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March 8, 2010

Alice opens with $116.3 million, a 3-D record

Filed under: business, money, opinion, politics, world — kertmakson @ 3:18 am
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NEW YORK – Tim Burton and Johnny Depp’s trip down the rabbit hole drew huge crowds, as “Alice in Wonderland” earned a whopping $116.3 million in its opening weekend — a record for a 3-D film.

The surprisingly huge total easily surpassed all other films in release and gave Walt Disney Studios an even bigger opening than that of the hugely popular 3-D film “Avatar.” It also marked the biggest opening weekend for a non-sequel.

“This is just one of those cultural phenomenons that has caught everybody’s interest,” said Chuck Viane, Disney’s president of distribution. “They don’t come like this very often.”

The film beat forecasts that ranged between $65 million-$75 million, and the surprising results added some intrigue to Oscar Sunday. Before the weekend, Disney and 20th Century Fox competed over the available 3-D ready screens; screens outfitted for 3-D are rapidly rising, but still amount to fewer than 4,000 in the U.S. and Canada.

Before “Alice,” many of those screens were still dedicated to Fox’s box-office behemoth, “Avatar,” which is up for nine Academy Awards on Sunday, including best picture.

In its 12th week of release, “Avatar” earned $7.7 million over the weekend, bringing its cumulative domestic total to $720.2 million.

Asked whether fewer 3-D and IMAX screens hurt “Avatar,” Chris Aronson, head of distribution for Fox, said, “No question.”

“Are we disappointed? Sure,” said Aronson. “But there are certain market forces that are beyond anything we can do. To have an 11-week window is pretty much unheard of. It certainly allowed this movie to be discovered and witnessed by so many people.”

“Avatar” isn’t disappearing, though, and it can be expected to regain 3-D and IMAX screens, especially if it wins best picture.

“We’ll have that negotiation tomorrow morning with exhibition, without a doubt,” said Aronson.

It also seemed likely that “Alice” benefited from the “Avatar”-effect in galvanizing audiences for 3-D movies. “Alice in Wonderland” is the first film released in 3-D since James Cameron’s epic. “Alice” was shot in 2-D, but transferred to 3-D in post-production.

“In the wake of the impact of `Avatar,’ there’s a whole new audience that’s been indoctrinated to 3-D,” said Paul Dergarabedian, box-office analyst for Hollywood.com. “That paid off big for `Alice in Wonderland.’”

The weekend’s second best performer at the box-office was Overture’s “Brooklyn’s Finest,” Antoine Fuqua’s gritty police thriller, which earned $13.5 million in its first weekend, according to studio estimates.

Martin Scorsese’s “Shutter Island” for Paramount followed closely with $13.3 million in its third week of release, bringing its cumulative total to $95.8 million. Warner Bros.’s comedy “Cop Out” came in fourth, adding $9.1 million for a two-week total of $32.4 million.

But “Alice” thoroughly dominated the weekend, surprising even Disney. Worldwide, it took in $210.3 million.

It was a record release for the first quarter of the year, typically a time of lower box-office expectations and critically acclaimed Oscar contenders. The previous first quarter record was Mel Gibson’s “Passion of the Christ,” which opened with $83.8 million in Feb. 2004.

“We went into Friday thinking that we really had a big hit with us, and then all of a sudden the numbers started to roll in,” said Viane inferred heaters. “Alice” went on to make $41 million on Friday alone.

“We said, `Oh my gosh. This is bigger than any of us could have anticipated,” said Viane.

Though reviews were mostly respectfully negative, much of the film’s draw was surely in teaming director Burton and his frequent collaborator, Depp, who plays the Mad Hatter. It also presented moviegoers with a 3-D updating of Lewis Carroll’s beloved classic. Though at times dark, it gained a PG rating from the MPAA (for, among other things, “a smoking caterpillar”), which meant a large number of kids could attend.

But it proved once again how significant the draw of 3-D is to moviegoers. The technology repeatedly has inflated box-office grosses for everything from “Avatar” to “Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs.”

“Alice” also played across 188 IMAX screens in North America and gave IMAX its best opening ever, with $11.9 million domestically. That beat the previous record of $9.5 million set by “Avatar.”

IMAX chairman and president Greg Foster said the huge success of “Alice” was unexpected, but that “Avatar” would regain some of those IMAX screens, whether or not it wins best picture.

“The momentum on 3-D is so massive right now,” said Foster. “They were ready for a new movie. They were ready for a new, cool 3-D experience.”

Though most of the Oscar contenders weren’t a big factor at the box-office Sunday, the boffo performance of “Alice” proved the good health of Hollywood, said Dergarabedian.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. “Alice in Wonderland,” $116.3 million.

2. “Brookyn’s Finest,” $13.5 million.

3. “Shutter Island,” $13.3 million.

4. “Cop Out,” $9.1 million.

5. “Avatar,” $7.7 million.

6. “The Crazies,” $7 million.

7. “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief,” $5.1 million.

8. “Valentine’s Day,” $4.3 million.

9. “Crazy Heart,” $3.4 million.

10. “Dear John,” $2.9 million.

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On the Net:

http://www.hollywood.com/boxoffice

___

Universal Pictures and Focus Features are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of General Electric Co.; Sony Pictures, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount and Paramount Vantage are divisions of Viacom Inc.; Disney’s parent is The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is a division of The Walt Disney Co.; 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight Pictures and Fox Atomic are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a consortium of Providence Equity Partners, Texas Pacific Group, Sony Corp., Comcast Corp., DLJ Merchant Banking Partners and Quadrangle Group; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC Films is owned by Rainbow Media Holdings, a subsidiary of Cablevision Systems Corp.; Rogue Pictures is owned by Relativity Media LLC; Overture Films is a subsidiary of Liberty Media Corp.

‘Alice’ opens with $116.3 million, a 3-D record

Hot News: Congressional estimates show grim deficit picture

March 6, 2010

Despite Storms, Stores Beat Expectations With Relatively Strong Gains

Filed under: blogs, finance, life, opinion, politics — kertmakson @ 3:54 am
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Despite fears that snowstorms in February would dampen sales, the nation’s stores posted their strongest results on Thursday since late 2007, suggesting the beginnings of a broad recovery in retailing.

Nearly every major chain turned in robust figures, beating analysts’ expectations and recording the sixth consecutive monthly sales increase. Even long-struggling stores and sectors came back from the dead.

“If anybody was wondering about the real state of the consumer, this is their answer,” said John D. Morris, a retailing analyst with BMO Capital Markets. “The consumer is coming back.”

The results provoked a measure of skepticism, however. A major reason they looked so good was that they were being compared with the deep declines of February 2009. That tempered industry professionals’ enthusiasm, as did the continuing high rate of unemployment, which strongly correlates with consumer spending.

Moody’s Investors Service said in a research note on Thursday that while retailers reported “modestly positive results, we remain unconvinced that this is evidence of a sustainable trend.”

Analysts at Moody’s said that in the year ahead, many consumers would be forced to increase their savings to pay off debt, and that the weak credit market would continue to squeeze consumers.

With February always a slow sales month, retailing analysts said the major test of the nascent recovery in retailing would come at the end of April. Over the next two months, they will be looking to see whether consumers are willing to open their wallets for spring clothes and Easter-related treats and decorations.

But for now, the February results are the best news in retailing in many months.

Comparing this February to last, the industry reported a 4 percent increase in sales at stores open at least a year, according to Thomson Reuters. Analysts polled by the company had expected stores to do well, in contrast to last year’s 4.7 percent decline. Even so, the results exceeded their expectations by more than 1 percent.

The International Council of Shopping Centers, a trade group, published its own figure, saying the industry had a 3.7 percent increase — the strongest since November 2007, when sales grew 4.9 percent by that group’s measure.

Had the weather been better, the results would probably have been even more robust. Retailers have a tendency to blame snow and rain for lackluster sales. But Michael McNamara, vice president for research and analysis at SpendingPulse, an information service of MasterCard Advisors, said this time the retailers’ lament was justified. He pointed out that sales in the Northeast and Middle Atlantic states — hit by repeated storms — account for about 25 percent of all retailing in the United States.

Macy’s, for instance, reported a 3.7 percent increase at stores open at least a year but said that its February increase would have been about 5 percent if not for the storms.

The retailing industry’s 4 percent increase in February was the best monthly percentage jump that the chains had collectively posted since the end of 2007. But that does not mean the stores have returned to the sales levels they hit at the peak of the boom. Sales fell so far in the recession that stores have climbed only part of the way back fast payday loans.

Still, the improvement last month was not only pervasive, it included categories of merchandise that had been hurt most by the downturn.

For example, sales of luxury goods not including jewelry peaked in 2007, and while they have yet to climb back to that level, they rose by double digits last month. Sales of luxury goods increased 15.2 percent year-over-year, according to SpendingPulse. “You’re just growing off of an absolutely tiny sales base last year,” Mr. McNamara said.

The February results continue a positive trend for the sector. Sales were up 8.1 percent in January and 5.5 percent in December, compared with the same months the previous year.

February sales at Saks stores open at least a year, a measure of retail health known as same-store sales, increased 2 percent. Same-store sales in the specialty retail segment of Neiman Marcus, which includes Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman stores, increased 5.1 percent. At Nordstrom, which offers a wider range of prices than Saks and Neiman Marcus, sales rose 10.3 percent.

As expected, stores that sell brand names at a discount thrived. Analysts said that while luxury retailing was enjoying an uptick, value was still king. Same-store sales rose 11 percent at Ross Stores and 10 percent at TJX Companies, which owns chains like TJ Maxx, Marshalls and Home Goods.

Other clothing purveyors showed improvement. Same-store sales climbed year-over-year at nearly every major department store chain, a long-struggling sector, including Macy’s and Kohl’s (both up 3.7 percent), Dillard’s (up 2 percent), J. C. Penney (up 1.2 percent) and Bon-Ton (up 0.5 percent). Stein-Mart was an exception, posting a 9.3 percent decline.

There were also increases at most specialty clothing stores and retailers that cater to teenagers, including Aeropostale (up 7 percent), American Eagle Outfitters (up 6 percent), Buckle (up 5.1 percent), Wet Seal (up 4.7 percent) and Gap (up 3 percent).

Abercrombie & Fitch, the worst-performing chain for much of the recession, reported a 5 percent same-store sales increase.

Same-store sales rose by double digits at Zumiez (up 11.2 percent) and Limited, which owns chains like Victoria’s Secret and Bath & Body Works (up 10 percent). Hot Topic was an exception, with sales sinking 7 percent.

Yet even as some consumers bought discretionary items like shirts and sneakers, they continued to be frugal-minded, driving sales at stores that sell food and other necessities at low prices.

Same-store sales were strong at discount chains like Costco (up 9 percent), BJ’s Wholesale Club (up 7.5 percent), and Target (up 2.4 percent). Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest retailer, does not report monthly sales. Costco said in a statement that customer traffic increased by about 3 percent and that the average transaction amount rose 1 percent.

The International Council of Shopping Centers expects the industry to post a 2.5 percent same-store sales increase in March. Easter, which is a week earlier this year than last, will most likely help increase sales. So might tax refunds.

Despite Storms, Stores Beat Expectations With Relatively Strong Gains

March 4, 2010

GM says vice chairman to step down in May

Filed under: economy, finance, life, opinion, people — kertmakson @ 7:06 am
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NEW YORK (AFP) – Embattled US automaker General Motors on Wednesday announced its vice chairman Robert Lutz would retire in May.

"Lutz will retire effective May 1, 2010, capping a 47-year career in the global auto industry that included senior leadership positions at four of the world?s leading automakers," GM said in a statement personal business card.

GM says vice chairman to step down in May

February 28, 2010

U.S.-UBS Deal Is Undermined by Swiss Ruling

Filed under: business, life, news, opinion, world — kertmakson @ 3:12 pm
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ZURICH — A Swiss court ordered tax officials to drop two more cases involving account holders of the banking giant UBS, adding urgency to the government’s effort to find a political solution that would preserve a data-sharing agreement with American regulators.

The Federal Administrative Court, in a decision published on Friday, told Switzerland’s tax authority to comply with an earlier ruling that blocked it from sending American regulators information on 26 UBS customers. The court, located in Bern, said Switzerland could lift bank secrecy rules only when there was evidence of tax fraud.

The decision increases pressure to find a way to salvage the agreement to hand over data on as many as 4,450 UBS account holders as part of an American crackdown on tax evasion. Parliament, however, may be asked to approve the settlement to get around the court rulings cheap payday advance.

With parliamentary approval, the court will not be able to “regard the UBS agreement as merely a mutual agreement” as it will have the same legal weight as a treaty, the government said.

The two UBS clients involved in the latest decision are among 26 covered by last month’s ruling. The court said that the account holders’ conduct — failing to complete tax forms or declare income — was tax evasion rather than tax fraud. Under Swiss law, tax fraud is a criminal offense, while evasion is a civil matter.

Officials with UBS, the Swiss Federal Tax Administration and the Internal Revenue Service all declined to comment.

U.S.-UBS Deal Is Undermined by Swiss Ruling

February 23, 2010

E.U. denies Greek-aid details in the works

Filed under: finance, life, opinion, people, world — kertmakson @ 2:54 am
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LONDON (MarketWatch) — The European Commission on Monday denied reports that a European Union plan was in the works to provide 20 billion to 25 billion euros ($27 billion to $33.8 billion) in aid to Greece as uncertainty lingers over how Athens’ European partners plan to ensure the nation will meet its debt obligations.

The Focus Will Be On Greek Bond Yields This Week

An expected bond offering will gauge investor appetite for Greek paper. If yields rise too far the country’s debt problems will get worse and the euro will suffer.

A weekend report in Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine and a story reported by the Financial Times Deutschland on Monday said Germany was working with its E.U. partners on a package.

“There is no such plan because Greece has not requested a single euro in financial aid,” a spokesman for the European Commission, the E.U.’s executive arm, told a news conference in Brussels, according to Reuters.

A spokesman for the German Finance Ministry said no decision had been made regarding aid for Greece, reports said.

The euro saw choppy trade and changed hands in recent action at $1.3610, little changed versus the U.S. dollar. The single currency has been under heavy pressure amid sovereign-default worries, dropping around 10% versus the dollar since November.

It remains unclear what authorities plan to do if investor confidence takes another hit, said Kenneth Broux, market economist at Lloyds TSB.

“I think the ECB and the E.U. are still very unclear about what the assistance would look like. And I think that is weighing on the market,” he said.

European Union leaders earlier this month pledged to support Greece, but offered no details of how an aid package would work. E.U. finance ministers last week said Greece must show progress toward slashing its budget deficit in a report due on March 16, or have further deficit-reduction measures imposed on top of the government’s austerity program.

Toe-dipping

Greece, meanwhile, is expected to put forward a 3 billion to 5 billion euro syndicated 10-year-bond issue as early as this week, the Financial Times reported on Saturday.

Such a move would allow Greece to “dip its toe in the water” and could prove to be a decisive moment for market sentiment, said Peter Dixon, economist at Commerzbank.

“Either it would confirm the view from Athens that the government should comfortably be able to raise the required funds, or it would trigger the need for support from other euro-zone countries,” he said.

Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on Sunday told the BBC in a television interview that the country isn’t looking for an E personal humidifier.U. bailout, saying that the nation instead needs political support as it attempts to slash its deficit.

“Give us the time, give us the support — and I’m not talking about financial but political support — in order to show you that what we’re saying is being implemented and we are credible again,” Papandreou said.

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“We don’t have at this point a need for borrowing. Our borrowing needs are covered until mid-March. What we’re saying is simply that we need the help so we can borrow at the same rate as other countries, not at the high rates that undermine the possibility for” cutting the deficit, he said.

Greek government bonds have come under heavy pressure since late last year after it was revealed the nation’s 2009 deficit was near 13% of gross domestic product, more than four times the euro-zone’s 3% limit.

Greek debt was downgraded by all three major ratings agencies in December and the yield demanded by investors to hold Greek 10-year debt over benchmark 10-year German bunds remains above three percentage points.

Eurostat still waiting for swaps info

Separately, Eurostat didn’t receive information from Greece regarding its use of currency swaps and its impact on the country’s deficit figures by a Feb 19 deadline, a spokeswoman for the European Union statistical agency said Monday in an email.

Eurostat received information from Greek authorities regarding a previous request from Jan. 21, but were told by Greek authorities that the requested swap-related information could not be sent due to a four-day strike by workers at the Ministry of Finance.

Eurostat on Sunday requested the information be sent “as soon as possible,” the spokeswoman said.

Olli Rehn, the E.U.’s top economic affairs official, last week ordered Greece to provide the data after news reports said Goldman Sachs had helped the government use currency swaps and other instruments designed to hide debt levels in the past.

Greek authorities have insisted the measures were allowed at the time under Eurostat rules, which were subsequently tightened.

E.U. denies Greek-aid details in the works

February 16, 2010

Indications: U.S. stock futures stronger after three-day break

Filed under: blogs, economy, opinion, people, politics — kertmakson @ 5:17 pm
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LONDON (MarketWatch) — U.S. stock futures were stronger Tuesday after a three-day break, with investors returning to a rally in commodity prices, notably gold.

S&P 500 futures rose 4.4 points to 1,083.50 and Nasdaq 100 futures added 8.25 points to 1,791.50. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 31 points.

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U.S. stocks rose last week, with the S&P 500 rising 0.9% to snap a four-period losing run.

Investors are returning to a rally in gold prices — up some $26 an ounce in electronic trade — and firmer commodity prices across the board. In euro terms, gold rose to an all-time high of 818 euros an ounce.

The dollar index fell 0.2%. The euro recovered somewhat as European finance ministers demanded fresh budget cuts from Greece if a review of the country’s debt-slashing measures doesn’t meet approval next month.

The New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State Index for February, along with the National Association of Home Builders’ housing market index, also for February, will be released Tuesday, as will securities inflows for December easy pay day loans.

Earnings also are due from companies including Merck & Co. , Kraft Foods and Qwest Communications .

Terra Industries on Monday accepted a $4.1 billion takeover bid from Norway’s Yara. See full story.

Barclays reported a surge in profit as the U.K. bank said 2010 has started out more strongly than 2009. See full story.

Virgin Calls On Europe To Be Tougher On BA, AA

Virgin Atlantic CEO Steve Ridgway shares his views on DOT’s decision to tentatively approve antitrust immunity to British Airways and American Airlines and what Virgin’s game plan is going forward.

AMR may advance as the American Airlines parent received tentative approval for antitrust immunity on transatlantic flights with partners British Airways and Iberia, with the airline only forced to divest four slots at London’s Heathrow Airport.

Rigel Pharmaceuticals may advance after reaching a deal to license its rheumatoid arthritis drug to AstraZeneca for as much as $1.25 billion before royalties.

The pan-European Dow Jones Stoxx 600 rose 0.6%, and strong results from Westpac helped the Australian S&P/ASX 200 rise 0.5%. China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore were closed for Lunar New Year.

Indications: U.S. stock futures stronger after three-day break

February 13, 2010

Oil prices slide on back of strong dollar

Filed under: business, news, opinion, people, world — kertmakson @ 10:48 am
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LONDON (AFP) – World oil prices plunged on Friday as traders took their cue from the strengthening US dollar and eyed a crucial update on energy stockpiles in the United States, analysts said.

New York's main futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in March, fell 1.64 dollars to 73.64 dollars a barrel.

Brent North Sea crude for March delivery plunged 1.48 dollars to 72.64 dollars a barrel.

Oil sank after the European single currency fell close to a nine-month dollar low, as markets took a dim view of eurozone growth data and unclear EU proposals to help debt-ridden Greece.

In late morning London trade, the euro tumbled to 1.3532 dollars, the lowest level since May 19. That compared with 1.3695 in New York late on Thursday.

A stronger dollar usually dampens demand for oil because it makes dollar-priced crude more expensive for buyers using weaker currencies.

"While European key players and the IMF will not allow a complete failure of Greece, the euro is likely to remain under pressure from the issue and similar concerns for other countries in the region," said analysts at the JBC Energy consultancy in Vienna.

EU leaders stopped short Thursday of offering a bailout to rescue eurozone member Greece. Deep problems in Greek public finances have highlighted the parlous debt of other crisis-hit countries such as Italy and Spain.

Investors also sought the safe-haven dollar after China ordered financial institutions to increase the amount of money they keep in reserve, as Beijing looked to rein in rampant lending amid fears of asset bubbles no fax needed payday loans.

The development was an additional concern for the oil market because China is the world's second biggest energy consuming nation after the United States.

Later Friday, traders will digest a key US inventories report for the week ending February 5. The report, usually published on Wednesdays, was delayed due to a snowstorm in the northeastern US.

This week, crude futures have edged higher as investors mulled the prospect of EU financial support for crisis-hit Greece — and as the US east coast experienced its second huge snowstorm in less than a week.

The International Energy Agency forecast on Thursday that world oil demand and prices would rise this year, driven higher by strong growth in emerging economies, revising upward its earlier forecasts.

The Paris-based agency said demand was now expected to be 86.5 million barrels per day in 2010 compared to a forecast last month of 86.3, while average prices will rise to 75 dollars per barrel from 58 in 2009.

Global daily demand is now estimated at 84.9 million barrels per day (mbd) in 2009, and thus the IEA is predicting a 1.6-mbd increase.

Demand growth is expected to come "entirely" from outside the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a grouping of 30 developed economies including Britain, France, Germany, Japan and the United States.

Oil prices slide on back of strong dollar

February 5, 2010

Justice Dept. Criticizes Latest Google Book Deal

Filed under: finance, life, opinion, people, world — kertmakson @ 5:12 am
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In another blow to Google’s plan to create a giant digital library and bookstore, the Justice Department on Thursday said that a class-action settlement between the company and groups representing authors and publishers had significant legal problems, even after recent revisions.

In a 31-page filing that could influence a federal judge’s ruling on the settlement, the department said the new agreement was much improved from an earlier version. But it said the changes were not enough to placate concerns that the deal would grant Google a monopoly over millions of orphan works, meaning books whose right holders are unknown or cannot be found.

The department also indicated that the revised agreement, like its predecessor, appeared to run afoul of authors’ copyrights and was too broad in scope.

The revised agreement “suffers from the same core problem as the original agreement: it is an attempt to use the class-action mechanism to implement forward-looking business arrangements that go far beyond the dispute before the court in this litigation,” the department wrote.

The department asked the court to encourage the parties to continue discussions on further changes to the settlement, which it said had many public benefits.

While the Justice Department did not explicitly urge the court to reject the deal, as it had the previous version, its opposition on copyright, class action and antitrust grounds represented a further setback for Google and the other parties to the deal.

The settlement stems from copyright lawsuits filed by the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers over Google’s plan to digitize books from major libraries personal business card. The settlement, introduced in October 2008, would allow Google to make millions of books available online and commercialize them, while creating new ways for authors and publishers to earn money from digital copies of their works.

But the deal faced a chorus of critics who argued that it would give Google a monopoly on millions of out-of-print books and had failed to take into account the interests of many authors.

In a statement on behalf of Google and the author and publisher groups, a Google spokesman, Gabriel Stricker, said the Justice Department’s filing “recognizes the progress made with the revised settlement, and it once again reinforces the value the agreement can provide in unlocking access to millions of books in the U.S.” He said Google looked forward to the court’s review of the department’s views and those of the deal’s supporters.

Critics of the agreement include Amazon, Microsoft and a range of authors, academics and public interest groups.

Judge Denny Chin of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, who will rule on the settlement, scheduled a hearing on the agreement for Feb. 18.

Justice Dept. Criticizes Latest Google Book Deal

Hot News: MarketWatch First Take: SEC settlement no tonic for shareholders

February 3, 2010

Europe Takes Its Own Path Toward Economic Recovery

Filed under: finance, life, money, opinion, people — kertmakson @ 11:11 pm
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BERLIN — The soaring glass and iron Siemens factory here opened almost exactly a century ago. At first, it churned out turbines to generate electricity, then switched to munitions during World War II before being looted by the Soviets, which required it to be rebuilt at the dawn of the Cold War.

Today, it is manufacturing turbines again — except the models being made now are among the most advanced in the world, each one able to power all the homes in this city of three million people by itself.

“It’s not a museum; it’s a workshop,” said Michael Schwarzlose, a project manager at the Berlin plant.

The same might be said for much of Europe itself, despite American suspicions to the contrary. European companies may not be as nimble as their U.S. counterparts, but in moving to preserve jobs in the midst of the worst global downturn since the end of World War II, they have forged a different path toward recovery.

In doing so, they are making old plants more modern and effective rather than starting over elsewhere or shifting jobs to less expensive locales.

“American companies have been faster to adjust their work forces and quicker in protecting profit margins,” said Gilles Moëc, a senior economist at Deutsche Bank. Indeed, while overall profit margins have fallen for both European and American companies, European firms have been willing to accept lower profit and productivity in the short term.

But that does not mean companies on the Continent have fallen behind in innovation, experts say, especially when it comes to green technology, despite increasing pressure from China.

Instead, Europe relies on its large companies to maintain a cutting edge in key industries, a sharp contrast to the American pattern of turning to newer, smaller companies to drive innovation and create jobs.

“The large incumbents in Europe, which might have been considered technological laggards, have used green technology and sustainability as a core new element of growth,” said Luc Soete, a professor of international economics at Maastrict University, in the Netherlands.

They are also remarkably resilient. The Siemens factory added 500 workers here during the depths of the economic crisis last year, beginning production of new gas-burning turbines that are the most powerful Siemens makes but emit substantially less carbon dioxide than older models.

Barbara Kux, the chief sustainability officer at the company, points to the state-of-the art products made by the century-old factory as an example of green innovation.

“It’s part of sustainability and it shows you think long term and are there to stay,” she said. “It gives you the chance to keep experienced people, to keep their knowledge in-house and develop a high level of loyalty and trust so they feel like part of a family rather than just doing a job.”

The varying responses to the economic downturn come amid a fierce intellectual debate in the United States about whether the country is headed toward a more European economic model, given Washington’s nationalization of big banks and intervention in the auto industry, as well as President Barack Obama’s proposal to overhaul the health care system.

“The end result would be an America much closer to the European model of a social-welfare state, which prioritizes cohesion over innovation,” warned a recent article in National Affairs quarterly by Jim Manzi, a former software executive who is now a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative research group.

While unemployment has soared into the 20 percent range in hard-hit countries on the periphery of Europe like Spain and Latvia, the relative success of other European countries in avoiding deep job cuts adds a new wrinkle to a long-standing trans-Atlantic argument.

When it comes to jobs, the most powerful political issue in the United States today, “companies in Europe are probably much more aware of the social limits in which they operate,” Mr. Soete said.

The overall European unemployment rate of 10 percent matches that of the United States, but northern and central Europe have fared much better, with joblessness at 4 percent in the Netherlands and 5.4 percent in Austria, for example.

Germany’s economy contracted by 5 percent last year, yet its unemployment rate of 7 cashadvance.5 percent is actually down from where it was two years ago. By contrast, the U.S. economy shrank 2.4 percent last year as unemployment doubled to 10 percent over the period.

The ability of the German economy, the biggest in Europe, to stanch job losses despite a markedly deeper recession than in the United States is “something of an economic miracle,” contends Jorg Kramer, chief economist for Commerzbank in Frankfurt.

Much of the attention on saving jobs has focused on the government’s short-work program, in which taxpayers and companies share the cost of furloughing workers. But Mr. Kramer said the government-financed program of shorter work weeks, or Kurzarbeit, was responsible for saving only about 20 percent of jobs.

“Half of this miracle can be explained because firms allowed workers to do less; they tolerated a 2.5 percent drop in productivity,” he added. “You can either cut workers or cut hours.”

In the more flexible U.S. labor market, where industrial unions are weak and contracts far less rigid, companies responded more often by letting workers go, sharply cutting costs and preserving profit margins.

German companies not only reduced hours on the job, they also made a decision to accept lower profit margins in the short term, Mr. Kramer said, a practice he called “labor-hoarding.”

In Germany, profit margins have fallen from 6.26 percent in the first quarter of 2008 to just 0.58 percent in the latest quarter, according to Thomson Reuters Datastream. Similarly, French profit margins have dropped from 6.5 percent to 1.2 percent. By contrast, corporate profitability in the United States have shrunk from 7.8 percent to 3.6 percent.

The choices may have fateful consequences. As the recovery picks up steam, European competitors will be well situated to take advantage of new growth opportunities while American companies are required to rebuild their work forces.

But if the fears of a “double-dip recession” turn out to be true, the leaner profile of big U.S. companies could help them hold up better in a renewed downturn.

Whatever the outcome, European experts say that the varying strategies of companies during the financial crisis, and the different ways they treated their workers, ought to prompt a revision of the traditional American view that Europe’s social democracies are condemned to slow growth and high unemployment.

“It’s not true that there is a correlation between how much you spend on social policy and welfare and economic growth,” said Paolo Guerrieri, a professor of international economics at the University of Rome I.

“The best performing group — Denmark, Sweden, Holland, Germany — are exactly the kind of countries that shouldn’t be doing well according to the U.S. stereotype of high taxes and high welfare benefits.”

Siemens is an example of the kind of European company that is leading the way.

Although its global work force has shrunk over the past five years as it exited businesses like telecommunications and auto parts, that has not stopped it making advances in facilities like its Berlin factory, even if the setting resembles Fritz Lang’s 1927 film “Metropolis.”

The 163-year old company spent €500 million, or $700 million, to develop the new turbines being built at the Berlin factory as part of a push into green technology, which it broadly defines to include low carbon-dioxide-emitting turbines and locomotives, solar paneling and wind technology, as well as air and purification equipment.

With revenue increasing 11 percent from 2008 to 2009, Siemens’ broad green portfolio is now growing faster than the company’s other businesses, Ms. Kux added.

And it managed to save its customers an estimated 210 million tons in carbon dioxide emissions last year, the equivalent of the amount generated by New York, Tokyo, London and Berlin put together.

“The global economic crisis has actually allowed us to increase our green advantage,” she said. “It’s an opportunity to jump ahead, cut costs, and improve our own resources.”

Europe Takes Its Own Path Toward Economic Recovery

February 2, 2010

Singapore Air Profit Rises as Demand Bounces Back

Filed under: blogs, business, life, opinion, politics — kertmakson @ 11:36 am
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SINGAPORE — Singapore Airlines, one of the world’s biggest carriers by market value, on Tuesday reported its best quarterly profit in almost two years as cargo volumes rebounded and travel improved.

The airline industry is recovering from its worst downturn last year, but growth in the more profitable business class segment, where SIA thrives, is slow and could take time to capture pre-crisis level.

“Passenger loadings in January and bookings in hand indicate that the recovery in the third quarter is likely to continue in the final quarter of the current financial year,” SIA said in a statement.

“The business outlook for the group in 2010 is encouraging, but it must be acknowledged that uncertainties linger over the global economy.”

The Singapore carrier saw a strong December when cargo traffic turned positive for the first time in 19 months and year-end travel boosted demand, but it has trailed the recovery seen by Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific, which is helped by China’s strong demand.

CLSA expects February’s Singapore Airshow could boost premium traffic and the mass market could benefit from the opening of the city-state’s two casino resorts later this year fast cash advance.

But the aviation industry body I.A.T.A. said last week the sector could face a tough 2010, making up for the lost demand in 2009 and handling new security demands.

SIA, 55 percent-owned by state investor Temasek Holdings, reported a net profit of 403.7 million Singapore dollars ($286.3 million)) in its third quarter, its highest quarterly profit since March 2008.

The results compared to a net profit of 337 million Singapore dollars a year ago, but below analysts’ average forecast of 448 million Singapore dollars.

Earnings from U.S. rivals so far this quarter have been mixed, raising concerns about the industry’s recovery.

At the close of trade, SIA shares were down 8.6 percent since the start of the year compared to an 9.4 percent drop in shares of Cathay Pacific and a 6 percent drop in the broader Singapore market.

Reuters

Singapore Air Profit Rises as Demand Bounces Back

Hot News: UBS falls after Swiss minister comments on U.S. row

January 29, 2010

Asian markets resume slide; Europe stocks gain

Filed under: Free, finance, news, opinion, people — kertmakson @ 10:06 am
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HONG KONG – Asian stock markets dropped sharply Friday as disappointing company forecasts and growing concerns about debt-laden European nations shook investor hopes for a quicker global recovery. European markets opened higher.

Steep falls across Asia followed strong gains the day before, marking a return to heavy selling that’s pulled markets worldwide lower in the past week. The dollar continued to strengthen as investors looked for safer bets, pulling down prices for commodities.

Lackluster outlooks from major U.S. technology companies Qualcomm Inc. and Motorola Inc. exacerbated worries that global demand and corporate earnings, after improving in 2009, could prove weaker than expected this year.

Investors are also increasingly unnerved by rising debt levels in European countries like Greece and Portugal — focusing the market’s worries on the huge amounts of government borrowing and its ultimate effects on the financial system. Moody’s ratings agency added to fears that have dragged the euro to multi-month lows with a warning that Portugal’s credit rating could suffer unless its deficit was reduced.

Mark Tan, fund manager at UOB Asset Management in Singapore, said uncertainty surrounding U.S. bank regulation plans, Chinese lending curbs and other problems were being used as an excuse to book profits after last year’s rally. He expected the markets to resume an upward trend soon.

“We believe this correction will be short and sharp,” said Tan, who helps manage more than $10 billion in assets. “There’s a lot of confusion in the market at the moment. But the liquidity and economic fundamentals are still good, so this is a correction in a relatively positive market.”

Early going in the Europe, Britain’s FTSE 100 added 0.7 percent, Germany’s DAX was up 0.8 percent and France’s CAC-40 rose 0.7 percent. Wall Street futures pointed to a slightly higher open in the U.S. Friday. S&P futures gained 0.9 point, or 0.1 percent, to 1,08.40.

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 stock average tumbled 216.25, or 2.1 percent, to 10,198.04. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index slid 234.38, or 1.2 percent, to 20,121.99, and South Korea’s Kospi fell 40 points, or 2.4 percent, to 1,602.43.

India’s market shed 0.4 percent and Shanghai was down 0.2 percent. Australia’s benchmark tumbled 2.2 percent, its resource-heavy market dragged lower by easing commodity prices fast payday loans.

Adding to investors’ unease was an initial report, to be released Friday, on U.S. gross domestic product in the fourth quarter. American GDP, a measure of the country’s economic output, is expected to rise 4.5 percent.

Global markets have gotten off to a rough start in 2010, with most down sharply for the year. Developing countries have been hit especially hard in the latest downdraft.

China and Indian benchmarks are now off about 9 percent and 7 percent for the year, respectively, as investors scale back their investments in riskier assets like equities in so-called emerging markets.

Overall, investors pulled more money out of developing market investment funds than they put into them during the week ending Jan. 27, according to a survey by EPFR Global, a Boston-based firm that tracks global fund flow data. It was the first time emerging market funds had suffered outflows of money in about 3 months.

Asian tech stocks felt part of the brunt of Friday’s selling as sentiment toward the industry continued to sour. South Korean tech giant Samsung Electronics Co. lost 3 percent even as it posted a fourth quarter profit. Japanese memory chip maker Elpida tanked 9 percent.

Also slammed were resource companies, with mining giant Rio Tinto down nearly 5 percent as a stronger greenback brought down prices for commodities, which are priced in dollars.

Meanwhile, Toyota Motor Corp. fell another 2 percent. The world’s largest automaker is struggling to salvage its safety reputation in the wake of massive recalls in the U.S., Europe and China.

Another bout of selling in the U.S. further weakened sentiment.

The Dow fell 115.70, or 1.1 percent, to 10,120.46. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 12.97, or 1.2 percent, to 1,084.53, while the Nasdaq fell 42.41, or 1.9 percent, to 2,179.00.

In currencies, the euro continued to slide, falling to $1.3967 from $1.3976. The dollar was higher at 90.25 yen from 89.87 yen.

Oil prices lingered near a six-week low below $74, with benchmark crude for March delivery fluctuating before rising 26 cents to $73.90 a barrel. The contract lost 3 cents to settle at $73.64 on Thursday, the lowest since Dec. 14 when crude dropped to $73.46.

Asian markets resume slide; Europe stocks gain

January 22, 2010

Pressure Mounts for Deal for Airbus Military Plane

Filed under: Free, business, life, money, opinion — kertmakson @ 5:12 pm
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BERLIN — Military officials from the European countries with orders to buy the Airbus A400M military transport plane tried and failed again Friday to resolve differences over how to share billions of euros in cost overruns, but said they would resume negotiations this coming week in Berlin in the hope of meeting a Jan. 31 deadline.

Many of the participating countries need the aircraft urgently as they play a greater and more demanding role in peacekeeping missions. The repeated delays — the A400M is now more than four years behind schedule — represent a big setback for European military cooperation.

Military procurement ministers from the seven customer nations met until late into the night Thursday with top managers from Airbus and its parent company, European Aeronautic Defense & Space.

“We will meet again early next week here in Berlin,” a German defense ministry spokesman, who asked not to be identified, said Friday. “All of the participants do want a solution to this problem.” Two people with direct knowledge of the negotiations said they would likely take place Tuesday.

Alexander Reinhardt, a spokesman for EADS, said nailing down the critical details of how to finance the program remained a thorny issue.

“The negotiations have been difficult, as expected,” Mr. Reinhardt said.

Seven countries — Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Spain and Turkey — together ordered 180 A400Ms in 2003 for €20 billion, or $28.2 billion. Last year, EADS and Airbus asked them to help cover an additional €5.2 billion in costs and to accept significant delivery delays. The company has asked the countries to agree to an additional 25 percent payment, or around €5 billion, according to people with direct knowledge of the negotiations.

The Airbus chief executive, Thomas O. Enders, warned this month that without an agreement soon, the project might have to be abandoned, placing as many as 40,000 European jobs at risk.

But while France said it would consider paying more, Germany has been more than reluctant. It has ordered 60 of the 180 aircraft, while France has ordered 50.

France was supposed to receive the first deliveries of the A400M transport aircraft late last year and Germany in 2010, but the plane made its first test flight only last month. Both countries will now have to wait several years more, according to the German Defense Ministry faxless cash advance.

Germany, however, has little room to maneuver. With 4,300 German troops based in northern Afghanistan, Berlin needs access to such aircraft for transporting not only troops but also such heavy equipment as tanks, armored personnel carriers and helicopters.

Without the A400M, it must either modernize at huge expense its Transall aircraft, which are more than 30 years old, or lease Russian Antonov aircraft.

“We want the A400M but not at any price,” the German defense minister, Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, reiterated during an interview with the Bayernkurier newspaper to be published Saturday. “Our willingness to compromise has its limits.”

Britain, too, is furious about the delays, especially given its big role in Afghanistan.

The German Defense Ministry official said that cost was not the only issue still on the table, but range and payload as well. The A400M is currently several tons over its specified weight.

An audit of the A400M program by PricewaterhouseCoopers, which was commissioned last year by the governments, has blamed a significant portion of the cost over-runs on EADS and Airbus for failing to put proper budget controls in place. It also said the manufacturer had consistently underestimated development costs.

The auditor’s report, which was leaked to several European media this past week, estimated that the A400M was roughly €7.6 billion over budget.

EADS and Airbus have rejected the findings of the audit, but have so far failed to provide their own cost estimate for the program, now four years behind schedule.

EADS has already written off €2.4 billion in costs for a project that continues to expend cash at a rate of around €100 million each month.

The seven countries failed to meet an year-end 2009 deadline to agree on a new delivery schedule and financing arrangement for the contract, and last month set a new deadline of Jan. 31.

With the financial crisis and recession straining budgets across Europe, the governments have been reluctant to come up with more money.

Nicola Clark reported from Paris.

Pressure Mounts for Deal for Airbus Military Plane

Hot News: Geithner voiced concern on US bank limits-sources

January 20, 2010

Williams creates giant natural gas partnership

Filed under: blogs, life, money, news, opinion — kertmakson @ 1:30 am
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TULSA, Okla. – Williams Cos. said Tuesday it will create one of the largest natural gas partnerships in the nation by combining its pipeline and processing units.

The deal provides Williams with more money to explore for natural gas. Many energy companies are manuevering to get a bigger portion of the huge natural gas reserves in the U.S. that have been discovered due to advances in drilling technology.

The deal is worth about $10 billion plus $2 billion in debt. Williams, based in Tulsa, Okla., will get about $3.5 billion in cash from Williams Partners, its natural gas processing company. It will also receive 203 million units of the partnership and its stake from 24 percent to 80 percent.

The restucturing will also allow the company to borrow money more easily.

Williams is one of the biggest natural gas operations in the U faxless pay day loans.S., producing enough gas for more than 4 million homes per day and transporting about 12 percent of the nation’s daily supply of natural gas. One its most important assets is the Texas Transcontinental Gas pipeline, which carries gas from the Gulf Coast to New Jersey and New York City as well as the Northwest.

Shares of Williams rose $1.73, or 8.1 percent, to close at $23.10. Earlier, shares reached a 52-week high of $23.76. Williams Partners shares shot up $5.60, or 18.2 percent, to $36.39, and hit a 52-week high of $36.40. Williams Pipeline Partners shares gained $3.84, or 16.5 percent, at $27.19. The shares hit $27.25 during the session, their highest price over the past year.

Williams creates giant natural gas partnership

January 18, 2010

Europe Markets Rise Amid Rumors on Deals

Filed under: Free, life, money, opinion, people — kertmakson @ 6:17 pm
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European stock markets rose Monday as speculation of a pickup in corporate deal making kept investors interested on a day Wall Street was closed for the Martin Luther King public holiday and Greece’s budgetary woes continued to weigh on the euro.

The FTSE 100 in London closed up 39.02 points, or 0.7 percent, at 5,494.39, while DAX in Frankfurt rose 42.58 points, or 0.7 percent, at 5,918.55. The CAC-40 in Paris ended 23.08 points, or 0.6 percent, higher at 3,977.46.

Earlier in Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 stock average ended 127.02 points, or 1.2 percent, lower at 10,855.08 while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 194.15 points, or 0.9 percent, to 21,460.01. Markets in Singapore and Taiwan also lost ground.

A lot of the interest in Europe centered on International Power of Britain and Gaz de France and whether weekend speculation that they were looking at some sort of tie-up would materialize.

However, International Power’s statement that merger talks had ended saw a massive reverse in the company’s fortunes and a share price that had been 8 percent higher in the day ended over 3 percent lower — making it the biggest faller on the FTSE 100.

The British candy maker Cadbury also remained in the spotlight amid speculation that its suitor Kraft Foods was preparing to sweeten its offer before a Tuesday deadline. Cadbury ended around 1.5 percent higher but investors remain skeptical that the current stand-off between the two companies can be ended.

“Some traders seem to feel that this has dragged on long enough, making any sort of deal unlikely,” said David Jones, chief market strategist at IG Index.

Even though talks between International Power and Gaz de France failed to yield anything, analysts said there are expectations that the amount of mergers and acquisitions taking place will increase over the coming months as the global economy recovers from recession. One corollary of increased confidence is an increase in mergers and acquisitions.

When Wall Street returns on Tuesday, the focus will turn towards the next batch of fourth quarter corporate earnings — so far, earnings have been fairly mixed, with upside surprises from the likes of the chipmaker Intel offset by disappointments elsewhere, most notably the aluminum Alcoa Inc free instant credit report.

Banks will be in the spotlight especially after U.S. stocks fell 1 percent on Friday — the Dow Jones industrial average suffered its worst day of the year so far — as JP Morgan Chase & Company offered a cautious earnings guidance even though it reported a fairly strong set of results.

“We get Citigroup tomorrow which has less of the good bits of banking and more of the bad bits,” said Kit Juckes, chief economist at the ECU Group.

A meeting of the 16 finance ministers of the countries that use the euro in Brussels later will be closely monitored in the currency markets as the main topic of debate will be the shaky state of Greece’s public finances.

Concern about Greece’s debts has been one of the reasons why the euro has floundered over the last month or so from 16-month highs above $1.50. Earlier it hit a ten-day low of $1.4336 before recovering slightly to $1.4380.

Greece’s problems have fueled concerns that the country may eventually have to be bailed out by its partners in the eurozone. Some observers are even speculating about a possible Greek exit from the single currency zone.

“With rising concerns about the workability of the Greek government’s stability and growth plan, the firm rejection from within the eurozone of the idea of a bailout, the rapidly rising cost of default insurance on Greek sovereign debt and concerns over deficits elsewhere in the region, the problems for the single currency are mounting rapidly,” said Neil Mellor, a currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon.

Europe Markets Rise Amid Rumors on Deals

January 17, 2010

Earnings growth takes center stage

Filed under: blogs, news, opinion, people, world — kertmakson @ 10:24 am
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NEW YORK (Reuters) – Profits from top U.S. technology companies like IBM (IBM.N) and financial companies like Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) next week could help stocks gain as long as investors see room for more profit growth.

Stronger-than-expected results late Thursday from tech bellwether Intel Corp (INTC.O) failed to excite investors on Friday, while steep loan losses reported by JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM.N) dragged down the market.

The benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 index (.SPX) rose 23.5 percent last year, with information technology the top-performing sector. It jumped 60 percent, raising questions about whether the sector may have become too expensive.

"It's all about how fast they can grow earnings to catch up to those valuations," said Jeff Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial in Boston.

"This is a business spending-led recovery rather than consumer recovery … so I think earnings growth will remain above average and justify those valuations."

Fourth-quarter results are expected to show a sharp improvement compared with 2008's last quarter, when the economic downturn took a heavy toll on corporate profits.

S&P 500 earnings for the quarter are forecast up 186 percent versus a year ago, according to Thomson Reuters estimates. It would be the first quarter that S&P 500 company earnings grew year over year since the second quarter of 2007.

Next week the earnings period accelerates, with some 57 S&P 500 companies reporting.

International Business Machines Corp is scheduled to post results on Tuesday while Google Inc (GOOG.O) is expected on Thursday. Among financials, Goldman Sachs is expected on Thursday, while Bank of America (BAC.N) and Morgan Stanley (MS.N) should report on Wednesday.

STOCKS END DOWN FOR WEEK

For the second week of the new year, the three major indexes lost ground. The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was down 0.1 percent, while the S&P was down 0.8 percent and Nasdaq (.IXIC) was down 1.3 percent.

The S&P 500 is still up 68 percent since its early March lows, largely because of stronger-than-expected earnings and economic data.

On the economic front, data that could influence stocks next week includes reports on housing starts, producer prices and leading indicators easy payday loans.

Data on December housing starts, expected on Wednesday, is forecast to show 580,000 new units from 574,000 in November.

More than 70 percent of companies beat estimates in recent reporting periods, and investors are eager to see if the fourth-quarter will produce similar results. The last quarter of 2008 was the worst earnings period in the history of the index.

"I think we're going to get decent numbers relative to estimates," said Fred Dickson, market strategist at D.A. Davidson & Co. in Lake Oswego, Oregon.

"Valuations have gone up, but so have earnings."

Intel, which fell 3.2 percent to $20.80 on Friday, "had such a good run on the margin front that I think a lot of people are a little bit leery that there's going to be any further improvement in margins," said Owen Fitzpatrick, head of U.S. Equity Group, Deutsche Bank Private Wealth Management, said.

FINANCIALS KEY TO MARKET

IBM shares have risen almost 60 percent in the past year as the company cut costs and changed its business mix. Analysts expect the company to report fourth-quarter revenue of about $27 billion, about even with a year earlier, and profit per share of $3.47 versus $3.27 a year earlier.

Financials, which were up 14.8 percent as an S&P sector last year, could benefit from gains in investment banking and other factors, Kleintop said.

"Financials still remain the sore spot in the market. If financials are going down, the whole market is going down," he said.

Financials, materials and consumer discretionary companies are expected to have the highest earnings growth for the fourth quarter, Thomson Reuters estimates showed. Energy and industrials are expected to have the lowest.

Also set to report next week: General Electric (GE.N), McDonald's Corp (MCD.N) and American Express Co (AXP.N).

(Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Earnings growth takes center stage

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