Bloomberg:
- Boeing Co.(BA) deserves another chance to bid on the $35 billion US Air Force aerial-tanker contract won by rival Northrop Grumman(NOC), a government agency said.
- Brazilian central bank President Henrique Meirelles said policy makers are on the lookout for increases in consumer prices and are ready to raise interest rates further if their inflation target is threatened.
- New York Times(NYT) said advertising revenue at its newspapers and their Web sites dropped 13% in May, the biggest monthly drop this year.
- Crude oil’s “bull run” may be over as prices become increasingly volatile and Saudi Arabia pledged to boost supplies, according to JPMorgan Chase(JPM). Spare production capacity may reach 5 million barrels a day by 2010, similar to levels in 2002 to 2003, when oil was $30 a barrel, the analysts said.
- Crude oil is surging more than $2/bbl. as historic investment fund speculation for the commodity continues unabated, despite a smaller-than-expected weekly
Wall Street Journal:
- China’s investment-banking market is about to become increasingly crowded. After a two-year hiatus, regulators are opening the way for global banks to set up joint ventures and allow them to expand their businesses in the country.
- EU Rethinks Farm Subsides, Seeks More Production. With global food prices and arable land in short supply, the EU finds itself at loggerheads over how to overhaul a subsidy system that frequently pays landowners not to grow crops.
- A new exchange-traded note is attempting to break new ground by employing a sophisticated strategy popular with hedge-fund investors: using short-selling and stock selection in an effort to outperform the market. In late May, JPMorgan Chase(JPM) teamed up with asset manager First Trust Advisors on an ETN that uses a so-called 130/30 strategy.
NY Times:
- Michelle Obama Seeks New Introduction After Stumbles.
MarketWatch.com:
- The Air Force is expected to double patrols of armed drones in Iraq and Afghanistan to help save more lives.
Advertising Age:
- Consumers will spend five hours a day watching videos on mobile phones, televisions and computers by 2013, an increase of 25% from 2008, citing a study by Forrester Research.