Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez put the nation’s most popular TV network off the air this weekend, accusing the broadcaster of “coup-mongering.”
- The US dollar reached the strongest level in six weeks against the euro and a three-month high versus the yen as reports suggested the US economy is gaining momentum.
- President Bush, in a Memorial Day weekend radio address, said the wars in
- Overseas stock exchanges including NYSE Euronext(NYX) and Nasdaq Stock Market(NDAQ) said they plan to open offices in
- Japan, a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, wants the 21 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation members to adopt specific measures to cut energy consumption.
- Venezuela’s new state television channel TVes took control of the country’s most-watched network as protesters accused President Hugo Chavez of seeking to stamp out voices of opposition to his government.
- Venezuela’s streets echoed with sirens, horns and pot-banging late last night as thousands of supporters of Radio Caracas Television readied for a final day of protest hours before the independent TV network exits public airwaves.
- Avaya Inc.(AV) delayed a meeting with analysts scheduled for next week amid speculation the world’s largest maker of corporate phone equipment will be acquired.
- China’s CSI 300 Index rose about 4,000 for the first time, driven by a surge in new investors who are ignoring warnings of a bubble to enter a market that’s doubled this year.
- A tax-cut war is spreading across Europe as leaders of the continent’s biggest economies give up criticizing smaller neighbors for slashing business tax rates and decide to join them instead.
- Venezuela’s government urged a probe of Time Warner’s CNN and local television station Globovision for broadcasting “lies” and inciting violence against President Hugo Chavez.
- Japan’s jobless rate unexpectedly fell to a nine-year low and households increased spending for a fourth month in April, suggesting consumers will help extend the economy’s longest postwar expansion.
- Colorado and Utah have as much oil as Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Nigeria, Kuwait, Libya, Angola, Algeria, Indonesia, Qatar and the UAE combined. That’s not science fiction. Trapped in limestone up to 200 feet thick in the two Rocky Mountain states is enough so-called shale oil to rival OPEC and supply the US for one hundred years.
- Crude oil fell as much as 1.4% in NY after oil workers in
Wall Street Journal:
- Avaya Inc.(AV), the world’s largest maker of corporate phone equipment, is in talks with private equity firm Silver Lake Partners about a leveraged buyout.
- Tishman Speyer Properties LP and Lehman Brothers Holdings(LEH) are close to reaching an agreement to acquire Archstone-Smith Trust(ASN).
CNNMoney.com:
- The Top 25 fastest growing tech companies.
- The Top 25 greatest tech stock gainers.
NY Times:
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- Iraqis say a rapid American troop withdrawal would fuel more violence in the country, citing a survey and interviews with more than 40 Iraqi politicians and residents.
- Coca-Cola(KO) may look for more acquisitions like its agreement to buy Glaceau Vitaminwater to boost its non-carbonated offerings, citing CEO Isdell.
- Witnesses aren’t cooperating with Newark, NJ Mayor Cory Booker’s bid to cut the murder rate in the state’s largest city. Police officers say witnesses often refused to say who committed crimes, the result of public mistrust dating back to riots in 1967 and hip-hop artists railing against informants.
- 33% of NYC residents owned their own homes in 2005, an all-time high and up from 30.2% in 2000, citing an analysis of Census Bureau data.
- Google Inc.(GOOG), Yahoo! Inc.(YHOO), Microsoft Corp.(MSFT) and their technology rivals are using unconventional recruiting methods to lure workers as they compete for top job candidates.
- Will stocks suffer a multi-decade bear market as the baby-boom generation sells its shares to retirement? Some have predicted such an outcome, but a new study – which projects huge growth in 401k assets in future decades – paints a far more sanguine picture.
- Google’s(GOOG) $3.1 billion acquisition of online advertiser DoubleClick Inc.(DCLK) led the US FTC to top a preliminary antitrust probe into the purchase.
Washington Post:
- Ryan Crocker, US ambassador in Baghdad, will tell Iranian diplomats how the Islamic republic can help stabilize Iraq, both militarily and politically, during talks in Baghdad tomorrow.
Newsweek:
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AP:
- To deal with high gas prices, 47% of the 1,000 Americans polled said they were considering buying a more fuel-efficient vehicle versus 39% last year, according to an AP-Ipsos poll.
- US military forces rescued 42 captured Iraqis from an al-Qaeda post near Baghdad today. Some of the group had been held for as longs as four months, including some who showed signs of torture.
Age:
- Rio Tinto Group(RTP) hired Deutsche Bank AG to advise it on a possible bid for aluminum producer Alcan Inc.(AL).
Reuters:
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Financial Times:
- Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party is preparing to allow casino gambling next year.
Sunday Telegraph:
- Coca-Cola Co.(KO) is in talks to buy the Highland Spring Ltd. bottled water company for as much as $992.3 million.
Sunday Times:
- The Dubai International Financial Centre may block Nasdaq Stock Market’s(NDAQ) acquisition of Sweden’s OMX AB by making its own bid.
BBC:
- World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz, who plans to resign June 30, says the media was a bigger factor in his decision to leave the lender than his standing among bank employees. The bank’s board agreed he hadn’t done anything unethical with regard to compensation for a bank worker who was his girlfriend.
Nikkei English News:
- Toshiba Corp. will start using Advanced Micro Devices(AMD) chips in some products to cut costs.
- The Chinese Central government has asked local officials to stop offering tax and power incentives to energy-intensive industries.
Shanghai Securities News:
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Xinhua News Agency:
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- Chinese university students shouldn’t be involved in stock trading, because they are unable to bear the losses should their investments turn sour, citing the Ministry of Education.
21st Century Business Herald:
- Yu Yongding, a former monetary policy adviser to China’s central bank, says the nation faces a “most urgent” problem of a “quite serious” stock market bubble. The government needs to curb share prices to make them drop gradually. Yu proposed raising stamp duty on share trading, cracking down on irregularities by brokers and increasing the supply of shares. Monetary policy alone can’t curb the asset bubble, because small interest rate increases won’t be enough to siphon money back into back accounts and raising rates too much risks hurting the economy, he said.
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Chosun Ilbo:
- North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il may be ill, citing a South Korean government official.
Emirates Today:
- Taxis in
Al-Ahram:
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Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Made positive comments on (LWSN) and (ARC).
- Made negative comments on (JSDA).
Morgan Stanley:
- As
Night Trading
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S&P 500 indicated +.03%.
NASDAQ 100 indicated +.09%.
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Economic Releases
- Consumer Confidence for May is estimated to rise to 105.0 from 104.0 in April
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Case-Shiller 1Q Home Price report and Merrill Lynch Small-cap Technology Healthcare Conference could also impact trading Tuesday.
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