Bloomberg:
- Herb Allison, nominated to run the Treasury’s office overseeing the U.S. financial rescue, owns $1 million to $5 million of stock in Bank of America Corp., one of the biggest federal aid recipients. Allison is also paid about $3,600 a month from a Merrill Lynch & Co. annuity, the firm where he worked for almost three decades, and was later bought by Bank of America.
- Emerging Markets Most Costly Since ’07 on Fund Flood.
- US stocks may extend their rally if the S&P 500 breaches the 945 level, according to a technical analyst at UniCredit SpA. “A crossing of 945 will attract more mid-term orientated investors into the market,” Volker Bien said. UniCredit’s first medium-term target level for the S&P 500 is 980 should the measure close above 945.
Wall Street Journal:
CNBC:
NY Times:
WebWire:
Market News International:
- The European Central Bank doesn’t exclude cutting its benchmark interest rate by a further quarter points and may use additional non-standard policy measures, citing “well-informed” sources. Another official said expanding the bank’s use of non-standard policy tools is also a possibility. The ECB has a “genuine willingness to consider all options” and “could easily go further” in response to changing market conditions, the official said.
Atlanta Business Chronicle:
Financial Times:
- Many managers hope the end of the hedge fund bubble will help create better times ahead.
JLM Pacific Epoch:
Xinhua News Agency:
- China’s crude-oil stockpiles for both emergency and commercial use rose by 1 million metric tons to 38.6 million tons in April from March.
- General Motors Corp.(GMGMQ), the bankrupt US carmaker, is considering opening a plant in Malaysia, citing the head of the manufacturer’s Southeast Asian division.