with updates to Twitter, as an overloaded network was affecting the flow of information to television commentators, Reuters reports.
      LEGAL/REGULATORY »
      Britain Launches Review of Libor The British government on Monday officially announced a review into the rate-setting process at the center of the recent financial scandal.
      S.E.C. Alleges Insider Trading on $15 Billion Cnooc Deal The Securities and Exchange Commission moves to freeze the assets of traders accused of illegally trading in shares in advance of the announced $15 billion acquisition of Nexen, a Canadian oil producer by the state-owned Chinese oil company, Cnooc.
      British Court Sentences Six Men for Insider Trading A British court has sentenced six men for their role in a multiyear insider trading scheme.
      How Libor Became Libor Gretchen Morgenson writes in the Fair Game column in The New York Times: "You probably won't be shocked to learn that in mortgages, at least, Wall Street played a role in pushing Libor over another rate benchmark - one that some bankers say was better for borrowers."
      New York Lender Sues Banks Over Libor The Berkshire Bank, a lender with 11 branches, sued 21 banks over the alleged manipulation of Libor, Bloomberg News reports.
      Solyndra Files Reorganization Plan The beleaguered solar panel maker has filed a plan to reorganize its obligations in bankruptcy court, Reuters reports.
      Greece's Lenders Extend Their Stay The so-called troika of lenders - the European Commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund - now plan to stay "as long as necessary" in Athens to help the government make budget cuts, The New York Times reports.
      European Central Bank Council to Meet Thursday After the president of the European Central Bank promised to do "whatever it takes to preserve the euro," expectations are running high for a meeting of the central bank's governing council this week, The New York Times reports.
      Patent Fight Between Apple and Samsung Heads to Trial The New York Times reports: "The jury trial is the latest phase in a global campaign of smartphone patent litigation that began more than two years ago."
       
     
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