Monday, August 18, 2008

Australia Origin, ASX eye US$ bond issues-sources

Australia Origin, ASX eye US$ bond issues-sources
08.18.08, 5:06 AM ET
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SYDNEY, Aug 18 (Reuters) - Australia's Origin Energy Ltd and bourse operator ASX Ltd are considering selling bonds in the U.S. private placement market, two market sources said on Monday.

Origin, Australia's second-largest energy retailer, has hired Bank of America (nyse: BAC - news - people ) and Westpac Institutional Bank to arrange a sale, a first source said.

Roadshows are scheduled for the second week of September.

Origin, which privately sold U.S. bonds in 2003 and 2005 with the same two banks, is fighting a hostile takeover bid from British energy firm BG Group Plc (nyse: BRG - news - people ) .

ASX, which runs the Asia-Pacific's second-largest listed stock exchange, is also eyeing a visit to the U.S. private placement market, a second market source said.

The company is looking to raise around $100-$150 million, with National Australia Bank (nyse: NAB - news - people ) possibly involved in the deal.

The U.S. private placement market is a popular source of funds for Australian companies looking for long-dated debt.

Seven companies have raised more than $1.6 billion there in 2008.

Typical buyers of private note placements are U.S. insurance companies keen on long-dated paper to match their assets.

(Reporting by Cecile Lefort)

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COPYRIGHT

Copyright Thomson Financial News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.

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Neither the Subscriber nor Thomson Financial News warrants the completeness or accuracy of the Service or the suitability of the Service as a trading aid and neither accepts any liability for losses howsoever incurred. The content on this site, including news, quotes, data and other information, is provided by Thomson Financial News and its third party content providers for your personal information only, and neither Thomson Financial News nor its third party content providers shall be liable for any errors, inaccuracies or delays in content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

Taiwan court orders Princo to pay Philips for CD-R licensing

Taiwan court orders Princo to pay Philips for CD-R licensing
Jimmy Hsu, Taipei; Adam Hwang, DIGITIMES [Monday 18 August 2008]

A local court in Taiwan, on August 15, announced its judgment that Princo, a Taiwan-based maker of blank optical discs, must pay Royal Philips Electronics a total of 2.354 billion yen (US$21.1 million) for CD-R licensing. The fees are due for the period from the fourth quarter of 1997 to the fourth quarter of 1999 plus interest for delayed payment, according to Princo's filing with the Taiwan Stock Exchange (TSE) on August 18. Princo has decided to appeal, the company stressed.

In June 1997, Princo signed a licensing agreement to pay a royalty fee of 10 yen per blank CD-R disc to Philips, Sony and Taiyo Yuden, Princo indicated. Princo later felt the rate was unreasonable and thus asked Philips to reduce the charge, but Philips declined. Princo refused to pay the royalty charges starting from the fourth quarter of 1997 and Philips, in response, terminated the licensing agreement in the first quarter of 2000 and filed with the Taiwan courts to recover payment.

Princo filed with Taiwan's Fair Trade Commission (FTC) in 1999 accusing Philips of operating a monopoly, and the FTC judged in 2001 that Philips had violated regulations regarding price fixing and fined Philips NT$14 million (US$447,000).

Princo took FTC's judgment as an excuse to not pay the due royalty fees, but the local court's recent judgment accepted Philips' argument that the FTC's decision covered the regulation of relations between the government supervisory authority and private interest groups only, and had nothing to do with the private licensing contract between Philips and Princo.

Pakistan shares up on resignation

Pakistan shares up on resignation

Pakistan traders
Markets had been knocked by the political uncertainty

Pakistan's leading share index has gained more than 4% after President Pervez Musharraf said he would resign.

The move was welcomed by investors, who said it would help to dispel the political uncertainty that has dented markets recently.

The Karachi Stock Exchange benchmark 100-share index climbed by 4.47%.

Political turmoil had pushed the rupee to a record low against the dollar before the weekend, as fears grew that Mr Musharraf would be impeached.

Mr Musharraf faces charges of violating the constitution and gross misconduct.

He said he was confident that the charges against him would not stand.

The economic situation in Pakistan has deteriorated in recent weeks, with inflation reaching its highest in 30 years, the trade deficit widening and reserves falling.

China B-shares close sharply lower; Huaxin Cement falls 10 pct - UPDATE

China B-shares close sharply lower; Huaxin Cement falls 10 pct - UPDATE
08.18.08, 4:54 AM ET
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BEIJING (XFN-ASIA) - China B-shares closed sharply lower, tracking declines in the A-shares as IPO stock China South Locomotive sucked capital out of a secondary market already suffering from inadequate liquidity, dealers said.

China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock (SHA 601766), the country's largest rail equipment maker, closed up 58.26 pct at 3.45 yuan in its Shanghai debut. The company raised 6.37 bln yuan with a 3 bln A-share offering.

The market also ignored attempts by the securities regulator to provide reassurance.

In a statement issued on the weekend, the China Securities Regulatory Commission expressed concern about volatility in the capital markets, saying it will seek to improve mechanisms that have contributed to recent fluctuations.

Ten stocks, including Huaxin Cement, tumbled by the 10 pct daily limit. Huaxin has fallen about 46 pct this month so far.

The Shanghai B-share Index fell 12.32 points or 7.53 pct to 151.36, while the Shenzhen B-share Index lost 16.62 points or 4.28 pct to 371.43.

'China South Locomotive's debut placed much pressure on liquidity, since its IPO price was very low and attracted some speculation,' said a Shanghai-based analyst who asked not be identified.

'Despite the reassurance from regulators, investor confidence has not been restored,' the analyst added.

In Shanghai, Huaxin Cement (SHB 900933; SHA 600801), Hainan Airlines (SHB 900945; SHA 600221) and Dazhong Transportation (SHB 900903; SHA 600611) all fell 10 pct to 1.233, 0.430 and 0.491 usd, respectively.

Jiangsu Xincheng Real Estate (SHB 900950) was down 10 pct at 0.375 usd. The company reported first-half net profit of 123.29 mln yuan, up 92 pct.

Property firm Shanghai Jiulongshan (SHB 900955; SHA 600555) was the only one stock ending up today. It rose 1.45 pct to 0.558 usd.

In Shenzhen, China Merchants Property Development (SZB 200024; SZA 000024) fell 4.88 pct to 8.38 hkd, while China Vanke (SZB 200002; SZA 000002), the country's top property developer by market value, slipped 9.21 pct to 7.00 hkd.

Hainan Pearl River Holdings (SZB 200505; SZA 000505) slid 9.33 pct to 2.04 hkd. The property firm reported a net loss of 46.51 mln yuan in the first half.

Shandong Airlines (SZB 200152) was down 6.15 pct at 2.90 hkd.

The FTSE/Xinhua China B 35 Index was down 332.72 points or 5.68 pct at 5,521.60.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index, which covers both A- and B-shares listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, closed down 130.74 points or 5.34 pct at 2,319.87.

(1 usd = 6.8 yuan; 7.8 hkd)

allen.shu@xfn.com

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xfnals/xfntm

COPYRIGHT

Copyright Thomson Financial News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.

The copying, republication or redistribution of Thomson Financial News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Financial News.

Neither the Subscriber nor Thomson Financial News warrants the completeness or accuracy of the Service or the suitability of the Service as a trading aid and neither accepts any liability for losses howsoever incurred. The content on this site, including news, quotes, data and other information, is provided by Thomson Financial News and its third party content providers for your personal information only, and neither Thomson Financial News nor its third party content providers shall be liable for any errors, inaccuracies or delays in content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

Futures point to lower Wall Street start as oil rises

Futures point to lower Wall Street start as oil rises
By LONDON (Reuters) - Stock futures pointed to a lower opening on Wall Street on Monday as oil prices rise, denting recent optimism over a recovery in consumer spending. 0824 GMT, S&P 500 futures were down 0.38 percent, Dow Jones futures down 0.37

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange August 8, 2008. REUTERS/Joshua Lott


* Oil rose more than $1 to top $115 a barrel on Monday, as investors eyed a potential supply threat from tropical storm Fay to oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico

* Economic indicators on tap for Monday include the National Association of Home Builders' housing market index for August, due at 1700 GMT, while on the earnings front, retailer Lowe's Companies Inc is due to report results. Investors will be looking for any indications on whether the housing market is bottoming

* Miners will be in the spotlight after BHP Billiton , the world's biggest mining group, posted a 30 percent rise in half-year profit on Monday in line with market forecasts, boosted by Chinese demand

* General Motors Corp has had preliminary talks with Hunan Changfeng Motor Co <600991.ss> on a possible sale of its Hummer brand but the Chinese sport utility vehicle (SUV) maker has backed off, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said

* Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) <8306.t> clinched a deal to take full control of California bank UnionBanCal Corp , after sweetening its bid 17 percent to $3.5 billion on Monday

* The U.S. Treasury is growing increasingly likely to recapitalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the months ahead on the taxpayer's dime, Barron's reported in its August 18 edition

Musharraf Quits as President to Avoid Impeachment (Update2)

Musharraf Quits as President to Avoid Impeachment (Update2)

By Naween A. Mangi and Khalid Qayum

Aug. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, the dictator who reinvented himself as a U.S. ally against terrorism, resigned to avoid facing impeachment charges for illegally seizing power and mishandling the economy.

``This is not time for individual bravado. I lose or win in impeachment proceedings, the Pakistani nation will be the loser,'' Musharraf, 65, said in a one-hour address to the nation. ``After taking advice from my supporters and friends, I have decided to resign in the best interests of the nation.''

Musharraf's departure after a six-month standoff frees up the coalition government to tackle an economy growing at the slowest pace since 2003, leaving half the population short of food. It will also test the durability of a fragile coalition that has been criticized by the U.S. for not doing enough to fight militants on the border with Afghanistan.

``This is the opportune moment for the government now,'' said Alok Bansal, an analyst at the Institute of Defence Studies and Analyses in New Delhi. ``Unless they show tenacity now, the coalition may splinter.''

The president said he will tender his resignation to the speaker of the house today. He'll be replaced by Mohammedmian Soomro, chairman of the Senate and a Musharraf loyalist, pending a parliamentary vote to choose a new president within 30 days. Pakistan's benchmark stock index rose the most in seven weeks and the rupee gained after the announcement.

Army Commander

Musharraf was the army commander in 1999 when he overthrew Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who has led calls to remove the president since returning from exile late last year. Pakistanis were frustrated with a decade of corrupt and ineffective governments under Sharif and Benazir Bhutto, and opinion polls showed 70 percent of people supported the coup.

A former special services commando, Musharraf put Sharif on trial for alleged corruption and in a deal brokered by the Saudi royal family, the two-time former prime minister was sent into exile in Saudi Arabia. Musharraf's government also pursued corruption charges against Bhutto, leading her to remain in Dubai and London until she returned last year, only to be assassinated 10 weeks later. Musharraf didn't say today whether he plans to remain in Pakistan or go into exile.

Under Pressure

The former general has been under pressure to quit since he fired 60 judges, including Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammed Chaudhry last year, leading to nationwide street protests. The government led by the Pakistan Peoples Party, which came to power in March after defeating pro-Musharraf parties in the Feb. 18 elections, vowed to reinstate the senior judiciary but has been unable to agree on how to do so.

``When he saw impeachment coming, he decided to resign because he couldn't sack the government,'' Sharif's spokesman Siddiq-ul-Farooq said in a telephone interview from Islamabad. ``We hope the judiciary will be reinstated very soon now.''

Pakistan's coalition partners including Sharif and Asif Ali Zardari, co-chairman of the Peoples Party, will meet today to discuss the reinstatement of judges, spokesman Farhatullah Babar said by telephone.

``After a long struggle, democratic forces have won and uncertainty has ended,'' Information Minister Sherry Rehman, a member of the Peoples Party, said. ``Its difficult to give a deadline for the reinstatement of judges.''

Handed Control

Musharraf assumed the presidency in 2001 and was re-elected by parliament in October. Opposition parties claimed the law barred Musharraf from standing while he still headed the military. Musharraf handed over control of the army to Ashfaq Parvez Kayani in November.

After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Musharraf abandoned the Pakistani army's long sponsorship of the Taliban regime in neighboring Afghanistan and allied with the U.S. His government was the largest recipient of U.S. aid in Asia after Afghanistan, amounting to more than $10 billion in six years.

Musharraf was credited for steering Pakistan's economy out of trouble in 1999 when the government had less than $1 billion in foreign exchange reserves. He brought in former Citigroup Inc. executive Shaukat Aziz to run the finance ministry and the nation's economy expanded at an average annual 7.5 percent in the four years ending June 30, 2007.

The benchmark Karachi Stock Exchange gained 10-fold since 2001 and investment from overseas corporations including China Mobile, Standard Chartered Plc and Emirates Telecommunications Co, reached a record $8.4 billion last year.

The main stock index, which has fallen 24 percent this year, rose 4.5 percent to 10,719.62. The rupee rose 1.1 percent to 75.60 against the U.S. dollar, paring its 22 percent decline this year.

Faced Criticism

Since January, Musharraf has faced criticism for a slowdown in economic growth, a widening budget deficit and an inability to reign in inflation running at a 30-year high.

In the speech, Musharraf denied charges his policies had stunted economic growth, calling allegations against him ``baseless.''

The coalition government ``may succeed in removing me but it can damage the country,'' Musharraf said in the speech. ``I deny the charges that economic crisis is caused by policies of my government in the past nine years.''

At an electronics store less than a mile from Musharraf's office, a dozen men applauded when he announced his resignation.

``We are very conscious that problems will remain with us,'' said Khurram Mughal, a lawyer from Rawalpindi, who stopped in the store to watch the speech.

Peace Process

As president, Musharraf started the India-Pakistan peace process by initiating a cease-fire across the border in October 2003 and pushing several so-called confidence-building measures including bus services and cultural exchanges.

``I don't think any other leader would have had that kind of commitment,'' said Suba Chandran, deputy director of Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies in New Delhi. ``He is the person behind the peace process and he was the first Pakistani leader to reorient Pakistan's policy toward Kashmir and ensure intra-Kashmiri interaction. His leaving would create a void.''

Musharraf considers himself a religious moderate who enjoys playing bridge and listening to classical music. He preached ``enlightened moderation'' as a way forward for Pakistan, the world's second most populous Muslim nation after Indonesia.

During his tenure, Musharraf survived at least four assassination attempts by Islamic extremists since he ended support for the Taliban regime.

Emigrated to Pakistan

The former army chief was born on Aug. 11, 1943, in Delhi, emigrating to Pakistan after the partition of the subcontinent in 1947 at the age of five. He lived in Turkey from 1949 to 1956 where his father was a diplomat. He attended St. Patrick's school in Karachi and then joined the army, graduating from the Pakistan Military Academy.

Musharraf was commissioned in the artillery regiment of the army in 1964 and later joined the Special Services Group as a commando, according to his profile released by the army. After serving in two wars with India -- in 1965 and 1971 -- he became a general in 1991 and chief of the army in October 1998.

He has been frequently criticized by the U.S. for ``not doing enough'' to fight terrorists hiding along the Pakistan- Afghanistan border. As many as 2,000 people were killed in suicide attacks and other bombings in Pakistan last year.

``Pakistan's economy is in a poor condition, politics is in complete chaos and there's a rise in militancy and violence,'' said Jawaharlal Nehru University's former professor Bahadur. ``He was personally tolerant and liberal but his positive contributions are not enough to overshadow his negative ones.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Naween A. Mangi in Karachi, Pakistan at nmangi1@bloomberg.net; Khalid Qayum in Islamabad at kqayum@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: August 18, 2008 05:18 EDT

Komatsu Shares Rise After Nikko Citi Lifts Rating (Update1)

Komatsu Shares Rise After Nikko Citi Lifts Rating (Update1)

By Masumi Suga

Aug. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Komatsu Ltd., the world's second- largest maker of earthmovers, rose the most in a month in Tokyo trading after Nikko Citigroup Ltd. raised its rating, saying the current price is ``a good investment opportunity.''

The shares rose 3.8 percent to close at 2,445 yen on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the biggest gain since July 22. Komatsu is down 20 percent this year, compared with a 14 percent decline in the Nikkei 225 Stock Average.

Nikko Citigroup analyst Yoshinao Ibara upgraded his rating to ``buy'' from ``hold,'' saying the company is countering risks of a slowdown in developed countries by tapping demand from ``resource-rich countries'' including Australia and in Central and South America, Asia, and the Middle East.

``Komatsu has established a business platform in a wide spectrum of emerging economies,'' Ibara said in a report dated Aug. 15. ``Business expansion in resource-rich countries in particular will continue to drive earnings.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Masumi Suga in Tokyo at msuga@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: August 18, 2008 02:35 EDT

Athens Stock Exchange opening: Rise

Athens Stock Exchange opening: Rise
Πηγή: ΑΠΕ 18/08/08-11:02

Equity prices were rising at the opening of trade on Monday on the Athens Stock Exchange (ASE), with the basic share price index up 0.65 percent, standing at 3,319.59 points at 10:45 a.m., and turnover at 15.9 million euros. Individual sector indices were moving mostly upward, with the biggest gains in Food & Beverage, up 3.34 percent; Public Utilities, up 1.20 percent; and Travel & Recreation, up 1.02 percent. The biggest losses were in Insurance, down 1.13 percent; Chemicals, down 0.20 percent; and Industrial Products, down 0.05 percent. The FTSE/ASE 20 index for blue chip and heavily traded stocks was up 0.89 percent, the FTSE/ASE MID 40 index was up 0.33 percent, and the FTSE/ASE-80 small cap index was up 0.12 percent. Of the stocks moved, 58 were up, 23 were down, and 37 were unchanged. (Source: ANA-MPA)

Aderans Shares Tumble as Wigmaker Cuts Profit Target (Update2)

Aderans Shares Tumble as Wigmaker Cuts Profit Target (Update2)

By Akiko Ikeda and Kiyotaka Matsuda

Aug. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Aderans Holdings Co. plunged the most in 10 months in Tokyo trading after the Japanese wigmaker cut its profit forecast citing a slump in sales.

Aderans tumbled 191 yen, or 9.7 percent, to close at 1,770 yen, on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the sharpest slide since Oct. 12. Aderans had the sixth-largest drop among 1,718 companies on the Topix index.

The Tokyo-based company cut its net income forecast for the year ending Feb. 28 by 78 percent to 500 million yen ($4.55 million), as spending cuts on advertising and administration failed to offset slumping sales in Japan and the U.S., it said on Aug. 15. It earned 590 million yen a year earlier. The change marked expectations of the company's new leaders after its previous management was voted out.

``It was necessary for the newly appointed management to make a clear break with the former executives by revising earnings forecasted by them,'' Yoku Ihara, head of equity research at Retela Crea Securities Co., said by phone today.

New York-based Steel Partners, led by Warren Lichtenstein, voted out Aderans Chief Executive Officer Takayoshi Okamoto and six directors on May 29, the first time a foreign fund ousted management at a publicly traded Japanese company. Steel Partners owned about 27 percent of the company's shares, making it the biggest shareholder, as of Feb. 29, according Bloomberg data.

Consumption Drop

``Decline in personal consumption was sharper than expected,'' said company spokeswoman Kaoru Kondo. ``Confusion in our management organization may have affected our customers emotionally.''

Aderans cut its sales forecast for its domestic core business by 2.1 billion yen to 37.7 billion yen and its Fontaine business, which offers ready-made wigs for women, by 1.3 billion yen to 11.3 billion yen, Kondo said. The company reduced its sales outlook for its hair-transplant business in the U.S. by 6 billion yen to 159.4 billion yen.

``We are not surprised by the slump in the domestic order- made wig operation, but the profit decline in the Fontaine operation was steeper than we had assumed,'' UBS AG analyst Mariko Watanabe wrote in a report dated Aug. 16. Watanabe rates Aderans shares ``neutral.''

The stock has risen 0.5 percent this year, compared with a 14 percent drop in the benchmark Topix index.

To contact the reporters on the story: Akiko Ikeda in Tokyo at iakiko@bloomberg.net; Kiyotaka Matsuda in Tokyo at kmatsuda@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: August 18, 2008 03:20 EDT