Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Business News
Common Ground Common Sense > National & International News > Daily National and International News > National News Archive
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14
theglobalchinese
Chrysler Recalls 268,800 Vehicles Yahoo! NEWS
DaimlerChrysler AG's Chrysler Group is recalling 268,800 vehicles from the 2005-2006 model years to replace a faulty front windshield wiper motor, the company said Monday. The wiper motor armature shaft on the vehicles, which include the Dodge Durango, Dodge Caravan and Grand Caravan, and Chrysler Town & Country, can break and disable the wipers, Chrysler said. The company said it had notified the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration of the voluntary recall. Owners will be notified when parts are available. No accidents or injuries have been reported related to the problem, Chrysler said.
On the Net: DaimlerChrysler AG: http://www.daimlerchrysler.com
theglobalchinese
U.S. Ports Debate Spurs Ownership Talks Yahoo! NEWS
The furor over efforts by an Arab company to buy U.S. port operations has focused attention on a little noticed economic fact of life: America increasingly is foreign-owned. From the ritzy Essex House hotel in Manhattan, owned by the Dubai Investment Group, to the nationwide chains of Caribou Coffee and Church's Chicken, owned by another company serving Arab investors, foreigners are buying bigger and bigger chunks of the country. The U.S. must borrow more than $2 billion per day from foreigners to finance its huge trade deficits. In 2005, for example, there was a record deficit of $805 billion in the current account, the broadest measure of trade. Foreigners sell their televisions, cars and oil to Americans and hold dollars in return. Those dollars are invested in stocks, bonds and other assets, including real estate and factories. Foreigners already own half of the U.S. government's publicly traded debt. As of January, some $2.19 trillion in Treasury securities were in the hands of central banks, including China and Japan, and private investors abroad. At the end of 2004, the total foreign direct investment in this country — actual factories, office buildings and other tangible assets as opposed to stocks and bonds — came to $1.53 trillion, 8.2 percent more than in 2003. That investment shows up in all of the 50 states. In Oakland, Maine, it's a customer service center for T-Mobile USA Inc., which is a subsidiary of German-based Deutsche Telekom. In Glendale, Calif., it's the U.S. headquarters for Nestle, the Swiss-based food and beverage company. Arab investment has gotten the most scrutiny of late because of the now-withdrawn bid by a Dubai-based company to buy operations at six major U.S. ports. But statistics show that Arab investments represent only a a fraction of the total direct investment in the U.S. by foreigners. European nations accounted for $977 billion, or two-thirds, of the $1.53 trillion of foreign direct investment, according to figures compiled by the Commerce Department. By contrast, Arab countries in the Middle East accounted for $9.3 billion, led by $4.7 billion in investment from Saudi Arabia. The United Arab Emirates was second among Middle East Arab countries with $1.8 billion in investments, according to the data. DP World of Dubai said last week it intends to sell its U.S. operations to an American-owned company. But that has not stopped some members of Congress from seeking to overhaul the way such deals are reviewed by a secretive government panel. A bill by the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, GOP Rep. Duncan Hunter (news, bio, voting record) of California, would bar foreign ownership of U.S. infrastructure deemed critical to the national security. "To those who say this is protectionism, I say — America is worth protecting," Hunter said. Opponents say his proposal would mean the fire sale of billions of dollars of assets now in foreign hands and end up hurting the U.S. economy. Consider that for more than a decade, French tire maker Michelin has been the exclusive supplier of tires for NASA's space shuttles. DSM, a Dutch company, makes body armor for U.S. troops, while French-owned Sodexho provides meals for the troops at a number of military installations. Nearly one in five U.S. oil refineries is owned by foreign companies. Foreign companies also have a sizable presence in running power plants, chemical factories and water treatment facilities in the United States. "People don't understand how integrated the U.S. economy has become with the global economy, how dependent we have become on other nations," said Clyde Prestowitz, president of the Economic Strategy Institute, a Washington think tank. Some analysts believe such realities are getting lost as politicians try to respond to growing anxiety about the trade deficits, the loss of nearly 3 million manufacturing jobs since mid-2000, immigration problems and the threat of more terrorist attacks. "We have to be very careful that we don't overreact in the legislative process and enact economic policy masquerading as national security policy," said Todd Malan, head of the Organization for International Investment. The Washington group represents foreign companies that do business in the United States. To the puzzlement of some economists, the current debate centers on direct foreign investment, the most stable type of investment. Yet the far larger share of foreign investment is in Treasury securities, corporate bonds and stocks. If foreigners suddenly decided to reduce their holdings of these assets, the dollar could plunge in value, interest rates could soar and stock prices could suffer a big blow. David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York, cited the 51 percent share of foreign ownership of the federal government's debt — and that share is rising. "That strikes me as scary," Wyss said. "When you make yourself so dependent on inflows of capital from the rest of the world, the question is what happens if the inflows slow down." The amount of federal debt that must be financed each year is climbing because of the budget deficits. On Thursday, Congress acted to raise the debt ceiling — the amount the government can borrow — by $781 billion, to nearly $9 trillion. Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman, said last year he believed market forces would lower the current account deficit before there were serious disruptions to the economy. A decline in the value of the dollar against other currencies, including China's, would help by making U.S. goods more competitive on overseas markets and imports more expensive and thus less attractive for American consumers. Falling global energy prices and stronger overseas economic growth to boost demand for U.S. exports would also help. "A lot of things will have to come together" to reduce America's need for foreign capital, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer
theglobalchinese
Slowing home market to ripple through job market Yahoo! NEWS
With the allure of easy money, thousands of Americans flocked to jobs in the real estate industry during the boom years. "You saw it - there were dollar signs in their eyes," recalls Nick Vayonis, a former real estate agent in Los Angeles, where median home prices rose 145% in four years. (Graphic: Impact of housing-related jobs) He left the business a year ago, just in time, he says. Home sales have declined nationwide for the past five months, and sales in Southern California fell to their lowest level in five years in February, DataQuick reported Tuesday. "I could see the ebb and flow. It wasn't going to be like that forever," says Vayonis, 40, who just opened a coffee shop in Canton, Ga., near Atlanta with his wife Anne-Marie, also a former agent. As the housing market slows, there will likely be a lot of stories of people who are bailing out of their real estate jobs and other professions related to housing - appraisers, mortgage brokers and home construction workers - and many not by choice. This could send shock waves through the job market and the economy. That's because housing helped drive the economy out of the last recession. Almost four out of every 10 jobs created in the past four years were in housing-related fields. At the end of last year, a record 9.8% of U.S. workers were employed in the real estate industry, up from 8.2% a decade ago, according to Moody's Economy.com. Only the health care industry added more jobs. "Job growth is the main engine for consumer spending," says Scott Anderson, senior economist at Wells Fargo in Minneapolis. "If we don't get the job creation that we need to sustain spending, the economy could be in trouble as we get into '07," he says. "If we don't get any help from these other (non-housing) sectors, longer-term the implications are slower job growth, which means slower consumer spending, which would eventually discourage businesses from spending. You'd have this downward spiral in growth."

Belt-tightening starts
While it's too early to tell how deeply the housing industry will contract, many companies are already seeing some business evaporate. Last month, Washington Mutual said it would close 10 mortgage processing centers and fire 2,500 employees. In November, mortgage company Ameriquest handed out 1,500 pink slips. The housing industry is braced for more belt-tightening. "At best, people should prepare for no pay increase and no bonus, something they have been getting a lot of. At worst, they should be thinking they may need to change occupations," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pa. While it's painful for those involved, Zandi calls the slowing in housing "a necessary adjustment." The economy had gotten so dependent on housing that it needed to come down a bit to make the economy more evenly balanced. "Housing has been flying high, and it's now coming back down to earth," he says. Existing home sales fell in January for the fifth month in a row, and home builders Toll Bros. and KB Home say more buyers are canceling their orders. In all, home sales are expected to fall 8% from last year's record, according to a group of economists surveyed by USA TODAY in January. That's going to make it harder, for example, for the nation's 2.6 million real estate agents to make a living. In a "normal" real estate market, the median income for an agent in business for two years or less is $12,852, according to the National Association of Realtors. (However, it picks up rapidly after that, with agents making about $47,187, after three to five years.) Your income "is very unpredictable," says Janice Hofferber, who left her job as a Wall Street stock analyst in 2003 and tried her hand as an agent in Bay Head, N.J. She quit last September and became an investment adviser for Smith Barney. "You're not really building a business, you're building a reputation," explains Hofferber, 41. "There's no recurring revenue. Every year, you start at zero again. That wasn't really attractive." It was no easier in the mortgage loan business, says Toney Goucher, who closed his restaurant in Arkansas and became a mortgage broker in 2002. When he joined Leader One Financial in Kansas, home sales were hot, interest rates were low, and anyone who wasn't buying was refinancing. Last summer, the market started drying up. "It seemed like every month, we had another interest rate hike, and it got harder and harder to find clients," recalls Goucher, 55. "I joined organizations and networking groups to find more business. I called on Realtors every day - cold calling - I just didn't enjoy what I was doing anymore." Goucher threw in the towel and put on an apron. After traveling to St. Louis for a conference, he opened Fat Toney's barbecue restaurant there in January.

Picking up the slack
So far, the economic impact of the downturn in housing has been soft. Other sectors of the economy are adding jobs. In February, employers added workers in a broad number of industries, such as retail, health care, restaurants and bars and state and local government. If that continues, those jobs will help take up some slack if people in housing-related fields find themselves out of work. Plus, many economists expect housing to slow, but not to slide dramatically. "We don't expect housing to completely collapse," says Anthony Chan, chief economist at JPMorgan Private Client Services, adding that the housing market might regain some momentum in 2007. There are also a few trends that could reduce the blow to the economy:

•Construction. Although residential construction is weakening, commercial building is picking up, thanks to demand for new roads, government office buildings and retail shops. More than 768,000 people had jobs in the non-residential construction industry in February, the most in more than three years. "The commercial market now seems to be on a pretty good upswing, and if housing loses ground, which I think is very likely, we will see some of those workers move into the non-residential side," says Dave Seiders, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders. Many of the skills used in home construction are transferable to commercial building. "A carpenter can just as easily work in a non-residential building as ... a residential building," says Michael Montgomery, an economist at Global Insight in Lexington, Mass.

•Hurricanes. Hurricanes last year damaged or destroyed 700,000 homes on the Gulf Coast, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, based on the number of families receiving federal housing aid. Although it's unclear how many of those homes will be rebuilt, the process of rebuilding homes, businesses, roads and other infrastructure will likely create jobs for years to come.

•Refinancing. About 25% of outstanding mortgages in the fourth quarter were adjustable-rate mortgages, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. For those who got into the mortgage brokerage business, that's good news. Many homeowners will likely want to refinance their mortgages in the months and years ahead to lock in a fixed rate as interest rates are expected to rise, but not by a lot. "That will kind of prop things (up) for awhile in terms of activity," Montgomery says. And plenty of people who got into the real estate market are determined to ride out any downturn. One of them is Steve Wydler, 37, who left his job as a lawyer at AOL's headquarters in Virginia in December 2002 to join his brother, Hans, an entrepreneur with a Harvard MBA who is a real estate agent. The two are getting their brokers' licenses in Virginia and Maryland so they can operate throughout the Washington, D.C., area. They now employ three people and work with four other agents as a team. He makes more money now than he did at AOL. "Personally, I'm not scared," he says. "We're not in it for the next sale. We're in it for the long haul." But back in St. Louis, at Fat Toney's, Goucher says he has already gotten a couple of calls from mortgage brokers he knew in Kansas asking about possible franchise opportunities for his barbecue restaurant. "They say, 'You're lucky you got out.' "
By Barbara Hagenbaugh and Noelle Knox, USA TODAY
theglobalchinese
Google launches financial news, data, blog site Yahoo! NEWS
Google Inc. is introducing a financial news, stock quote and chat service that seeks to shake up the online finance information market now dominated by Internet media rivals and online brokers. The Web search leader said late on Monday that it has begun offering a trial version of the service called Google Finance that uses a keyword search system to help consumers target information on public and private companies and mutual funds. Google Finance primarily provides financial news, stock quotes, charts and data. In its trial form, the site is far less comprehensive than established financial sites such as those from Yahoo Inc., Microsoft Corp.'s MSN America Online's Money & Finance and TheStreet.com.
QUOTE("Katie Jacobs Stanton @ product manager for Google Finance, said in a phone interview")
"We are going to provide quick, easy access to financial information ... by taking complex financial data and making it more digestible"
The new Google site relies on information from a variety of financial publishers and data providers including Reuters Group Plc, Hoover's Inc., Morningstar Inc., Interactive Data Corp. and Revere Data LLC. Google plans to introduce advertising eventually, Stanton said. Yahoo Finance, the king of online financial sites offers not only many of the features Google Finance does but also links to stock research, retirement planning, bonds, options and downloadable spreadsheets for making finance calculations. Peggy White, general manager of Yahoo Inc.'s Yahoo Finance, said the 10-year old finance site is aimed at everyone from entry-level investors to professional money managers.
QUOTE("she said")
"The Yahoo Finance customer doesn't have any one given customer profile ... We talk to all clients across the finance spectrum,"


FINANCIAL NEWS, QUOTES, BLOGS
Google Finance can be found at http://finance.google.com and links to it appear in a featured area at the top of general Google search results pages when users search for stock or corporate information that appear to be finance related. Beneath the finance-focused search box at the top of the Google Finance main page are sections that provide summaries of the market, stock quotes and links to news, blogs and moderated-finance group discussions. One of the more novel features of the site gives user the ability to view financial news alongside historical price charts over various time frames. As the user zooms back in time, the news results change with the date. The site identifies financial stories within Google News, the company's existing news search site that features articles from roughly 4,500 different sources. By contrast, Yahoo's financial news relies on three dozen top editorial brands. And while Yahoo was the first of the major Internet sites to incorporate blogging alongside news in its Yahoo News site, Google Finance is first to run blogs alongside financial news. Matthew Bienfang, a retail brokerage analyst at research firm TowerGroup, said the broad-based financial information sites such as Yahoo or TheStreet.com are chipping away at online brokers such as Charles Schwab Corp., which depend on their sites to attract their core customer base.
QUOTE("Bienfang said")
"Every time a new online finance portal shows up it challenges the online brokerages, which have much more trouble retaining accounts"
Other Google features include the ability to set up stock portfolios, track mutual fund performance or connect to other online finance sites, including Yahoo, MSN, Dow Jones' MarketWatch and AOL and regulatory filings from EDGAR Online. Google will use human editors to help moderate a part of the site called Google Finance Groups. This service relies on the same group discussion technology as Google Groups, which features unedited discussion forums on a myriad of topics. Google Finance started out as a part-time project by Google engineers working in Bangalore, India, Stanton said. Financial terms of the deal between Google and Reuters were not disclosed. A Reuters spokesman said the company stands to benefit as customers of Google Finance click on links to Reuters sites seeking deeper information. Besides links to its news, Reuters supplies some stock quote data on publicly traded companies as well as background summaries, profiles of executives and directors and links to key historical developments that may have affected a stock.
By Eric Auchard
theglobalchinese
Siemens, Nokia build faster T-Mobile network Yahoo! NEWS
Germany's Siemens and Finland's Nokia are equipping T-Mobile's mobile phone network to speed up third-generation services such as Internet surfing and downloading movies in Germany and Austria. Siemens said on Tuesday it was the main supplier to T-Mobile, the mobile phone unit of Deutsche Telekom, and a Siemens spokeswoman said that its part of the deal was worth an amount in the double-digit millions of euros. T-Mobile confirmed that Siemens was the main supplier for upgrading its network to HSDPA (high speed downlink packet access) and said Nokia would also supply some parts. Siemens said in a statement: "Starting with Germany and Austria, T-Mobile customers can now use their notebook or mobile phone to surf in the Internet at DSL (digital subscriber line) speeds and download large volumes of data such as movies or large e-mail attachments faster than before." Telecoms operators hope that HSDPA, which promises to bring home broadband speeds to mobile devices, will encourage customers to access data while on the move. Current third-generation networks, with their slower speeds, have failed to create a mass market for such services. T-Mobile said its entire German third-generation network would be equipped with HSDPA by May at initial rates of up to 1.8 megabits per second, compared with 384 kilobits now. By the end of the year transmission will be speeded up to 3.6 megabits per second, and after that it will be doubled again to 7.2 megabits per second.
theglobalchinese
Microsoft to double Xbox 360 shipments this week Yahoo! NEWS
Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday said it plans to boost shipments of its
Xbox 360 video game console by "two to three times" this week to address shortages that have crimped game sales across the industry. The increase in shipments comes a week after rival Sony Corp. announced it would delay the launch of its much-anticipated PlayStation 3 game machine until November to finalize standards for the Blue-ray Disc drive, a next-generation DVD player that will be included in PS3. Microsoft said it can ramp up Xbox 360 shipments now that its supply of components is in full production and a third contract manufacturer, Celestica Inc., is now making consoles along with Wistron Corp. and Flextronics International Ltd. A Microsoft spokeswoman said Sony's six-month delay did not play a role in its decision to boost shipments. The software giant's game console is widely viewed as a crucial product that underscores its commitment to play a big role in delivering entertainment and media in the living room. Initially, Microsoft hoped to sell 2.75 million to 3 million consoles in the first 90 days after the product's U.S. launch in November. The company later reduced that target to 2.5 million consoles due to supply delays but said it still aimed to sell 4.5 million to 5.5 million units by the end of June. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft is trying to turn the tables on Sony, which currently dominates the video game console market with a share of about 70 percent with its PlayStation 2. Sony used a head start on the original Xbox to carve out a leading position in the console market, prompting Microsoft executives to pledge not to get beat to market by Sony again. The Japanese electronics and entertainment conglomerate plans a simultaneous global launch in November, pitting Xbox 360 against the PS3 during the holiday shopping season when the game industry earns most of its money. Microsoft also said on Tuesday that Xbox Live, the online download accessible by the console, has logged more than 10 million downloads, which it said was "faster than iTunes did when it launched." More than 85 percent of Xbox 360 consoles that are connected to the Internet have downloaded games, trailers and videos from the service. Shares of Microsoft gained a penny to $27.90 on the Nasdaq.
theglobalchinese
Following Yahoo to a Wealth of Traffic Site-reference.com
Consider Yahoo the first major casualty of the search engine wars. Yahoo has admitted that they cannot reasonably expect to take away any significant amount of the search market share from Google, so they have chosen to be happy as the second most visited search engine on the Internet. On the surface, this may seem strange. Why would Yahoo ever publicly announce that they are 'throwing in the towel' in the search engine war? That would be similar to Pepsi recommending that people drink their product only if Coca-Cola is not available. From a business standpoint, it is absolutely ridiculous and makes absolutely no sense. But be careful to not read into this too far. Yahoo may have tipped their hat to Google as being dominant in the traditional search engine market, but this does not mean that they are giving up the fight for Internet user's attention. In fact, for some time now, Yahoo has been moving towards a market which is quickly emerging as being just as powerful as search engines currently are.

Yahoo Moves to Web 2.0 Style Websites
In a few of the articles published here at Site Reference we have mentioned Web 2.0 and how Yahoo seems to be following this development trend, but we have never looked into why Yahoo is so fascinated by Web 2.0. As most of you probably know, Yahoo launched My Web 2.0, a public bookmarking service, along with acquiring Del.icio.us, a well-established public bookmarking service. Yahoo also launched Yahoo Answers, a service which relies on a community of users to answer questions that the same community asks. There is a common trend with all of these services - they all rely on the input from a vast community. Del.icio.us works well because it relies on thousands people deciding which websites are important rather than relying on one person's (or one algorithm's) opinion. This is the entire idea behind a folksonomy driven website - that when enough votes are tallied, the general public will decide which websites are important to specific topics, and which websites are not worth taking the time to bookmark.

An Alternative to Search Engines
Search engines provide a very simple service: they unite web users with a website that matches their current interest. It just so happens, however, that services like My Web 2.0 and Del.icio.us (public bookmarking services) have the ability to do the exact same thing - and possibly in a more effective and timely manner. Suppose you want to find new resources for SEO. You could spend your time using the keyword "SEO" in Google in a regular web search, but the results for such a competitive term tend to remain fairly static over time. An alternative would be to look at what people are tagging as "SEO" at a service like Del.ico.us. Here you are presented with an entirely new list of pages that are (for the most part) relevant to what you are looking for, and are certainly filled with fresh, up-to-date information. The information at a public bookmarking service is not necessarily always going to be the most complete, but it is the information that web users, as a collective unit, have determined to be worth visiting. In this way, public bookmarking services are more effective than search engines in filtering out which content is important, and which content is not worth reading (or even outright spam). Add the fact that these results are available in RSS form and you suddenly can be presented with the hottest information on your topic that the web has to offer. I personally subscribe to feeds that look at "Google", "Yahoo", "SEO", and other topics that are relevant for my day to day life. Obviously public bookmarking is not evolved enough for every industry. As it stands now, most of the quality information that you can get through a service like Del.icio.us relates to more technical fields, such as programming or photography. But as more people bookmark their favorite sites, the more a service like Del.icio.us will grow useful.

What Does This Have To Do With Yahoo! - And How Does It Help Me?
Traditionally, when there is a market that is worth exploring for traffic, Yahoo! has been there. When Hotmail was released, Yahoo answered with their email program. When Monster.com became popular, Yahoo acquired HotJobs. With every major traffic generating innovation, Yahoo seems to get involved. This raises the question - if Yahoo is content with remaining in second place with the search market, and at the same time they are being active in the Web 2.0 market by buying social bookmarking sites, launching their own social bookmarking service, launching Google answers, etc., shouldn't we as website owners look to these services as a way to promote our businesses? Everyone knows that you should optimize your website for the search engines, but how many people take the time to optimize their websites for bookmarking services? Not very many people consider trying to work their way up to the top of these websites, but they are actually missing out on a significant source of traffic. Darren Rowse of ProBlogger talked about how much traffic he received from getting to the front page of Del.ico.us. In the end, he saw 8,000 visitors in one day from the front page exposure as well as the external links he received from that front page exposure. Imagine just how much traffic a person could receive for constantly being towards the top of a website like Del.ico.us. Getting to the top of public bookmarking sites is not easy (just as SEO is not easy), but the reward is significant. Unlike SEO, getting to the top of a public bookmarking service is truly a viral way of marketing your website. Not only will you receive the benefit of being exposed in a very public place, but those who have put you there will talk about your website on their sites, and grow your business virally.
Who knows - public bookmarking may just overtake traditional search as a source for your traffic.
By Mark Daoust
Snuffysmith
Senators Press Beijing on Yuan

BEIJING-Lawmakers threaten to impose 27.5% import tariffs unless
China revalues its currency. By Mark Magnier and Don Lee.
http://email.latimes.com/cgi-bin1/DM/y/ezn...Io30G2B0HOH70En
theglobalchinese
Google Considered Immune To Vista Threat Forbes
Market Scan
Will Microsoft's Vista be to Google as its Internet Explorer was to Netscape? Cowen & Co. analyst Jim Friedland doesn't think so. "We believe the launch of Vista will not have a negative impact on the market share of Google," the analyst wrote in a Tuesday research note. "Google became the dominant global search engine without an ad campaign or a default position in the Windows OS." The company's success has instead been driven by the quality of its products, Friedland said, noting that despite "aggressive" investments by Microsoft in R&D, Google continues to gain share. The analyst believes that the only way MSN can reverse the trend is by developing a "vastly superior" search experience, and no major search upgrades are anticipated as part of the Vista OS launch. In addition, MSN Search is not guaranteed to be the default search engine on new Vista PCs, Friedland said. According to the analyst, OEMs such as Dell, will instead have control over what search providers are available in the drop-down menu and which one is the default. Microsoft is planning to launch the Vista operating system later this year. Vista will incorporate "Desktop Search" and "Web Search" features directly into the Vista Start menu and Internet Explorer 7. The last time Microsoft made a big move in the Internet was in 1995 when the company launched Internet Explorer and incorporated the browser into its Windows 95 operating system. As a result, Netscape's share of the browser market declined from a peak of 70% in 1996 to less than 12% within five years.
Maya Roney
theglobalchinese
France moves forward with law challenging Apple Yahoo! NEWS
France's lower house of parliament passed a law on Tuesday that could challenge Apple Computer Inc.'s dominance of the online digital music market by making it open its iTunes store to portable music players other than Apple iPods. French officials said the law is aimed at preventing any single media-playing operating system, such as Apple's iTunes or Microsoft Corp.'s Windows Media Player, from building a grip on the digital online music retail market. "These clauses, which we hope will be taken up by other countries, notably at the European level, should prevent the emergence of a monopoly in the supply of online culture," Richard Cazenave and Bernard Carayon, National Assembly deputies from the ruling UMP party, said in a statement on Tuesday. The new legislation would require that online music retailers such as iTunes provide the software codes that protect copyrighted material -- known as digital rights management (DRM) -- to allow the conversion from one format to another. Apple responded on Tuesday night in California that if the law passes, it would only lead to increased piracy. "The French implementation of the EU Copyright Directive will result in state-sponsored piracy," spokeswoman Natalie Kerris said from Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California. "If this happens, legal music sales will plummet just when legitimate alternatives to piracy are winning over customers." Shares of Apple fell more than 3 percent to close down $2.18 at $61.81 on the Nasdaq on Tuesday. "Any interested party can ask the court ... to get a supplier (of content) ... to provide information that is essential for 'interoperability,"' France's new copyright law states, so that content can be read on any hardware support. It remains to be seen whether Apple would comply with the law, or just shut down the iTunes store in France, which would have a minimal effect on Apple's sales. Shaw Wu, an analyst at American Technology Research, estimates that less than 5 percent of Apple's overall revenue comes from sales of iPods and iTunes songs in France. The new legislation would also allow consumers to use software that circumvents DRMs only if it were done to convert digital content from one format to another. Using such software is currently illegal in much of the world. Currently, songs purchased from the market-leading iTunes service can only be played on iPods or Motorola Inc.'s iTunes mobile phone, and iPods are not compatible with music that uses DRM from rival companies such as Microsoft. "There's no doubt that the fact it's a closed system has been a reason for Apple's success with the iPod," Wu said. Consumers are prepared to pay twice as much for a song that can freely move between different devices, a recent study of the European Union project Indicare showed.

CAUSE FOR CONCERN
"The problem is that it may risk weakening systems that are used to protect against piracy," said Olivier Cousi, copyright lawyer at French law firm Gide Loyrette Nouel of the law. "The impact on Apple is not clear yet," said Andrew Neff, an analyst at Bear Stearns in New York. "But the French are late; Microsoft and Apple are already dominating the market." For its part, Apple said the law would actually likely increase iPod sales "as users freely load their iPods with 'interoperable' music which cannot be adequately protected." Microsoft in France declined to comment. "The vote today by French lawmakers is a direct attack on Apple's ability to design its own products and on the company's intellectual property rights, which will have a chilling effect on future innovation," said Jim Prendergast, executive director of Americans for Technology Leadership, a U.S. lobby group. "Apple could immediately pull its iTunes product from France, giving consumers less choice when it comes to popular digital music," he added. The law would affect other French online music stores as well, such as Fnac, part of retail group PPR; and Virgin, whose French retail operations are owned by media group Lagardere. The government says the new law is designed to boost the legal digital music market and adapt the country's copyright rules to the rapidly changing online content market. It was adopted by the National Assembly with 286 votes in favor and 193 against and will be examined in the upper house, the Senate, in May.
By Astrid Wendlandt
theglobalchinese
GM reaches early retirement deal Yahoo! NEWS
General Motors Corp. and bankrupt former subsidiary Delphi Corp. will offer buyouts to more than 125,000 factory workers, the companies said on Wednesday, after reaching a cost-cutting deal with the United Auto Workers union. The agreement, which capped a week of intensive negotiations in Detroit, moves the world's largest automaker toward its goal of cutting 30,000 jobs by 2008 and helps avert the threat of a strike at Delphi that could have crippled GM and cost the automaker $5 billion per month. Analysts said the deal, while positive, did not entirely remove the threat of a labor disruption at Delphi, which remains in talks aimed at slashing its own payroll costs. Another unknown is how much the early retirement incentives will cost GM, which plans to shut 12 plants to adjust to continuing loss of market share in the crucial U.S. market. "The deal still leaves a lot of questions, and is less than what people were looking for," Morningstar analyst John Novak said. "We would have liked to have seen a comprehensive deal at Delphi. The fact is, there is still the overhang of a potential strike out there." Shares of GM were up less than 1 percent on the New York Stock Exchange, off early an earlier high. The buyout offers range from $35,000 to $140,000, with the higher payments offered to workers at GM plants scheduled to be closed, one UAW local official said.

GM TO TAKE CHARGES
GM said it would recognize charges for the buyouts in 2006. The company, which posted a $10.6 billion loss in 2005, last week raised its estimated exposure to Delphi to a range of $5.5 billion to $12 billion. GM, which remains the world's No. 1 automaker by unit sales, has been hurt by the waning popularity of profitable sport utility vehicles, high commodity costs and the burden of its pension and health-care obligations. Delphi said about 13,000 of its 24,000 UAW-represented workers would be eligible for the early retirement incentives, including a one-time payment of $35,000. The Troy, Michigan-based company also said that about 5,000 of its workers would have the opportunity to return to factory jobs with GM, which spun off Delphi in 1999. GM will fund the lump-sum payments and provide retirement benefits for any Delphi workers that return to its payroll, said GM spokeswoman Katie McBride. Early retirement incentives will also be offered to all of GM's 113,000 factory workers, she said. Of that total, 36,000 are currently eligible to retire under the UAW contract, while another 27,000 are close to 30 years of experience and will be offered special incentives, McBride said. If too many workers in a particular plant opt to take the buyouts, the existing contract between GM and the union provides a seniority-based system to determine who would be eligible.

DELPHI STILL NEGOTIATING
Delphi, which filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. automotive history in October, has said it must slash wages, benefits and jobs to reorganize its struggling U.S. operations. The company is still negotiating with its unions over which of its factories will remain in operation and how its overall wage and benefit levels will be reduced after it emerges from bankruptcy. Delphi's participation in the GM-led buyout deal is subject to approval by federal bankruptcy court. The auto parts supplier said on Wednesday that it still planned to file a motion to have its existing labor contracts voided by a bankruptcy judge on March 31 if it did not get a comprehensive deal with its unions. Shares of GM were up 20 cents to $22.20. Shares of Delphi were down 6 cents to 82 cents.
By Jui Chakravorty and Poornima Gupta in Detroit
Snuffysmith
===
Bear Stearns warns against airline stocks due to 'imminent' bird flu:

Investment bank Bear Stearns has advised investors to start dumping airline and retail stocks in favour of blue-chip utilities as a hedge against bird flu, warning that a full human pandemic of the H5N1 virus could set off the worst global stock market crash since the 1930s.
http://tinyurl.com/p5c5l
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
China Tries to Charm Couple of Senate Skeptics
By JOSEPH KAHN
BEIJING, March 22 — Global Times, a tabloid newspaper in China's capital, usually offers its readers a rich diet of nationalist propaganda on subjects like Japanese war crimes and American hegemony.

So it is telling that it devoted its front page on Tuesday to respectful, even admiring, coverage of the China visit of two United States senators, Charles E. Schumer of New York and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who have attacked Beijing for "illegal currency manipulation," "mercantilism" and "failure to play by the rules."

The senators, the paper said, "have sent a positive signal by coming to China to see for themselves."

"It is not like earlier times when members of Congress relied on hearsay or their own imagination when they criticized China," the article said.

With a banquet in the Great Hall of the People, a roster of top-level meetings and fawning attention in the state-run press, China wants to win over Mr. Schumer and Mr. Graham.

The reason seems clear: At a time of rising economic nationalism in the United States, highlighted by the rejection of the Dubai ports deal, the Beijing leadership fears that a bill drafted by the senators to impose a 27.5 percent tariff on Chinese exports to the United States has a chance to become law. That would upend economic relations between the world's richest nation and its fastest-growing rival.

The bill would impose the tariffs unless Beijing substantially revalued its currency, the yuan, which critics say the government keeps artificially low. It has met firm opposition from some business leaders and economists, who say they fear a trade war, but it garnered 67 votes in a nonbinding tally in the Senate recently and may come up for a formal vote as soon as March 31.

"They know it's for real," Mr. Schumer said before a private dinner with China's central bank governor on Wednesday evening. "Believe me, the people who are seeing us wouldn't be seeing us if they didn't think it's for real."

The bill and the senators' high-level reception are among the signs that Chinese-American economic relations have become fraught with tensions that trade experts and members of Congress say are the most politically volatile since the fight over China's entry to the World Trade Organization in the late 1990's.

The Bush administration has warned China that its big trade surplus with the United States and industrial-scale violations of American trademarks and copyrights threaten the nations' fast-growing trade ties.

Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, who will visit China next week, said that unless steps were taken to address American complaints soon, "the administration and the American people may be forced to reassess our bilateral relationship."

Members of Congress have raised the alarm about China's threat to United States manufacturers and workers many times before. But Bush administration officials say the potential for a sustained protest has grown in tandem with China's rising economic power.

China's trade surplus with the United States hit $201 billion last year, a record for any trading partner and an increase of 24 percent from 2004.

Beijing has controlled its currency within a narrow band around 8 yuan to the dollar, a level that critics say gives it an artificial trade advantage. Despite American pressure, China has allowed its currency to appreciate just 3 percent since it broke a formal, fixed peg to the dollar last July.

China is defending itself against the onslaught, but gingerly. Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, meeting a group of foreign business leaders this week, urged them to convey the message that "it is unfair for the U.S. to scapegoat China for its own structural problems," according to people who attended the meeting.

But Mr. Wen and other top leaders are also trying to improve the atmosphere before President Hu Jintao's first state visit to the United States, scheduled for mid-April. They have promised to tighten enforcement of intellectual property rights and to move steadily toward a more market-driven exchange rate for the yuan, also called the renminbi.

One test of whether Beijing can tame protectionist pressures will be the five-day trip by Mr. Schumer, a Democrat, and Mr. Graham, a Republican, which ends Saturday. The two were joined by Senator Tom Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican, who supports their tariff bill.

The senators declined to say if they had heard anything during their trip to change their minds about the bill. But Mr. Graham said he was "very impressed" with a presentation by a senior economic planner on Wednesday. Mr. Schumer said he had picked up signals "that they are taking the currency where it needs to go, though I'm not sure if they will get there fast enough."

Neither senator has much experience in economic diplomacy. They are lawyers who were not widely noted for their focus on trade, currencies or China before introducing the tariff bill.

Mr. Schumer says his trip to Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong is not only the first time he has visited China, but also the first time he has taken an official trip abroad in his 25 years in Congress.

"I'm a homebody," he said. "But somebody has the right to ask, How can you do this if you don't come to China? So we came to China."

Beijing's reaction to their request was cool at first, they said. Mr. Graham joked that of China's 1.3 billion people, "All of them were out of town the week of our visit." Their visas did not come through until shortly before they planned to travel.

But then China laid out a red carpet. They were treated to a banquet in the Hong Kong Room of the Great Hall of the People, the sprawling Stalinist-style meeting hall in Tiananmen Square. They were served dishes that Mr. Schumer, who says his favorite Washington restaurant is Hunan Dynasty on Capitol Hill, pronounced "extraordinary, just extraordinary."

Though they did not get time with Mr. Hu or Mr. Wen, the list of top officials who agreed to meet them is expansive, especially for visitors who do not meet the Chinese leadership's preference for "old friends," or people who have proved sensitive to the Communist Party's interests.

Li Zhaoxing, the foreign minister; Wu Yi, a vice premier and the chief economic troubleshooter; Zhou Xiaochuan, the central bank governor; and Bo Xilai, the commerce minister, are among those on their schedule.

The general sentiment in Beijing is that the threat of the Schumer-Graham tariff can still be headed off. A high tariff would result in "unaccountable losses" to the American economy, because consumers and businesses depend on cheap Chinese imports, said Liu Baocheng, of the Sino-U.S. School of International Management at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing.

But after the collapse of the Dubai deal, which Mr. Schumer helped bring about, and the failure last summer of a major Chinese energy company's bid to take over the American oil company Unocal, China has grown fearful of surging economic nationalism in the United States.

Mr. Liu said the decision to play host to Mr. Schumer and Mr. Graham took a page from China's courtship of Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker. "He was once an advocate of the China threat, but a visit to China turned him into an opponent of that theory," Mr. Liu told The Beijing Morning News.

Much of what the senators were told by government leaders appears to be a recitation of themes — China's mounting internal social problems, its desire to move toward a fully convertible currency, its plans to stimulate domestic consumption — that officials have repeated many times in recent months. But Mr. Schumer said: "They're not just mouthing it. They really believe it."

On Wednesday they got a presentation on currency reform from Zhu Zhixin, a top official of the National Development and Reform Commission, a central planning body.

Mr. Schumer said he had pressed Mr. Zhu to address the imbalances between the United States, which is thought to consume beyond its means, and China, which is thought to consume too little relative to its rising wealth. The official pulled out a page from China's newly enacted 11th five-year plan that made the same point.

"It was a golden moment for us," Mr. Schumer said. "He said this was the right way to go. They just had to figure out how to get there."



Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
theglobalchinese
More Marketing Spending Seen For Online Travel Companies Forbes
MaOnline travel companies will rely more on marketing to boost growth in the near future, according to a recent report from Merrill Lynch. The research firm noted that Cendant plans to boost marketing for its online travel segment by 30% to 40% year-over-year this quarter as the company works on differentiating its brand from other online travel agents. Cendant is the parent company of such Internet-based travel services as Orbitz and CheapTickets. "Competitive margin pressures seem to be building," wrote Merrill analyst Justin Post, "and we are somewhat concerned that industry leaders are relying on marketing to drive growth." The analyst said Expedia is likely to join Cendant in raising its marketing spending. "Price is not a differentiator in online travel," said the analyst, adding that service initiatives help distinguish providers in the eyes of users. The analyst noted that Expedia offers consumers the "Expedia Promise" and Travelocity is promoting its "Customer Bill of Rights." Travelocity is a unit of Sabre Holdingsrket Scan
by David Ng
theglobalchinese
Digital River Still Faces Ambiguity Forbes
Market Scan
Digital River saw its shares rise more than 4% in Tuesday trading due to an upward guidance revision, but the e-commerce company still faces speculative uncertainty, according to a report from RBC Capital Markets. The research firm reiterated an "outperform" rating on Digital River and upped the target price to $50 from $40. For shares of Digital River to see additional growth, the research firm said the company needs to show earnings and revenue upside in addition to the guidance increase it already provided. In addition, the research firm recommended that Digital River show more "meaningful" involvement with the Microsoft download business. "As the stock is now trading above its 52 week high, we are likely to see volatility around this speculation until it is resolved," wrote RBC analyst Robert Breza in a Tuesday research report. For the March quarter, Digital River raised its earnings guidance to 48 cents per share on revenue of $77 million, from 40 cents per share on revenue of $70 million. RBC attributed the company's revised guidance to AV revenue strength as well as sales to Symantec
by David Ng
Snuffysmith
GM, Delphi at Crossroads After Cost Cuts

The buyout offers are seen as a big step in the carmaker's
turnaround plan. Both companies still face challenges to reduce
expenses. By John O'Dell.
http://email.latimes.com/cgi-bin1/DM/y/ezs...Io30G2B0HOUb0ET
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
G.M. Will Offer Buyouts to All Its Union Workers
By MICHELINE MAYNARD
DETROIT, March 22 — General Motors reached a landmark agreement Wednesday with the United Automobile Workers intended to reduce sharply the ranks of a generation of auto workers long envied by other blue-collar workers for their wages and benefits.

G.M., staggering under the weight of $10.6 billion in losses last year, said it would offer buyouts and early-retirement packages ranging from $35,000 to $140,000 to every one of its 113,000 unionized workers in the United States who agreed to leave the company.

At the same time, Delphi, the nation's biggest automotive parts maker and a unit of G.M. until seven years ago, will offer buyouts of $35,000 to 13,000 U.A.W. members, of 24,000 on its factory floors.

Despite the ambitious plan, G.M. still has much more to do in its effort to rebuild itself as a smaller, more competitive automaker after losing ground for two decades in the United States against the growing strength and sophistication of Asian and European rivals.

For G.M., which is paying the full cost, the buyout offer is an expensive way to persuade its workers and those at Delphi to retire rather than accept the full pay and benefits they would ordinarily receive when their plants closed or they were laid off. Analysts said the plan could cost G.M. as much as $2 billion, depending on how many workers took part in the buyout program.

On average, U.A.W. members at G.M and Delphi cost the equivalent of $67 an hour, including pay of about $27 an hour plus pensions and health care expenses.

The buyout plan, coupled with concessions on health care late last year, signals the willingness of the U.A.W. president, Ron Gettelfinger, to grant concessions without formally reopening the union contract for new bargaining — something not done since the industry slump of the early 1980's. At that time, the U.A.W. renegotiated its contract only after Chrysler sought a federal bailout and both G.M. and Ford suffered deep losses.

For G.M.'s American workers, the offer presents a host of difficult choices, forcing them to consider the risk that the company may be even worse off in the future if the buyouts fail to spur a turnaround in business.

Amid all the maneuvering, analysts said, bargaining in next year's contract talks has already begun, with Mr. Gettelfinger gambling that if the union can address major issues now, it can stave off a bitter confrontation in 2007.

But the situation is far from resolved for G.M.'s chief executive, Rick Wagoner, whose future is now in serious doubt. He must deliver even broader cost cuts to save both G.M. and his own job. Already, he is under growing pressure from the company's largest individual shareholder, Kirk Kerkorian, whose representative has joined the board.

Delphi, which is operating under bankruptcy protection, remains a wild card. Despite G.M.'s assistance, it is still demanding that U.A.W. members accept sharply lower wages and benefits by the end of the month. Otherwise, Delphi has threatened to ask a bankruptcy judge for the ability to impose lower rates. If that happens, the U.A.W. has warned that it may go on strike.

In pursuing this substantial a downsizing, said John A. Challenger, president of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a Chicago firm that follows workplace trends, G.M. is finally recognizing that its dominant position in industrial America is over. "It's taken the company losing $10 billion," he said, "for the jam to begin to break."

Beyond the buyouts, analysts said, G.M. must take further steps to become more competitive or risk being pushed aside by strong rivals like Toyota, which could unseat G.M. to become the world's biggest auto company as soon as sometime this year.

A number of industry analysts have raised fears that G.M. could be forced into its own bankruptcy filing as a result of a flood of bad news at the company.

Late last year, G.M. announced plans to eliminate 30,000 jobs and close all or part of 12 plants through 2008.

It estimated that it faced a liability of $5.5 billion to $12 billion from the bankruptcy at Delphi, because it must pay for the pensions and health care coverage of workers who were at G.M. before Delphi was spun off.

Its once-sterling credit rating has sunk to junk-bond status, and its financial results have been restated twice in four months, most recently last week.

G.M., its union and Delphi began talking about the retrenchment plan shortly before Delphi sought bankruptcy protection last October.

Under the program, G.M.'s hourly workers would be offered packages to retire or leave, ranging from $35,000 for those who are already eligible to retire to $140,000 for those with 10 years at the company who are willing to cut ties and give up health care coverage.

At the same time, as Delphi will be offering buyouts to roughly half its unionized employees, G.M. agreed to take back 5,000 workers from Delphi, and those workers can opt for one of the G.M. retirement programs.

Employees are not under the obligation to accept a deal, and there is little likelihood that G.M. would give buyouts to all its workers — something that would cripple factories.

Rather, it is likely to look for volunteers at the plants it already wants to close so it can make room for the Delphi workers who come back.

Even so, some executives and union officials have been concerned that workers could hold out for sweetened offers. The $35,000 lump-sum payment, for example, is roughly half what some better-paid workers earn in a year.

The Ford Motor Company, for example, is offering buyouts of $35,000 to $100,000 under a program that will eliminate 30,000 jobs by 2012.

Reaction to the G.M. plan Wednesday was decidedly mixed.

Robert Betts, president of the U.A.W. local at the Delphi plant in Coopersville, Mich., said the offers were attractive. "If someone is going to give you $35,000 to take your pension, that's good," Mr. Betts said. "I think a whole lot of people are going to hit the road over this."

But Steve Brunner, who has spent 22 years as an electrician at the G.M. truck plant in Flint, Mich., and still has eight years to go until he can retire, said he was not interested.

"I mean, $35,000 is not even a year's wages," Mr. Brunner said. "I don't think it'll change anyone's mind unless they were ready to go."

Analysts also said they were not convinced that the plan had gone far enough to push G.M. and Delphi over the hump.

"The risk of a strike has not been eliminated," John Murphy, an auto analyst at Merrill Lynch, said in a research report. Mr. Murphy called the deal "disappointing," especially because it was likely to increase G.M.'s ratio of 2.5 retirees for every active worker.

But in a statement, Mr. Wagoner said that the move was an important step in the company's revamping, and that G.M. was "pleased" by the agreement.

A G.M. spokeswoman, Katie McBride, said that about 36,000 workers were eligible to retire with full pension and benefits, meaning that they had spent at least 30 years on the job.

An additional 27,000 are within a few years of retirement, and would be offered a plan providing them up to $2,900 a month, on top of their usual pay, if they agreed to retire when they reached the 30-year level.

Michigan's governor, Jennifer M. Granholm, whose state has about half the employees at G.M. and Delphi, said the agreement "signals that Michigan's manufacturers and workers are committed to working together in new ways."

Governor Granholm, who faces re-election this fall, has aggressively courted Toyota to build an engine plant in the state.

Given G.M.'s cutback plans, there are not likely to be jobs for the Delphi workers when they "flow back" to G.M. Unless they retire, that means some would go into a program called the Jobs Bank, where workers receive full pay and benefits until the U.A.W. contract expires next year.

The buyout program is the second major accommodation the union has made under the terms of its current labor agreement, which has 17 months to run. Late last year, U.A.W. members at G.M. and Ford agreed to pay more for health care benefits.

The union has not yet reached a similar agreement at Chrysler, which was the only Detroit auto company to earn a profit in North America and gain market share last year.

Union officials said last week that Delphi would possibly hold off filing its motion to dissolve its labor agreements if it reached a deal with G.M. and the U.A.W. on early retirement. Delphi, though, reiterated its intention to go ahead on March 31 if there was not a deal with the U.A.W.

Talks are likely to continue after that. But a strike by the U.A.W. would cripple production at G.M., and could topple the company into filing for bankruptcy protection, under which its own workers could face the threat of lower wages and benefits like those Delphi is seeking from the union.

Averting that is the supreme challenge for G.M., said David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich.

"When we look back at this particular period," Mr. Cole said, "what we are going to realize is that we were right in the middle of the most dramatic restructuring period in the history of the automobile industry."

Jeremy W. Peters contributed reporting from Flint, Mich., for this article.



Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
Snuffysmith
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1143036165...e_whats_news_us

Shrinking Giant
GM Makes Sweeping Buyout Offer

Deal With Delphi, UAW
Lets Auto Maker Slash
Unionized Work Force
Clearing Out a Generation
By JEFFREY MCCRACKEN and LEE HAWKINS JR.
March 23, 2006; Page A1

General Motors Corp. reached a landmark buyout and early-retirement program yesterday with the United Auto Workers and parts supplier Delphi Corp., marking a major step toward shrinking the unionized North American auto industry.

But for GM, it is not the end of the painful overhaul facing the company after nearly two decades of losing ground to Asian and European rivals.

Under a complex deal worked out in weeks of talks, GM agreed to finance early-retirement packages and buyouts to be offered to as many as 131,000 GM and Delphi workers -- including all 105,000 of GM's current UAW-represented employees in the U.S. The buyouts would range from $35,000 for those with the most service to $140,000 to certain others further from retirement age.


The buyout plan is one of the largest in U.S. corporate history. In effect, GM is offering to take off the assembly line a whole generation of workers hired in the 1960s and '70s when the company still dominated the U.S. auto industry.

But how many will sign up to leave is a big question mark. And even if many do, GM Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner still faces a series of challenges that the big labor deal won't solve. In 4 p.m. composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange, GM's stock finished up one cent, at $22.01.


On Wall Street, the ultimate worry is whether GM can succeed where some big unionized steelmakers and airlines failed and restructure outside of bankruptcy court. GM has denied any plan to use Chapter 11 bankruptcy to shed its obligations under its current U.S. union agreements. But major credit-rating agencies have dropped GM's debt ratings deep into "junk" levels and warned that without a quickly executed turnaround plan in North America, bankruptcy is a possibility. One agency, Fitch Ratings, has warned that some debtholders could get 40 cents on the dollar in a GM bankruptcy scenario.

Among the challenges still facing GM is an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission into GM's accounting. Just last week, the company said it still is unable to file its annual report and added $2 billion to its net loss for 2005, widening it to $10.6 billion.

GM is also struggling to find a buyer to reinvigorate its big finance unit, General Motors Acceptance Corp. A wide acceptance of the buyout, by easing concerns about GM's viability, could speed a sale of a controlling stake in the finance unit. Groups led by two private-equity firms have made bids for GMAC in the $11 billion range.


And GM faces continuing pressure to halt a steady slide in its U.S. market share (to 24.4%, most recently) and beef up its product line.

For GM, the mass buyout is another milestone in a long retreat from the days when it dominated the U.S. auto industry with nearly 50% of the U.S. market, and dominated the American economy as the nation's largest industrial corporation. For nearly four decades after World War II, GM and the UAW set the standard for American industrial workers in terms of wages, health care and pension benefits, in an often contentious partnership.

GM workers, and their counterparts at Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp., consistently earned more than the average American factory worker during the decades between 1960 and 2002, according to a study by the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich. By 2002, UAW Big Three workers earned an average hourly wage of $25.95, or 69% more than the average manufacturing wage. Health-care and pension costs in recent years have risen even faster, pushing GM's total average hourly labor cost per U.S. factory worker to $74 an hour last year, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

GM's UAW members also enjoyed unprecedented protection from layoffs, thanks to a program called the Jobs Bank that guaranteed workers nearly all of their full-time pay even if they had no work to do.

But GM's high U.S. labor costs have taken a toll on the company and the UAW as Asian and European auto makers have ramped up production at nonunion factories in the U.S. and Canada. In 1985, when nonunion auto production in the U.S. was minimal, GM had 457,000 factory workers in the U.S. Today, GM has 113,000 U.S. hourly workers. (In all, its North American auto operations employ 173,000, and world-wide its work force is 325,000.)


Some of those jobs have been lost as GM emulated the efficient "lean production" techniques of rival Toyota Motor Corp. But others have been lost because GM has been unable to stop losing market share in the U.S., despite volleys of new models and increasingly expensive price and financing discounts.

Though it's unclear how many workers will take the buyout offers, yesterday's deal is noteworthy if for no other reason than the sheer number of people eligible. GM hopes the offers will get it most of the way toward its announced goal of cutting 30,000 hourly jobs by 2008. Delphi, which has about 34,000 hourly jobs, hopes to eliminate at least 18,000 hourly workers, including 5,000 who transfer back to GM.

The buyout and early-retirement offer is complex. In one of the main provisions, GM and Delphi workers with 30 or more years on the job as of Oct. 1, 2005 -- the week before Delphi's bankruptcy filing -- will be eligible to receive $35,000 to retire and receive a full pension and retiree health care. A UAW member retiring would receive a pension of about $3,000 a month. GM estimates that 36,000 of its 105,000 U.S. UAW hourly employees are eligible under this provision.

GM and Delphi workers with at least 27 but fewer than 30 years on the job as of this July 1 can get the equivalent of an early pension, slightly smaller, that starts right away. Workers with 27 years, for instance, would receive $2,800 a month until they reach 30 years. The deal includes full retiree health care. When they reach what would be 30 years with the company, they will retire and receive a full pension. Workers at GM plants that have been closed or soon will be can retire with 26 years on the job. Those include plants in Oklahoma City, Baltimore, Lansing, Mich., Linden, N.J., and Muncie, Ind.

GM is also trying to buy out younger UAW members. Those with fewer than 10 years of service could get a one-time $70,000 buyout in return for severing all ties with the company, including health-care and other benefits. Vested pension benefits wouldn't be affected. GM employees with 10 or more years of seniority will have the option of a $140,000 buyout under the same terms.

CNBC looks at GM and Delphi's buyout plan with the United Auto Workers that includes early-retirement offers.The offers will go out immediately, said the UAW. Workers will have 45 days to accept and then seven more days to rescind, said a GM spokesman, who estimated that buyouts and early retirements should start before June 1.

For those currently eligible for retirement, taking the $35,000 buyout would amount to accepting the value of a new Cadillac CTS sedan in order to retire and collect pensions now, rather than work a few more years. But for younger workers, the calculus of accepting $70,000 to $140,000 to walk away from GM, and give up the rich health care and comparatively high wages is more complex.

Especially in the Midwest, the number of manufacturing jobs that pay as much as GM and Delphi is small and dwindling. That's in part because GM itself is putting pressure on suppliers to shift operations to lower-cost countries such as China or Mexico. If enough workers leave Delphi, the company could find itself in a position where it needs to hire new U.S. employees. But Delphi Chief Executive Robert S. "Steve" Miller has said his company's U.S. hourly wages for future workers need to drop from an average of $26 an hour, not including benefits, to about $12.50 an hour.

Another provision of yesterday's agreement provides that workers at both GM and Delphi with 10 years of service who are over 50 will be offered "mutually satisfactory retirement." They will be able to retire with their accrued pension, plus full health-care benefits until Medicare kicks in.

GM's decision in 1999 to spin off the Delphi auto-parts business was supposed to help GM cut costs and steer the money it saved to designing better cars. Delphi, with about $28 billion in annual revenue, began life as a far-flung collection of operations making parts from seats to spark plugs to radios for GM vehicles.


Delphi tried to diversify its customer base, but found it a struggle to compete, given wage rates that matched GM's levels. These were far higher than even unionized parts makers in the U.S., let alone competitors based in Mexico or China. Last year, facing mounting losses and the fallout from accounting problems, Delphi's directors brought in Mr. Miller, a veteran of complex turnarounds at Chrysler and Bethlehem Steel, to try to salvage the company. In October, he decided Delphi should seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

In blunt language rarely used in public by senior Detroit executives, Mr. Miller declared that the days when UAW members could expect to earn more than $60 an hour in wages and benefits were over. Mr. Miller has since toned down his public comments, in response to objections from both GM and the UAW. But yesterday's deal represents a tacit recognition by the UAW that it can't hope to save the jobs that GM's market-share losses have effectively wiped out already.

At Delphi, as at GM, yesterday's deal left key questions unanswered. Among these were what the parts maker's remaining hourly workers will be paid and what they will do. The accord also didn't say which Delphi plants are to stay open or which products Delphi will continue making.

Delphi has thrice delayed a threatened move to ask the bankruptcy judge to void its existing labor contracts. Another deadline to do so looms on March 31. Delphi has said it would go ahead to void its labor contracts unless a complete deal with the UAW is reached. But the UAW and other Delphi unions have warned that such a step might provoke a strike. A strike by such a large supplier of parts to GM could quickly shut down production at the car maker, too.

Though other Delphi unions weren't part of yesterday's deal, the company hopes to offer similar early-retirement plans soon to its other 9,000 eligible workers.

For GM, the buyout plan is the latest in a series of moves to cut its U.S. employment costs. The auto maker last fall negotiated a deal to curtail medical benefits for hourly retirees, and earlier this year cut retirement medical benefits for white-collar workers and effectively ended its traditional salaried pension plan.


There would also be significant accounting effects for GM from a mass retirement. The company would greatly reduce the liability it has already recorded for those employees' retirement costs, a figure that is based on assumptions about how many years they are likely to remain on the job. The liability cut would reduce GM's pension expense, resulting in an immediate boost to the bottom line. GM's domestic pension plan, which already has a $6 billion surplus, would become even more overfunded. (For more on this, see related story.)

In terms of GM's credit standing, the uncertain costs of the buyout plan won't immediately jeopardize the company's rating, agencies indicated, but neither will it boost GM's ratings. "Our primary focus is on Delphi's ability to reach a contract with the UAW so as to ensure no production disruptions, and we still don't have a lot of details as to what a restructured Delphi would look like," said Mark Oline, an analyst with Fitch Ratings. "If a [possible] Delphi strike lasted for any extended period, GM's liquidity would erode fairly rapidly."

Because of that, GM has a big incentive to provide more support to Delphi. GM is apt to be very much involved as Delphi and the UAW continue their discussions over plant closures and future production.

GM's fourth-quarter results included $1.3 billion in costs related to plant closings and a $2.3 billion guarantee to UAW members employed by Delphi. Those items reduced GM's bottom line by $3.6 billion, or $6.36 a share. GM has estimated its ultimate tab for bailing out Delphi will be between $5.5 billion and $12 billion.

Standard & Poor's said $2 billion that GM received by selling most of its 20.4% stake in Suzuki Motor Corp. should help GM fund the buyout program. But S&P cited other factors, such as "mounting Delphi-related costs [and] the likely slow progress this year in turning around GM's North American operations," that it said "add to the likelihood that GM's ratings could ultimately be lowered."

Among issues still on the table is how Delphi will deal with its underfunded pension plan. A pension contribution of $1.1 billion is due in June. Both the UAW and the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. would be likely to resist any attempt by Delphi to terminate the program. To terminate it, Delphi would have to convince the bankruptcy court that it can't operate without doing so.

The Delphi portion of yesterday's agreement needs approval from the bankruptcy court. Delphi is seeking an April 7 hearing. Delphi's creditors' committee -- including bondholders, suppliers and other parties -- has already signaled a willingness to challenge GM on some issues. The committee has a team of lawyers, accountants, investment bankers and others reviewing the terms of GM's 1999 spinoff of Delphi, to see if Delphi was doomed to fail by labor obligations and other agreements imposed by GM.

A GM spokeswoman, Toni Simonetti, said GM was "not in a position" to discuss the total financial impact of the deal on GM now. Whatever its final cost for the buyouts, it will be money the car company can't spend on much-needed new products or features such as gasoline-electric hybrid engines.

One reason large-scale buyout offers are tricky is that employers can't control how many, or which, employees apply. Management experts say the offers tend to attract the most capable employees, those who can most easily find jobs elsewhere. "You create incentives for the wrong people to leave," said Peter Capelli, a management professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. "The lowest performers are generally not the ones who take it up."

This may be less of a concern with assembly-line workers such as GM's than with salaried people. In any case, a buyout is GM's main option for getting its payroll costs down. If it laid off hourly workers, it would still be required, under labor contracts, to pay most of their wages and benefits.

---- Ellen E. Schultz and Scott Thurm contributed to this article.

Write to Jeffrey McCracken at jeff.mccracken@wsj.com and Lee Hawkins Jr. at lee.hawkins@wsj.com
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
G.M. Sells 78% of GMAC Holding for $1.5 Billion
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 10:08 a.m. ET

DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Corp. said Thursday that it is selling a majority interest in its commercial mortgage division for $1.5 billion in cash to a private investment group.

In addition to the cash payment for a 78 percent stake in the business, GM said that GMAC Commercial Holding Corp. has also repaid $7.3 billion in intercompany loans as part of the deal. That would boost the total proceeds from the deal to almost $9 billion.

The announcement comes a day after the world's biggest automaker and its major supplier, Delphi Corp., said they plan to offer buyouts to more than 125,000 hourly workers under an agreement with the United Auto Workers. Workers are expected to start leaving GM by June 1.

GM is under enormous pressure to reverse its fortunes. It recently had to increase by $2 billion its reported 2005 loss to $10.6 billion. It has been losing U.S. market share to Asian automakers who are building cars that are among the most popular with American consumers.

GM shares rose 23 cents, or just over 1 percent, to $22.24 in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

The buyer group includes Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., Five Mile Capital Partners and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners.

GM said the deal for the commercial mortgage unit stake is separate from GM's announced plans to sell a controlling interest in the its overall finance business, General Motors Acceptance Corp.

''This sale is good news for GMAC and provides GMAC with even greater liquidity,'' GMAC spokeswoman Joanne Krell said.

GMAC Commercial Holding also announced that it has changed its name to Capmark Financial Group Inc. The name change will be fully implemented in the second quarter of this year. Capmark ''will launch with an investment-grade rating,'' Krell said.

GMAC said in August that it had agreed to sell a 60 percent stake in its commercial mortgage holding business to Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and the other partners, but no financial details were released at that time. The mortgage unit has a loan servicing portfolio of around $250 billion.



Copyright 2006 The Associated Press Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
Once Set for Life, Auto Workers May Have to Gamble
By JEREMY W. PETERS
FLINT, Mich., March 22 — For General Motors workers who once thought they were set for life, the buyouts the company offered Wednesday may well represent the first real gamble of their careers: Do they stay with G.M. and hope for a turnaround or take the money and run?

Ron Linn, an electrician at G.M.'s Flint Truck Assembly plant, is taking his chances. Having just remarried and purchased a new house, Mr. Linn, 52, said he planned on working at least another five years before he retired.

"A million dollars wouldn't be enough to get me to go," he said. "A hundred thousand dollars, after they take out taxes, that ain't going to last long. That's not much incentive to retire early."

The question is whether his job will be around in five years.

People like Mr. Linn, who has been with G.M. almost 29 years, are exactly the type of worker the company is hoping to entice with buyout offers. And his reluctance illustrates the difficulty the besieged automaker faces as it tries to pare down its factory work force by 30,000 over the next two years. The company is offering $35,000 in cash to employees who have already worked at G.M. for 30 years and are eligible to retire.

But Mr. Linn is among 27,000 workers at G.M. who are a few years away from retirement. For them, G.M. is offering a special plan that would pay up to $2,900 a month on top of their hourly wages, if they agree to retire as soon as they reach 30 years on the job.

Mr. Linn, who on Wednesday afternoon sat at the counter at the Capitol Coney Island diner here drinking coffee after his shift, said he would rather stay in his job than accept a lump sum cash payment and re-enter the work force midcareer.

Others would, too. Down the street at the Wooden Keg, a smoky, dimly lighted tavern across from the truck plant, Brian Kaufmann, 30, said he was not even considering leaving his job on the assembly line.

"I think you're kind of short-changing people," he said, sipping beer out of a small round glass. "You're putting a price on people's heads. I can't put a price on anybody's head."

Though Mr. Kaufmann said he thought staying at G.M. was risky — with all the recent job cuts and plant closings and the uncertainty looming over what the United Automobile Workers might have to give up in next year's contract negotiations — he said he would rather stay where he was than risk being unemployed.

Because he only has nine years on the job, by leaving he could walk away with as much as $70,000 if he agreed to give up everything but his pension.

Mr. Kaufmann was lucky to get hired at G.M. in the first place. About 80,000 people in Flint once worked for G.M., or more than one out of every two people here. Now, G.M. has only 15,000 workers left here, or about one in eight residents.

"There are no jobs out there for us," Mr. Kaufmann said. "And it's hard to start over. Who wants to hire a washed-up 30-year-old G.M. worker?"

But for other G.M. workers, uncertainties about the company's future are enough to persuade them to leave.

"I'd sign the papers right now if I could," said Spanky Waldorp, a 48-year-old worker at the truck plant who was sitting at a table in the Wooden Keg playing Keno. His numbers did not come up — all the more reason, he joked, to take a buyout.

"I'm two years away from retirement," he said. "And the way the company is going, who knows what's going to happen? As long as I'm getting something that's guaranteed, I'll take it. I mean, I could get laid off. This is a guarantee."

With 28 years of seniority, G.M. is offering him $2,850 a month on top of his hourly wage to retire once he hits the 30-year mark. "We'd be fools not to take that," Mr. Waldorp said.

Scott Shumaker, 45, said that after 27 years as a die maker for G.M., he was ready to try something else — teaching, perhaps, or starting his own landscaping business.

He said he thought a buyout would give him that chance.

"I've got a lot of things I'd like to do," he said. "I may even go south and roof houses. There's a lot of money to be made, but not around here. A lot of guys, they were waiting to see what was going to happen. Now, I think there'll be a lot of people who are going to take it. A lot of them were going to go anyway."

Anne Forsberg, 71, retired from General Motors 15 years ago as an auditor in the Buick City complex here, a cluster of factories that once employed 20,000 workers, but now is mostly demolished. As she sat eating her lunch at a McDonald's down the street from the truck plant, she offered a message to younger workers contemplating a buyout: wait and see.

"If you're young enough, hang in there," she said. "G.M. is going to come back. But if you're 45 or older, take the buyout because recovery is going to take a while. It always does."



Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
Oil Prices Rise Above $63 a Barrel
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 11:07 a.m. ET

VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- Oil prices rose Thursday in what appeared to be a delayed reaction to U.S. government data relased the day before that showed shrinking domestic supplies of oil and gasoline.

Light sweet crude for May delivery gained $1.23 in early trading to $63 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Wednesday, crude futures fell 57 cents, dragged down by a steep drop in gasoline futures.

Nymex April gasoline climbed 3.85 cents to $1.775 a gallon, retracing a portion of the more than 10-cent-per-gallon drop a day earlier. Heating oil was steady at $1.7442 a gallon, while natural gas gained 24.7 cents to $7.20 per 1,000 cubic feet.

May Brent crude futures on ICE Futures in London traded at $62.08 a barrel, up 58 cents.

In its latest weekly report, the U.S. Energy Department said Wednesday that domestic inventories of crude oil declined by 1.3 million barrels last week to 338.6 million barrels, or 9 percent above year-ago levels. The agency said gasoline inventories fell by 2.3 million barrels to 221.6 million barrels, or 1 percent higher than last year.

The supply of distillate fuel, which includes diesel and heating oil, shrank by 800,000 barrels to 126.7 million barrels, or 15 percent above year-ago levels, the Energy Department said.

Vienna's PVM Oil Associates focused on increasing refinery output as the catalyst for the market. Extra production due to the approaching summer driving season and plans by BP to resume production at its facility in Texas City, Texas, by June means ''total refinery runs are likely to cross the 5-year average again, which would be the first time since August last year,'' it said.

Prices had been supported in recent weeks by persistent concerns over supply disruptions in Nigeria, as well as the potential threat of United Nations Security Council action against Iran over its nuclear ambitions.

The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council have been debating since last week what action the council should take after the U.N. nuclear watchdog referred Iran, OPEC's No. 2 oil producer, to the body.

The United States accuses Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, a charge denied by Tehran, which says its program aims only to generate electricity.



Copyright 2006 The Associated Press Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
theglobalchinese
PayPal to offer paying by text messageYahoo! NEWS
Online payment company PayPal said on Wednesday it was preparing to offer a service for consumers to make purchases or money transfers using simple text messaging via mobile phones. The move by PayPal, a unit of online auctioneer eBay Inc., marks a big step in bridging the worlds of e-commerce and the physical world of brick and mortar stores by giving consumers a pay as you go option via phones, analysts said. The service, known as PayPal Mobile, will be launched in the next couple of weeks in the United States, Canada and Britain. Other markets worldwide will follow for the world's biggest online payments service. "PayPal is going to be launching a mobile payments product," PayPal spokeswoman Sara Bettencourt told Reuters. Word of the service had leaked out earlier on Wednesday when bloggers found links to test pages on PayPal's Web site describing it. Details can be found at: (https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=xpt/mobile/MobileSend-outside). Over time, the company may look to extend the service to the more than 55 countries and regions where PayPal is registered to transfer funds online, Bettencourt said. However, she stressed that PayPal has no specific plans to do so yet. While designed to make online payments more convenient for the nearly 100 million existing PayPal users, the move to offer a mobile payment service holds out the prospect of reaching vast markets in the developing world where phones, rather than computers, are the main way to connect to the Internet. PayPal Mobile will offer customers two options for transferring funds, be it for gifts or purchases, by phone to nearly anyone they choose, whether individuals or retailers. Payments can be sent over a phone via text message or by calling an automated customer service system and using voice commands to transmit funds, according to PayPal's site. "This is very important because it is going to create an awareness that your mobile phone is much more than just a device for talk," said Dan Schatt, an analyst with financial consulting firm Celent. "It allows you to make transactions." In effect, the phone has become an electronic wallet. In the United States, start-up TextPayMe now offers a PayPal-like service that allows consumers to send send payments via text messages. Obopay is set to launch mobile payments with a companion debit card for purchases or cash withdrawls. Operators of mobile phone systems in Britain, Europe, Australia, Japan and many other parts of Asia are well ahead in investing in mobile payment services. But PayPal's stringent verification system gives it a leg up on independent services as it appeals to a huge base of existing users, Schatt said.

PAY AS YOU GO
One feature, called Text to Buy, would allow magazine readers, for example, to buy advertised items such as clothes, concert tickets or music or movie-video discs using their mobile phones, by sending product codes located in the ads. A merchant receiving such a payment would then ship the product to the address stored in the PayPal user's account. "It's basically just another way to access PayPal," Bettencourt said. "It's just like in the online world when you send a payment," she said. "All you are doing is sending a payment using your phone instead of your computer." When introduced, mobile phone users will be able to send a text message to 729725 (the spelling of PayPal on a numeric handset keypad) with the amount of money the sender wishes to transfer and the recipient's phone number. On the PayPal Web site, the company uses the example: "Send 5 to 4150001234." A PayPal computer then calls back the text message sender on the phone and asks the user to enter a secret PIN to confirm the transaction. PayPal immediately notifies the recipient and tells it how to claim the payment online. The Web site shows a second option where the customer calls 1-800-4PAYPAL, enters a secret PIN, the amount of the transfer and the phone number where the payment is to be sent.
By Eric Auchard
theglobalchinese
CBS's "60 Minutes" in Web news tie-up with Yahoo Yahoo! NEWS
CBS Corp. on Thursday said it will showcase segments from its popular "60 Minutes" television news magazine on Yahoo Inc. as it seeks a wider audience for its news programs. The tie-up will begin at the start of the 2006/2007 broadcast season in the third quarter, when "60 Minutes" will open its 39th season on the air. Each week, following the Sunday night broadcast of "60 Minutes," viewers can turn to a dedicated Yahoo site that will expand on segments seen during the program, with unaired footage as well as archival material and blogs. The site will also feature special "60 Minutes" segments created for the Yahoo site and previews of upcoming broadcasts. A preview of the service will be available on March 26, including an interview with golfer Tiger Woods. "'60 Minutes' produces all of the content for the site but we will be working in connection with them to choose the topical content for a particular week," said Scott Moore, vice president of content operations at Yahoo. Moore said Yahoo would promote the news segments on suitable areas of its Internet network, such as Yahoo Sports for the Woods interview, and sell advertising space on the "60 Minutes" Web version. Buick bought up all of the Web advertising for the Woods preview package, Yahoo said. CBS already offers video news and other data on its CBSNews.com Web site. Earlier this month, Yahoo said it would not pursue an ambitious plan to deliver its own programing but would focus more on tailoring news and entertainment content to the Internet. The CBS venture "is a perfect example of the kind of relationship we are building with media companies," said Moore. "We have a lot of expertise in the online space but we need partners." Yahoo's Web sites draw an estimated 126 million users per month, while "60 Minutes" has an average weekly viewership of 14 million people.
By Michele Gershberg
theglobalchinese
Many US workers job-hunt on company time: survey Yahoo! NEWS
A quarter of U.S. workers who use a computer admit using it to hunt for a new job on company time, according to a survey released on Wednesday. Among workers who believe their Internet use is monitored by their bosses, one-quarter use their work computer for job-hunting, according to research conducted for professional staffing company Hudson Highland Group Inc. "It's one of the ways employees deal with work-life balance issues," said Robert Morgan, chief operating officer at Hudson Talent Management, one of the company's divisions. "Because we're spending so much time at work, that's the only time we have to schedule some of those appointments." One-third of workers who think their managers are unaware of their personal Web surfing use their work computer to find a new job, according to the study. Half of the workers surveyed said their companies monitor their computer use, while three-quarters said they believe their bosses know how much they use the Internet for nonwork activities. Job-hunters may not be overly concerned about what their bosses know, Morgan said. "Once they've made that decision to make a job change, they're probably less concerned about their current employer finding out," he said. "What employers really need to focus their efforts on is why are people looking for a job, versus trying to get them to stop them from looking for it at work." Among managers, 24 percent admitted to job-hunting on their work computer, the survey showed. Among nonmanagers, the figure was 23 percent. More than two-thirds of workers said they spend "hardly any" time on personal e-mails, surfing the Web, in chat rooms or blogging in a typical work day, it said. One percent said they spend more than two hours a day at work on such activities, it said. The research was based on a nationwide poll of 2,694 workers conducted March 11-13. The margin of error was plus or minus 3 percent.
By Ellen Wulfhorst
theglobalchinese
Google Base Seen As Key Stock Catalyst Forbes
Market Scan
Google Base is likely to be the most important new monetization method for Google, according to a report from research firm Piper Jaffray.
QUOTE("Analyst Safa Rashtchy wrote")
"We continue to expect some meaningful, though not yet material, results from Base by the end of 2006 that should serve as catalysts for the stock"
Rashtchy maintained an "outperform" rating and $600 price target on the stock. Rashtchy said his recent checks of listing on Google Base demonstrate that the online retailing platform is growing rapidly and being gradually integrated into Google's other platforms. Google has started testing the integration of Base with the conventional Google search results page, according to the Piper analyst.
QUOTE("he said")
"We view the integration of Google Base and conventional search results as a means to drive traffic to Google Base, and we expect Google to begin to leverage its network of products to drive traffic to Google Base now that it has a critical mass of listings"
Maya Roney
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
Bayer of Germany Offers $19.5 Billion for Schering
By HEATHER TIMMONS
LONDON, March 23 — The German drug giant Bayer A.G. stepped in as surprise white knight for Schering A.G. of Germany today with a cash bid of 16.3 billion euros, or about $19.5 billion.

Schering, which is fending off a hostile bid from rival Merck KgaA, has recommended the deal to shareholders, and it is expected to be completed unless Merck comes in with a higher offer.

Bayer is offering 86 euros a share for Schering, the world's largest manufacturer of birth control pills. The Bayer bid is 11.7 percent higher than Merck's offer of 77 euros a share.

Earlier today in Frankfurt trading, Schering's shares rose 2.01 euros, to 84.95 euros, on speculation that Bayer might make a bid.

Unlike Merck, which surprised Schering executives earlier this month by informing them that it intended to make a bid, Bayer began its approach on a friendly basis, executives involved in the deal said. Bayer is making several concessions to Schering, including agreeing to keep the combined companies pharmaceutical headquarters in Berlin, and keeping a 1.20-euro-a-share dividend payment to shareholders due April 17.

The offer is 2.7 times 2006 earnings, and the deal is expected to add to earnings in 2007.

The companies have not released details of what the management team will look like, but they are expected to combine executives from both sides into the new Berlin headquarters.

Bayer is currently headquartered in Leverkusen, Germany.

Bayer will remain the name of the parent company. Its pharmaceutical unit will be called Bayer-Schering.

The addition of Schering will increase Bayer's pharmaceutical unit to 70 percent of its business, from a quarter. The company also makes agricultural chemicals, plastics and coatings.



Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
Snuffysmith
March 23, 2006
Oil Prices Climb More Than $2 Per Barrel
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 3:46 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Oil prices shot up by more than $2 a barrel Thursday in what some analysts described as a delayed reaction to U.S. government data released the previous day that showed shrinking domestic supplies.

The buying was propelled further by technical trading and reports from Dow Jones Newswires and others that Rome-based Eni SPA's Nigerian unit would not fully repair until the end of the month a 75,000-barrel-per-day pipeline that was sabotaged.

Light sweet crude for May delivery gained $2.14 to settle at $63.91 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That is 19 percent higher than a year ago, and helps explain why retail gasoline prices average $2.50 a gallon nationwide.

''This market is very sensitive to geopolitical news,'' said Lee Fader, a broker at ABN Amro in New York. Fader believes oil will continue to trade in a range of about $60-$65 per barrel, unless there is some major change in either supply or demand.

On Wednesday, crude futures fell 57 cents, dragged down by a steep drop in gasoline futures. But Nymex April gasoline climbed 7.96 cents on Thursday to close at $1.8161 a gallon, retracing most of the more than 10-cent-per-gallon drop a day earlier. Heating oil futures climbed 4.13 cents to $1.7864 per gallon, while natural gas gained 24.7 cents to $7.20 per 1,000 cubic feet.

May Brent crude futures on ICE Futures in London rose 58 cents to $62.08 a barrel.

The U.S. Energy Department said Wednesday that domestic inventories of crude oil declined by 1.3 million barrels last week to 338.6 million barrels, or 9 percent above year-ago levels.

But Alaron Trading Corp. analyst Phil Flynn said the historically high levels of inventory are not providing much comfort to the market.

''We've got the highest level of inventory since 1999. That's great except that we have a different world than 1999,'' Flynn said, citing stronger demand, little excess production capacity and much more geopolitical uncertainty.

Flynn said prices could rise as high as $69 a barrel by next week, as some traders are shifting their attention to potential supply disruptions from the next hurricane season.

Prices had been supported in recent weeks by persistent concerns over supply disruptions in Nigeria, where rebels have struck an oil pipeline operated by Eni SPA's Agip Oil Co. unit, as well as the potential threat of United Nations Security Council action against Iran over its nuclear ambitions.

The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council have been debating since last week what action the council should take after the U.N. nuclear watchdog referred Iran, OPEC's No. 2 oil producer, to the body.

The United States accuses Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, a charge denied by Tehran, which says its program aims only to generate electricity.



Copyright 2006 The Associated Press Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
theglobalchinese
Spitzer sues Web marketer Gratis for privacy breach Yahoo! NEWS
New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer on Thursday filed suit against online marketer Gratis Internet, accusing the company of selling personal consumer data from millions of customers despite a strict confidentiality pledge. "This is believed to be the largest deliberate breach of a privacy policy ever discovered by U.S. law enforcement," Spitzer's office said. Gratis operates FreePay.com and several related sites that offer free music discs, consumer electronics and retail gift cards to users who participate in advertiser-sponsored trials. The company could not immediately be reached for comment on the suit. Gratis pledged on its site to "never give out, sell or lend" the names and data of consumers on its Web site, but since 2004 has sold access to lists of millions of customers to three e-mail marketers, Spitzer said in a statement. In each deal, Gratis provided between 1 million and 7 million confidential user records, according to the attorney general. Spitzer launched a probe of companies who compile and sell lists of consumer data to marketers in early 2005. Earlier this month, e-mail marketer Datran Media Corp. agreed to pay $1.1 million to settle with Spitzer over accusations it misused personal data, but admitted no wrongdoing. Spitzer's office said Datran had purchased consumer records from Gratis.
theglobalchinese
'No work please,' it's basketball time Yahoo! NEWS
Relax, don't work so hard. These days no one else in America does, and that might not be such a bad thing for an employer's bottom line. It's "
March Madness," when millions of U.S. workers spend so much time following the men's college basketball games of the NCAA Tournament that by one estimate they're costing companies $3.8 billion in lost productivity. That price comes as no surprise, said one Boston-area salesman who says his clients have been preoccupied with the three-week, 65-team event that ends with the final game on April 3. "I'd call customers who would say, 'Call me back later on. I'm watching a game on my computer and don't want to be bothered,"' he said, not wanting his name used. "And every office I go to, it's all they're talking about." To arrive at that lost $3.8 billion, consultants Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. used data showing that some 41 percent of U.S. workers, or about 58 million people, consider themselves college basketball fans. Millions of fans, and some who normally pay little attention to college basketball, take part in ubiquitous "March Madness" office pools. Using online tracking data, Challenger estimated working fans average 13.5 minutes a day following tournament action on the Internet, said John Challenger, chief executive of the Chicago-based firm that studies workplace and business trends. That activity costs companies $237 million a day, he said, but it may be worth it.

'GOOD BUY'
"We think it's a good buy. It's probably good for morale," he said. "When you can find ways to bring people together, take advantage of it. It's worth the price tag." This year's impact may have been particularly acute, with CBS showing games online for free. Helpfully, the Web site included a "Boss Button" which, when hit, instantly mutes the game and replaces the on-screen action with a spread sheet. But even a "Boss Button" won't help in some workplaces, like one huge Wall Street investment firm where a sternly worded memo was sent to employees banning any on-the-job tournament pools or e-mail traffic. "Nobody is saying a word about 'March Madness,"' said one of the firm's executives. Omni Duct Systems in Anaheim, California, installed a filtering program so none of its employees can get access to online sports information, said Mike Delawder, its information technology manager. "Basically, if it's got the word 'sports' in it, it just blocks it out," he said. Delawder said he's heard no complaints about the filter, which he said is intended to prevent an overload on the company's computer server. But he concedes complaints would be unlikely. "If they come to me complaining that they can't get to the sports site, it's pretty much saying, 'Hey, look, I'm goofing around at work,"' he said. Companies don't necessarily have to go that far, said Jim Holland, a Kansas City-based attorney whose firm specializes in representing management in labor and employment issues. They can take steps to make sure employees can follow the games and set up office pools with moderation, he said. "I've had some employers say, 'Hey, we end up wasting more time doing birthday cakes every month than we do doing the NCAA pool,"' he said. "It's lost productivity, but at the same time, I think employers are gaining something from it from the standpoint of morale in the office."
By Ellen Wulfhorst
theglobalchinese
US telecom execs battle Net neutrality demands Yahoo! NEWS
Telecommunications providers like AT&T Inc. intensified their efforts this week to persuade US policymakers to avoid imposing regulations on the Internet for services like streaming movies and unfettered Web access. The "network neutrality" battle in Washington pits high-speed Internet operators against content and application providers. Network owners want to sell tiers of service to reflect bandwidth usage, while the content companies fear they will be shunted to the slow lane of the Internet or shut out unless they pay more for dedicated network service. The issue dominated the annual convention of big and small carriers held by the US Telecom Association (USTA), as they stepped up efforts to influence lawmakers and regulators who are mulling whether new rules or laws are necessary. AT&T, BellSouth Corp. and Verizon Communications executives spent the week criticizing demands for network neutrality laws at almost every opportunity. "This debate I think is all about movies," said Jim Cicconi, AT&T's senior executive vice president for legislative affairs. "What we're saying is that you can't provide dedicated line, virtual private network services for free." AT&T, BellSouth and Verizon say they do not intend to block Internet content and prefer to make commercial bandwidth deals with content companies such as Internet retailer Amazon.com or Web search engine Google Inc. USTA Chief Executive Walter McCormick pressed the matter with Federal Communications Commission officials who attended. "We're hearing a lot today about Net neutrality, it's in the newspapers just about every day," McCormick told FCC Chairman Kevin Martin during a public event. "The chairman of Disney said this is not an area to legislate in." Martin replied that the agency has previously acted against discrimination, but recognized the need for network operators to control service and ensure "they have opportunities to offer differentiated products." But Internet phone service company Vonage Holdings Corp. and others like Amazon.com worry their Internet applications could be blocked unless they pay for dedicated service. "We're not looking for a free ride, but that downstream injection of content be offered on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms," said Paul Misener, vice president for global public policy at Amazon.com. In Hollywood, streaming of full-length movies and television shows via the Internet has been slow in coming. Content delivery from Web sites like Movielink and CinemaNow has for the most part been confined to downloads. But increasingly television networks and movie studios want to use the Web to reach consumers directly. "If America is to enjoy the ever-expanding Internet, providers have to be able to manage their networks according to the needs of customers," said BellSouth Chief Executive Duane Ackerman. "But let me be clear, managing the networks is not about controlling where people go on the Internet." Some consumer groups questioned whether the carriers would give their own services priority over competitors. "My concern is they would say 'well you know we only have enough bandwidth to provide that quality of service for our service'," said Gigi Sohn, president of Public Knowledge. The FCC last year attached network neutrality conditions to Verizon's acquisition of MCI and the deal that formed AT&T. It required them to provide consumers unfettered Internet access and to run any Internet-based applications for two years. Lawmakers are considering etching those principles into law and giving the FCC enforcement power. But, some in Congress and at the FCC question if there is a problem to be solved. "There is a big difference between a very important issue that needs discussion and a problem," Republican FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate said. One of the two Democrats on the FCC, Jonathan Adelstein, said network neutrality could be resolved with more bandwidth. "You don't need to worry about priority access if you've got 100 megabits going to the home," he said. "Hopefully as we get more capacity those kinds of questions become much less significant."
By Jeremy Pelofsky and Robert MacMillan
theglobalchinese
New Home Sales, Median Prices Fall in Feb. Yahoo! NEWS
New home sales fell by the biggest amount in almost nine years in February while home prices declined for a fourth straight month, raising concerns that the once high-flying housing market could be in for a rougher-than-expected landing. The Commerce Department reported Friday that sales of new single-family homes dropped by 10.5 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 1.08 million homes. It was the second straight monthly decline, following a 5.3 percent fall in January, and marked the biggest one-month drop since April 1997. The slowdown in sales further depressed home prices with the median price for new homes sold in February falling to $230,400, 1.6 percent below the January level. It marked the fourth straight month that the median, or midpoint for home prices, had fallen since hitting an all-time high of $243,900 in October. Analysts, who had been forecasting a much more moderate drop of around 2 percent in February sales, said the big decline and downward revisions to sales activity in the previous three months could be signaling that housing will slow more this year than had been expected. "The new home market looks like it is starting to stagger," said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisers, a Pennsylvania forecasting firm. "Bubbles do burst, they really do." A crash in home prices is seen as one of the biggest threats to economic growth. Some analysts are worried that five straight years of record home sales, fueled by the lowest mortgage rates in a generation, spurred a speculative fever in housing similar to the forces that created a bubble in stock prices in the late 1990s. The bursting of the stock market bubble in early 2000 wiped out $7 trillion in paper wealth and contributed to pushing the country into a recession in 2001. With mortgage rates being pushed higher as the Federal Reserve raises rates to fight inflation, the worry is that home sales will slow further and put more pressure on prices. In addition, homeowners who stretched to buy homes with adjustable rate mortgages could be forced into foreclosures if they cannot meet the higher monthly payments as their mortgage rates readjust. "The housing market is fading fast and the prospect is it will weaken further as rates move higher," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. But other analysts said they believed the February decline overstated the weakness. They noted a report on Thursday showed that sales of previously owned homes actually rose by 5.2 percent last month, although that gain came after five straight declines in existing home sales. David Seiders, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, said he still believed that sales of new homes will post a moderate decline of around 8 percent this year with home price gains slowing from double-digit increases of around 12 percent to about half that level. He said that some of the hottest sales markets in areas such as California, Nevada, Arizona and California could see a bigger slowdown because a larger percentage of that sales activity has been driven by investors who might start dumping houses back on the market. "If it pans out like we think it will, we will have a moderate slowdown and not a housing collapse," Seiders said. Sales of new homes have fallen in four of the past five months with the sales rate of 1.08 million units in February the slowest pace since May 2003. The slowdown in sales pushed the inventory of unsold homes up to a record of 548,000 homes at the end of February. At the February sales pace, it would take 6.3 months to sell all of the homes on the market, up from 5.3 months in January. Analysts believe that the growing backlog of unsold homes will add to downward pressure on prices in the months ahead. By sector of the country, sales were down by the largest amount last month in the West, a drop of 29.4 percent in February. Sales fell 6.4 percent in the South but they rose 12.7 percent in the Northeast and 5.2 percent in the Midwest. In other economic news, the Commerce Department reported that orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket manufactured goods rose by 2.6 percent last month, the biggest gain since November. The strength reflected a 52.5 percent surge in demand for commercial aircraft, which rebounded following a big drop in January. Outside of the volatile transportation sector, orders actually fell by 1.3 percent, but economists said the underlying trend for manufacturing remained strong.
On the Net: Housing sales: http://www.census.gov/newhomesales
Durable goods: http://www.census.gov/m3
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer
theglobalchinese
Wal-Mart's Organics Could Shake Up Retail Yahoo! NEWS
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is throwing its weight behind organic products, a move that experts say could have the same lasting effect on environmental practices that Wal-Mart has had on prices by forcing suppliers and competitors to keep up. Putting new items on the shelf this year, from organic cotton baby clothes to ocean fish caught in ways that don't harm the environment, is part of a broader green policy launched last year to meet consumer demand, cut costs for things like energy and packaging and burnish a battered reputation. Organic products are one lure for the more affluent shoppers Wal-Mart is trying to woo away from rivals like Target Corp., said Alice Peterson, president of Chicago-based consultancy Syrus Global. A new Supercenter that opened this week in the Dallas suburb of Plano features over 400 organic foods as part of an experiment to see what kinds of products and interior decor can grab the interest of upscale shoppers. "Like many big companies, they have figured out it is just good marketing and good reputation building to be in favor of things that Americans are increasingly interested in," Peterson said. Wal-Mart's Lee Scott is not the first chief executive to advocate sustainability, a term for the corporate ethos of doing business in a way that benefits the environment. Industrial giant General Electric Co., for example, last year launched a program called "Ecomagination" to bring green technologies like wind power to market. What makes Wal-Mart's efforts unique, sustainability experts say, is the retailer's sheer size and the power that gives it in relations with suppliers. Wal-Mart works closely with suppliers to shape their goods, if they want them on the shelves of Wal-Mart's nearly 4,000 U.S. stores and over 2,200 internationally. "They have huge potential because it's not just Wal-Mart we're talking about, it's their entire supply chain," said Jeff Erikson, U.S. director of London-based consultancy and research group SustainAbility. The group says it does not do any consulting work for Wal-Mart. Erikson said Wal-Mart could bring the same pressure it has exerted over the years on prices and apply that to pushing manufacturers and competitors to adopt more sustainable business practices and larger organic offerings. "We love to see companies like Wal-Mart taking a big step and making pronouncements as they have, because their tentacles are so large," Erikson said. Wal-Mart plans to double its organic grocery offerings in the next month and continue looking for more products to offer in areas such as grocery, apparel, paper and electronics. Stephen Quinn, vice president of marketing, told an analysts' conference this month that Wal-Mart would have 400 organic food items in stores this summer "at the Wal-Mart price." Some Wal-Mart critics call the effort just a public relations job. But others say Wal-Mart could make a real difference if the retailer brings a critical mass of organic products to market and pushes enough suppliers to adopt green practices. Sierra Club executive director Carl Pope, who is a board member of the union-backed group Wal-Mart Watch that criticizes the retailer, said it is too soon to tell if Wal-Mart will deliver but that the impact could be good for the environment. "I think the direction they've said is a positive direction. The question is, `Are they are going to go there strongly enough?'" Pope said. Some of the new items will be seafood caught in the wild. Wal-Mart last month announced a plan to have all its wild-caught fish, which accounts for about a third of seafood sales, certified by the Marine Stewardship Council as caught in a sustainable way. The London-based MSC, founded in 1997 as a venture of the conservation group World Wildlife Fund and global consumer products company Unilever, issues the certificates to let consumers know which fisheries avoid overfishing and use methods that don't damage the ocean environment. Sustainability experts say what makes this program interesting is that Wal-Mart will work with its suppliers to get more fisheries around the globe certified by MSC, instead of just buying up the existing stock of certified fish. Wal-Mart says this means there will be more sustainable fish that will also be available to Wal-Mart's competitors, such as Whole Foods Market, which already sells about 18 MSC certified items, according to the MSC Web site. Wal-Mart plans to offer between 200 and 250 items. The way Wal-Mart hatched the fish plan is typical of how it operates. Peter Redmond, vice president and divisional merchandise manager in charge of deli and seafood, said he conceived the idea after meeting MSC board chairman Will Martin last fall. Wal-Mart and MSC worked out details and then Wal-Mart called in its 25 to 30 fish wholesalers in January to tell them it was switching to MSC certified seafood. Wal-Mart developed a plan to work with its suppliers to encourage fisheries to adopt MSC practices. The plan includes barring its suppliers from switching fisheries in the first year to 18 months, giving the suppliers more reason to promote the changes. "We don't want to walk away from a fishery just because it is in fairly poor shape or poor shape," Redmond said. "We want to try and recover that (non-certified) fishery to where it becomes a sustainable fishery. Our point being that if we just go for sustainable fisheries, it won't be enough at the end of the day unless we recover a lot of these that are in trouble now," he added. The term fishery refers to a particular species of fish and the fleet that harvests them. Redmond said about 60 percent of the fisheries that Wal-Mart buys from now can be brought up to MSC standards within a year or two, and the remainder may need three to five years to change. Redmond says the decision to go with sustainable fish came after Lee Scott launched the environmental policy last fall and fits Scott's maxim of "doing well by doing good". "The environmental piece is a company (policy) plank. Secondly and probably the main reason is, when I look at seafood now and how many dollars it does now and how many dollars it's going to do in four years, I'm extremely concerned that that product is simply not going to be there." "So we have to take the position that if I want to have hake five or six years from now, we as a company have to get involved and do something because I don't think it'll be there for us otherwise," Redmond said.
By MARCUS KABEL, Associated Press Writer
theglobalchinese
Sen. John Kerry Visits iRobot Yahoo! NEWS
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., will meet the robots that are protecting U.S. troops when he visits iRobot (NASDAQ:IRBT) on Monday, March 27. While at iRobot, Kerry will also address the employees about what it means to have industry leader iRobot base its headquarters in Burlington, Mass., and discuss the impact of the emerging robot market on the local economy. Some of the robots Kerry will see include the iRobot PackBot® Tactical Mobile Robots that have been credited with saving scores of soldiers lives, the latest iRobot Scooba™ Floor Washing Robot and REDOWL, a sniper detection payload prototype developed in conjunction with The Photonics Center at Boston University. iRobot is a provider of behavior based robots. Currently, more than 300 iRobot PackBot robots are helping protect U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and more than 1.5 million iRobot Roomba® Vacuuming Robots have been sold since its introduction in 2002.
theglobalchinese
Kerry Demands FEMA Award Gulf Coast Contracts to Small Businesses Yahoo! NEWS
Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.) is calling on the Bush Administration to fulfill its commitment to award $1.5 billion in federal contracts to small businesses for cleaning up and rebuilding the Gulf Coast areas devastated by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. After the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) awarded several no-bid contracts to firms with close ties to the White House, Kerry raised concerns that small businesses were left out and the Administration promised to re-compete the contracts. However, at a November 8, 2005, Committee hearing on Katrina, Gregory Rothwell, chief procurement officer for the Department of Homeland Security, said the large no-bid contracts would not be re-competed immediately but that FEMA would award 15 contracts worth $1.5 billion to small, local and small disadvantaged businesses by February 2006. As of today, those contracts still have not been awarded. "Hundreds of local and small businesses have applied for these contracts, but after five months of empty promises the Bush Administration's continued incompetence, mismanagement and delay is hanging Gulf Coast businesses out to dry," said Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Ranking Democrat on the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship. "The Administration is letting red tape and excuses hold up real recovery for the Gulf Coast." Also, the Administration has failed to reopen the competition for the no-bid contracts awarded to the four big contractors with White House connections, which it promised to do six months ago. In a letter to FEMA's Acting Director David Paulison, Kerry suggested FEMA take the following actions immediately to ensure small business participation in rebuilding the Gulf Coast and helping to rejuvenate the economy: Award the 15 prime contracts of approximately $100 million each to small businesses; Re-compete the $1.5 billion in no-bid contracts awarded to the "big four" contractors and require a substantial small business subcontracting plan; and Hold prime contractors accountable for failing to meet their subcontracting goals by implementing and strongly enforcing a policy which includes the use of liquidated damages. In addition, Kerry wrote, "As billions of dollars flow into the region for debris removal and reconstruction, small and local businesses must receive a greater share of contract awards and dollars. We cannot allow administrative delays to continue to be a barrier to small business development in the region. Excuses don't help small businesses make payroll."
To read the letter Kerry sent to FEMA, please visit: http://sbc.senate.gov/democrat/lettersout/...ettertoFEMA.pdf.
http://www.usnewswire.com/
theglobalchinese
Personal Bankruptcy Filings Up 30 Pct. Yahoo! NEWS
Personal bankruptcies soared 30 percent to a record high last year, surpassing 2 million for the first time, as financially strained people rushed to file before new restrictions took effect Oct. 17. Bankruptcy petitions filed in federal courts totaled 2,039,214 in 2005, up from 1,563,145 in 2004, according to data released Friday by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. A new law, which brought the most comprehensive revision of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in a quarter-century, made it more difficult to erase credit card and other debts in bankruptcy. Prior to its enactment, the number of bankruptcy filings had been fairly stable. "It is ironic that, at least in the short term, a law Congress hoped would reduce bankruptcies instead caused the largest upward spike in history," said Samuel Gerdano, executive director of the American Bankruptcy Institute, an organization of bankruptcy judges, lawyers and other experts. By contrast, he said, personal bankruptcy filings have fallen sharply so far this year under the impetus of the more stringent law. The law bars those with above-average income from Chapter 7 — where debts can be wiped out entirely — except under special circumstances. Those deemed by a new "means test" to have at least $100 a month left over after paying certain debts and expenses must file instead a 5-year repayment plan under the more restrictive Chapter 13. The new figures showed that last year there were 1,631,011 personal bankruptcy filings under Chapter 7, up from 1,117,766 in 2004. Chapter 13 filings declined to 407,322 from 444,428. In the final quarter of the year, which included the two weeks preceding the Oct. 17 deadline, filings under Chapter 7 ballooned to 560,654 from 254,518 in the October-December period of 2004. Chapter 13 filings fell to 93,714 from 109,116. A group representing bankruptcy attorneys has contended, in a report released last month, that the law has failed to stop abuses and has stymied people who have legitimate reasons to file for bankruptcy. The report by the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys was based on an analysis of 61,335 people who had gone to credit counseling agencies, the required first step under the new law before filing bankruptcy. Of the 61,335, 97 percent were unable to repay any debts and 79 percent had gotten into financial trouble because of job loss, huge medical expenses or the death of a spouse, the report said. Passage of the new bankruptcy law came after eight years of strenuous efforts by congressional backers, banks and credit card companies. Supporters said the new provisions were needed to curb abuses of the bankruptcy system. Opponents said the changes would be especially hard on low-income working people, single mothers, minorities and the elderly and would remove a safety net for those who have lost their jobs or face mounting medical bills.
On the Net: Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts: http://www.uscourts.gov
theglobalchinese
IKEA billionaire founder proud to be frugal at 80 Yahoo! NEWS
IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad, ranked 4th richest man in the world, drives a 15-year-old car and always flies economy class, in part to inspire his 90,000 employees worldwide to see the virtue of frugality. The billionaire Swede, who turns 80 on March 30, explained his legendary habits during a rare television interview in Switzerland, his adoptive home for nearly 30 years. His fortune was recently estimated at $28 billion by Forbes magazine -- trailing only Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, U.S. investor Warren Buffett and Mexican industrialist Carlos Slim. "People say I am cheap and I don't mind if they do. But I am very proud to follow the rules of our company," Kamprad told French-language Swiss Broadcasting Corporation. Asked to confirm he drove an old Volvo, he said: "She is nearly new, just 15 years old, or something like that." Interviewer Darius Rochebin teased that Ikea employees were always told to write on both sides of the paper. "Why not? If there is such a thing as good leadership, it is to give a good example. I have to do so for all the Ikea employees," Kamprad retorted. "Everything we earn we need as a reserve. We have to still develop the IKEA group. We need many billions of Swiss francs (dollars) to take on China or Russia," he added. Ikea is the world's biggest furniture retailer, with 202 stores in 32 countries. Known for its inexpensive self-assembly furniture, the family-owned business claims its hefty catalog is the most widely read publication after the Bible.

SMALL-TOWN SWEDE
After flirting with neo-Nazism after World War Two -- for which he has apologized -- the small-town Swede set up shop in his garden shed, selling watches, pens and Christmas cards. "I bought seeds for the garden and had great success with it, going around to all the houses in my village. After that year I could buy myself my first bicycle," Kamprad recalled. When Sweden's Social Democrat government launched the "Million Homes Project" in the 1950s, he saw an opportunity and got into the furniture business. He stumbled upon the "flat-pack" idea in 1956 when an employee took the legs off a table to fit it into a customer's car. It saves a fortune in transport, storage and sales space. "Our idea is to serve everybody, including people with little money. We have to keep costs down," he said. His home in the Swiss village of Epalinges near Lausanne above scenic Lake Geneva is mainly decorated with Ikea furniture, apart from a few family pieces. In keeping with Swedish tradition, Kamprad said he prepares and brings glogg, or hot wine, to "good neighbors" at Christmas along with his three sons. Last week he made a donation of 500,000 swiss francs ($379,900) to the Lausanne cantonal art school, where his son studied. "I'm not afraid of turning 80 and I have lots of things to do. I don't have time for dying," Kamprad said. ($1=1.316 Swiss Franc)
By Stephanie Nebehay
theglobalchinese
Next Big Quake? Maybe East of Bay Area Yahoo! NEWS
New cracks appear in Elke DeMuynck's ceiling every few weeks, zigzagging across her living room, creeping toward the fireplace, veering down the wall. Month after month, year after year, she patches, paints and waits. "It definitely lets you know your house is constantly shifting," DeMuynck said. So do the gate outside that swings uselessly 2 1/2 inches from its latch, the strange bulges in the street and the geology students who make pilgrimages to her cul-de-sac. DeMuynck could throw her paint brush from her front stoop and hit the Hayward Fault, which geologists consider the most dangerous in the San Francisco Bay Area, if not the nation. Like others who live here, she gets by on a blend of denial, hope and humor. It's the geologists, emergency planners and historians who seem to do most of the worrying, even in this year of heightened earthquake awareness for the 100th anniversary of San Francisco's Great Quake of April 18, 1906. Several faults lurk beneath this region, including the San Andreas Fault on the west side of the Bay area, but geologists say the parallel Hayward on the Bay's east side is the most likely to snap next. "It is locked and loaded and ready to fire at any time," said U.S. Geological Survey seismologist Tom Brocher. The Hayward Fault runs through one of the country's most densely populated areas; experts say 2 million people live close enough to be strongly shaken by a big quake. It slices the earth's crust along a 50-mile swath of suburbia east of San Francisco, from exclusive hilltop manors overlooking the bay to Hayward's humble flatlands. It snakes beneath highway bridges, strip malls, nursing facilities and retirement centers, and it splits the uprights of the football stadium at the University of California, Berkeley. "A lot of these structures are going to come down," said David P. Schwartz, chief of the USGS's Bay Area Earthquake Hazards Project. He spoke with one foot on either side of the fault, marked by a crack that snaked through a parking lot in Hayward's business district. Before San Francisco's Great Quake of 1906, on the San Andreas fault, there was the Great Quake of 1868 on the Hayward, a magnitude 6.9 rumbler that killed five people. Severe quakes have happened on the Hayward Fault every 151 years, give or take 23 years, meaning it is now into the danger zone. Experts forecast the next big one will be in the potentially lethal 6.7 to 7.0 range. The Association of Bay Area Governments estimates it would wipe out some 155,000 housing units, 37,000 in San Francisco alone. The ground on each side of the fault could shift 3 feet, meaning two objects on opposite sides could be abruptly carried a total of 6 feet apart, Schwartz said. The Hayward Fault runs directly beneath Eden Jewelry and Loan, but the men working in the pawn shop shrugged when asked if they fear a quake. "Honestly, it's a non-issue," said Saul Gevertz, 64. The building was renovated about five years ago and now is essentially an enormous steel cage, designed to flex in an earthquake without breaking, said one of the building's co-owners, Darrell Davidson. "I'm not worried-worried. I've thought about it," said Davidson, 47. "I think we're in good shape. I hope to God we are." Nickey Avila acknowledged some alarm when informed that the fractures in the pavement outside his house were caused by the fault. "I'm thinking one day it's going to move, but if I survive it, I'll be able to say I survived one of the biggest quakes of all time," said Avila, 23. The quake could come at any moment. "If it moved while we were walking, it wouldn't surprise me," Schwartz said during a tour of Hayward's misaligned street curbs, warped concrete gutters and abandoned buildings. They include the former Hayward City Hall, deemed too dangerous to occupy because it's right on the fault. The City Hall was built in 1930, during an unusually quake-free period after the Great Quake of 1906 released stress on all faults in the region. A "virtual tour" developed by the USGS shows the Hayward Fault slashing through identifiable structures, like DeMuynck's house, but she is resolved not to worry. "There's dangers all around us, all the time, so if we thought about those dangers all the time, we wouldn't have anything else to think about," said DeMuynck, 62. "We just come home and say, 'The house is still here.' We're OK for another day."
On the Net:
USGS Bay Area Earthquake Hazards Project: http://walrus.wr.usgs.gov/cencal/
Northern California Quake Hazards: http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/
Great Quake Centennial: http://www.1906centennial.org
Shaking Hazard Maps: http://www.abag.ca.gov/bayarea/eqmaps/pickcity.html
By SCOTT LINDLAW, Associated Press Writer
theglobalchinese
Wal-Mart's Organics Could Shake Up Retail Yahoo! NEWS
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is throwing its weight behind organic products, a move that experts say could have the same lasting effect on environmental practices that Wal-Mart has had on prices by forcing suppliers and competitors to keep up. Putting new items on the shelf this year, from organic cotton baby clothes to ocean fish caught in ways that don't harm the environment, is part of a broader green policy launched last year to meet consumer demand, cut costs for things like energy and packaging and burnish a battered reputation. Organic products are one lure for the more affluent shoppers Wal-Mart is trying to woo away from rivals like Target Corp., said Alice Peterson, president of Chicago-based consultancy Syrus Global. A new Supercenter that opened this week in the Dallas suburb of Plano features over 400 organic foods as part of an experiment to see what kinds of products and interior decor can grab the interest of upscale shoppers. "Like many big companies, they have figured out it is just good marketing and good reputation building to be in favor of things that Americans are increasingly interested in," Peterson said. Wal-Mart's Lee Scott is not the first chief executive to advocate sustainability, a term for the corporate ethos of doing business in a way that benefits the environment. Industrial giant General Electric Co., for example, last year launched a program called "Ecomagination" to bring green technologies like wind power to market. What makes Wal-Mart's efforts unique, sustainability experts say, is the retailer's sheer size and the power that gives it in relations with suppliers. Wal-Mart works closely with suppliers to shape their goods, if they want them on the shelves of Wal-Mart's nearly 4,000 U.S. stores and over 2,200 internationally. "They have huge potential because it's not just Wal-Mart we're talking about, it's their entire supply chain," said Jeff Erikson, U.S. director of London-based consultancy and research group SustainAbility. The group says it does not do any consulting work for Wal-Mart. Erikson said Wal-Mart could bring the same pressure it has exerted over the years on prices and apply that to pushing manufacturers and competitors to adopt more sustainable business practices and larger organic offerings. "We love to see companies like Wal-Mart taking a big step and making pronouncements as they have, because their tentacles are so large," Erikson said. Wal-Mart plans to double its organic grocery offerings in the next month and continue looking for more products to offer in areas such as grocery, apparel, paper and electronics. Stephen Quinn, vice president of marketing, told an analysts' conference this month that Wal-Mart would have 400 organic food items in stores this summer "at the Wal-Mart price." Some Wal-Mart critics call the effort just a public relations job. But others say Wal-Mart could make a real difference if the retailer brings a critical mass of organic products to market and pushes enough suppliers to adopt green practices. Sierra Club executive director Carl Pope, who is a board member of the union-backed group Wal-Mart Watch that criticizes the retailer, said it is too soon to tell if Wal-Mart will deliver but that the impact could be good for the environment. "I think the direction they've said is a positive direction. The question is, `Are they are going to go there strongly enough?'" Pope said. Some of the new items will be seafood caught in the wild. Wal-Mart last month announced a plan to have all its wild-caught fish, which accounts for about a third of seafood sales, certified by the Marine Stewardship Council as caught in a sustainable way. The London-based MSC, founded in 1997 as a venture of the conservation group World Wildlife Fund and global consumer products company Unilever, issues the certificates to let consumers know which fisheries avoid overfishing and use methods that don't damage the ocean environment. Sustainability experts say what makes this program interesting is that Wal-Mart will work with its suppliers to get more fisheries around the globe certified by MSC, instead of just buying up the existing stock of certified fish. Wal-Mart says this means there will be more sustainable fish that will also be available to Wal-Mart's competitors, such as Whole Foods Market, which already sells about 18 MSC certified items, according to the MSC Web site. Wal-Mart plans to offer between 200 and 250 items. The way Wal-Mart hatched the fish plan is typical of how it operates. Peter Redmond, vice president and divisional merchandise manager in charge of deli and seafood, said he conceived the idea after meeting MSC board chairman Will Martin last fall. Wal-Mart and MSC worked out details and then Wal-Mart called in its 25 to 30 fish wholesalers in January to tell them it was switching to MSC certified seafood. Wal-Mart developed a plan to work with its suppliers to encourage fisheries to adopt MSC practices. The plan includes barring its suppliers from switching fisheries in the first year to 18 months, giving the suppliers more reason to promote the changes. "We don't want to walk away from a fishery just because it is in fairly poor shape or poor shape," Redmond said. "We want to try and recover that (non-certified) fishery to where it becomes a sustainable fishery. Our point being that if we just go for sustainable fisheries, it won't be enough at the end of the day unless we recover a lot of these that are in trouble now," he added. The term fishery refers to a particular species of fish and the fleet that harvests them. Redmond said about 60 percent of the fisheries that Wal-Mart buys from now can be brought up to MSC standards within a year or two, and the remainder may need three to five years to change. Redmond says the decision to go with sustainable fish came after Lee Scott launched the environmental policy last fall and fits Scott's maxim of "doing well by doing good". "The environmental piece is a company (policy) plank. Secondly and probably the main reason is, when I look at seafood now and how many dollars it does now and how many dollars it's going to do in four years, I'm extremely concerned that that product is simply not going to be there." "So we have to take the position that if I want to have hake five or six years from now, we as a company have to get involved and do something because I don't think it'll be there for us otherwise," Redmond said.
By MARCUS KABEL, Associated Press Writer
Snuffysmith
March 27, 2006
Vague Law and Hard Lobbying Add Up to Billions for Big Oil
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
WASHINGTON, March 26 — It was after midnight and every lawmaker in the committee room wanted to go home, but there was still time to sweeten a deal encouraging oil and gas companies to drill in the Gulf of Mexico.

"There is no cost," declared Representative Joe L. Barton, a Texas Republican who was presiding over Congressional negotiations on the sprawling energy bill last July. An obscure provision on new drilling incentives was "so noncontroversial," he added, that senior House and Senate negotiators had not even discussed it.

Mr. Barton's claim had a long history. For more than a decade, lawmakers and administration officials, both Republicans and Democrats, have promised there would be no cost to taxpayers for a program allowing companies to avoid paying the government royalties on oil and gas produced in publicly owned waters in the Gulf.

But last month, the Bush administration confirmed that it expected the government to waive about $7 billion in royalties over the next five years, even though the industry incentive was expressly conceived of for times when energy prices were low. And that number could quadruple to more than $28 billion if a lawsuit filed last week challenging one of the program's remaining restrictions proves successful.

"The big lie about this whole program is that it doesn't cost anything," said Representative Edward J. Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat who tried to block its expansion last July. "Taxpayers are being asked to provide huge subsidies to oil companies to produce oil — it's like subsidizing a fish to swim."

How did a supposedly cost-free incentive become a multibillion-dollar break to an industry making record profits?

The answer is a familiar Washington story of special-interest politics at work: the people who pay the closest attention and make the fewest mistakes are those with the most profit at stake.

It is an account of legislators who passed a law riddled with ambiguities; of crucial errors by midlevel bureaucrats under President Bill Clinton; of $2 billion in inducements from the Bush administration, which was intent on promoting energy production; and of Republican lawmakers who wanted to do even more. At each turn, through shrewd lobbying and litigation, oil and gas companies ended up with bigger incentives than before.

Until last month, hardy anyone noticed — or even knew — the real costs. They were obscured in part by the long gap between the time incentives are offered and when new offshore wells start producing. But lawmakers shrouded the costs with rosy projections. And administration officials consistently declined to tally up the money they were forfeiting.

Most industry executives say that the royalty relief spurred drilling and exploration when prices were relatively low. But the industry is divided about whether it is appropriate to continue the incentives with prices at current levels. Michael Coney, a lawyer for Shell Oil, said, "Under the current environment, we don't need royalty relief."

The program's original architect said he was surprised by what had happened. "The one thing I can tell you is that this is not what we intended," said J. Bennett Johnston, a former Democratic senator from Louisiana who had pushed for the original incentives that Congress passed in 1995.

Mr. Johnston conceded that he was confused by his own law. "I got out the language a few days ago," he said in a recent interview. "I had it out just long enough to know that it's got a lot of very obscure language."

A Subsidy of Disputed Need

Things looked bleak for oil and gas companies in 1995, especially for those along the Gulf Coast.

Energy prices had been so low for so long that investment had dried up. With crude oil selling for about $16 a barrel, scores of wildcatters and small exploration companies had gone out of business. Few companies had any stomach for drilling in water thousands of feet deep, and industry leaders like Exxon and Royal Dutch Shell were increasingly focused on opportunities abroad.

"At the time, the Gulf of Mexico was like the Dead Sea," recalled John Northington, then an Energy Department policy adviser and now an industry lobbyist.

Senator Johnston, convinced that the Gulf's vast reservoirs and Louisiana's oil-based economy were being neglected, had argued for years that Congress should offer incentives for deep-water drilling and exploration.

"Failure to invest in the Gulf of Mexico is a lost opportunity for the U.S.," Mr. Johnston pleaded in a letter to other lawmakers. "Those dollars will not move into other domestic development, they will move to Asia, South America, the Middle East or the former Soviet Union."

Working closely with industry executives, he wrote legislation that would allow a company drilling in deep water to escape the standard 12 percent royalty on up to 87.5 million barrels of oil or its equivalent in natural gas. The coastal waters are mostly owned by the federal government, which leases tens of millions of acres in exchange for upfront fees and a share of sales, or royalties.

Mr. Johnston and other supporters argued that the incentives would actually generate money for the government by increasing production and prompting companies to bid higher prices for new leases.

"The provision will result in a minimum net benefit to the Treasury of $200 million by the year 2000," Mr. Johnston declared in November 1995, denouncing what he called "outrageous allegations" that the plan was a giveaway.

He won support from oil-state Democrats, Republicans and the Clinton administration. Hazel O'Leary, the energy secretary at the time, said the assistance would reduce American dependence on foreign oil and "enhance national security."

Representative Robert Livingston of Louisiana, then a rising Republican leader, declared that the inducements would "create thousands of jobs" and "reduce the deficit."

Many budget experts agree that the rosy estimates were misleading. The reason, they say, is that it often takes seven years before a new offshore field begins producing. As a result, almost all the costs of royalty relief would occur outside of Congress's five-year budget timeframe.

Opponents protested that the cost estimates were wrong, that the incentives amounted to corporate welfare and that companies did not need government incentives to invest.

"They are going to the Gulf of Mexico because that's where the oil is," said Representative George Miller, Democrat of California, during a House debate. "What we do here is not going to change that. We are just going to decide whether or not we are going to give away the taxpayers' dollars to a lot of oil companies that do not need it."

Industry executives and lobbyists fanned out across Capitol Hill to shore up support for the program, visiting 150 lawmakers in October 1995. The effort succeeded. A month later, Congress passed Mr. Johnston's bill.

A Missing Escape Clause

To hear lawmakers today, they never intended to waive royalties when energy prices were high.

The 1995 law, according to Republicans and Democrats alike, was supposed to include an escape clause: in any year when average spot prices for oil or gas climbed above certain threshold levels, companies would pay full royalties instead.

"Royalty relief is an effective tool for two things: keeping investment in America during times of super-low prices, and spurring American energy production when massive capital and technological risks would otherwise preclude it," said Representative Richard W. Pombo, Republican of California and chairman of the House Resources Committee. "Absent those criteria, I do not believe any relief should be granted."

But in what administration officials said appeared to have been a mistake, Clinton administration managers omitted the crucial escape clause in all offshore leases signed in 1998 and 1999.

At the time, with oil prices still below $20 a barrel, the mistake seemed harmless. But energy prices have been above the cutoff points since 2002, and Interior Department officials estimate that about one-sixth of production in the Gulf of Mexico is still exempt from royalties.

Walter Cruickshank, a senior official in both the Clinton and Bush administrations, told lawmakers last month that officials writing the lease contracts thought the price thresholds were spelled out in the new regulations, which were completed in 1998. But officials writing the regulations left those details out, preferring to set the precise rules at each new lease sale.

"It seems to have been a massive screw-up," said Mr. Northington, who was then in the Energy Department. No one noticed the error for two years, and no one informed Congress about it until last month.

Five years later, the costs of that lapse were compounded. A group of oil companies, led by Shell, defeated the Bush administration in court. The decision more than doubled the amount of oil and gas that companies could produce without paying royalties.

The case began as a relatively obscure dispute. Shell paid $3.8 million in 1997 for a Gulf lease and soon drilled a successful well. But the Interior Department denied the company royalty relief, saying that Shell had drilled into an older field already producing oil and gas. The decision hinged on undersea geography and the court's interpretation of language in the 1995 law.

A typical field, or geological reservoir, often encompasses two or three separately leased tracts of ocean floor. Interior Department officials insisted that the maximum amount of royalty-free oil and gas was based on each field. Shell and its partners argued that limit applied only to each lease.

Perhaps shrewdly, the oil companies sued the Bush administration in Louisiana, where federal courts previously had sided with the industry in spats with the government.

The fight was not even close. In January 2003, a federal district judge declared that the Interior Department's rules violated the 1995 law. If the department "disagrees with Congress's policy choices," Judge James T. Trimble Jr. wrote, "then such arguments are best addressed to Congress."

What might have been a $2 billion mistake in the Clinton administration suddenly ballooned into a $5 billion headache under Mr. Bush.

But even as the Bush administration was losing in court, it was offering new incentives for the energy industry.

Mr. Bush placed a top priority on expanding oil and gas production as soon as he took office in 2001. Vice President Dick Cheney's task force on energy, warning of a deepening shortfall in domestic energy production, urged the government to "explore opportunities for royalty reduction" and to open areas like the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling.

Gale A. Norton, who stepped down this month as interior secretary, moved quickly to speed up approvals of new drilling permits. Starting in 2001, she offered royalty incentives to shallow-water producers who drilled more than 15,000 feet below the sea bottom.

In January 2004, Ms. Norton made the incentives far more generous by raising the threshold prices. Her decision meant that deep-gas drillers were able to escape royalties in 2005, when prices spiked to record levels, and would probably escape them this year as well.

She also offered to sweeten less-generous contracts the drillers had signed before the regulation was approved.

"These incentives will help ensure we have a reliable supply of natural gas in the future," Ms. Norton proclaimed, predicting that American consumers would save "an estimated $570 million a year" in lower fuel prices.

Ms. Norton's decision was influenced by the industry. The Interior Department had originally proposed a cut-off price for royalty exemptions of $5 per million British thermal units, or B.T.U.'s, of gas. But the Independent Petroleum Association of America, which represents smaller producers, argued that the new incentive would have little value because natural gas prices were already above $5. Ms. Norton set the threshold at $9.34.

Based on administration assumptions about future production and prices, that change could cost the government about $1.9 billion in lost royalties.

"There is no cost rationale," said Shirley J. Neff, an economist at Columbia University and Senator Johnston's top legislative aide in drafting the 1995 royalty law. "It is astounding to me that the administration would so blatantly cave in to the industry's demands." Incentives Keep Growing

Last April, President Bush himself expressed skepticism about giving new incentives to oil and gas drillers. "With oil at $50 a barrel," Mr. Bush remarked, "I don't think energy companies need taxpayer-funded incentives to explore."

But on Aug. 8, Mr. Bush signed a sweeping energy bill that contained $2.6 billion in new tax breaks for oil and gas drillers and a modest expansion of the 10-year-old "royalty relief" program. For the most part, the law locked in incentives that the Interior Department was already offering for another five years. But it included some embellishments, like an extra break on royalties for companies drilling in the deepest waters.

Lee Fuller, vice president of the Independent Petroleum Association of America, said smaller companies wanted to prevent future administrations from cutting back on incentives. "Having a clear, stable royalty policy was of value to independent producers," he said.

And energy companies, whose executives had long contributed campaign funds to Republican candidates, pushed to block any amendments aimed at diluting the benefits.

The push to lock in the royalty inducements came primarily from House Republicans. The only real opposition came from a handful of House Democrats, in a showdown about 1 a.m. on July 25, according to a transcript of the session.

"It is indefensible to be keeping these companies on the government dole when oil and gas prices are so high," charged Representative Markey of Massachusetts, who proposed to strip the royalty provisions. "We might as well be giving tax breaks to Donald Trump and Warren Buffett."

Mr. Barton, the Texas Republican, brushed aside the objections. He reassured lawmakers that the new provisions would not cost taxpayers anything.

When Mr. Markey proposed a more modest change — having Congress prohibit incentives if crude oil prices rose above $40 a barrel — Republicans quickly voted him down again.

"The only reason they waited until after midnight to bring up these issues is that they couldn't stand up in the light of day," Mr. Markey said in a recent interview. "They all expected me to give up because it was so late and I didn't have the votes. But if nothing else, I wanted to get these things on the record."

A Royalty-Free Future?

It is still not clear how much impact the reduced royalties had in encouraging deep-water drilling. While activity in the Gulf has increased since 1995, prices for oil and gas have more than quadrupled over the same period, providing a powerful motivation, experts say.

"It's hard to make a case for royalty relief, especially at these high prices," said Jack Overstreet, owner of an independent oil exploration company in Texas. "But the oil industry is like the farm lobby and will have its hand out at every opportunity."

The size of the subsidies will soar far higher if oil companies win their newest court battle.

In a lawsuit filed March 17, Kerr-McGee Exploration and Production argued that Congress never authorized the government to set price cut-offs for incentives on leases awarded from 1996 through 2000. If the company wins, the Interior Department recently estimated, about three-quarters of oil and gas produced in the Gulf of Mexico will be royalty-free for the next five years.

Mr. Markey and other Democrats recently introduced legislation that would pressure companies to pay full royalties when energy prices are high, regardless of what their leases allow.

But Republican lawmakers and the Bush administration have signaled their opposition.

"These are binding contracts that the government signed with companies," Ms. Norton recently remarked. "I don't think we can change them just because we don't like them."



Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
theglobalchinese
Rice Says Cuts in U.S. Forces in Iraq Are 'Entirely Possible' The New York Times
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said today that significant reductions in American forces in Iraq in the coming year were "entirely possible," apparently seeking to offset any impression that they might not come for years. She also said that Washington would ask Moscow about a Pentagon report that Russians had shared elements of the American invasion plan with officials in Baghdad. "We take very seriously any suggestion that a foreign government may have passed information to the Iraqis prior to the American invasion that might have put our troops in danger," Ms. Rice said on Fox News, while adding that she could not confirm the report. Ms. Rice also welcomed reports that an Afghan man, facing a death sentence for converting to Christianity, was likely to be spared. Ms. Rice's prediction on troop strength in Iraq underscored the message from American military and political leaders that a drawdown there was likely if the country remained on track toward democracy and if Iraqi security forces made further progress toward autonomy. But Ms. Rice's comments, made on three Sunday morning television news programs, may also have been intended to offset the less-upbeat impression left last week when President Bush told a questioner that the decision for complete withdrawal would be up to "future presidents," meaning not before January 2009. Ms. Rice said on the NBC News program "Meet the Press" that If Iraqi troops and police are able to take command of larger swaths of territory, "I think it's entirely probable that we will see a significant drawdown of American forces over the next year." She did not specify whether she meant the calendar year or the coming 12 months. Ms. Rice referred to earlier comments by Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the top American commander in Iraq, who told Congress last fall that reducing American troop levels would begin "taking away an element that fuels the insurgency." In January, an Iraqi member of a joint American-Iraqi committee of which General Casey is a member said troop levels could reach 100,000 by year's end, down from the current 130,000. And on March 19, General Casey said on CNN, "We've already begun a gradual reduction in the coalition presence here." He added, "With an assumption that the political process continues on the track that it's on and we continue to have the success that we're having with the development of the Iraqi security forces, I would expect that process of gradual coalition reductions to continue through 2006 and 2007." Ms. Rice also said Washington would investigate a report that Russians might have leaked portions of the American invasion plan to Iraq and would ask Moscow for an explanation. The information came from Iraqi documents captured by American forces after the invasion. Those documents, Pentagon officials said Friday, indicated that information obtained by a Russian source from the United States Central Command had been passed to Baghdad. While some of the information proved accurate — including that American ground forces coming from Kuwait would pass through the Karbala area — a key fact was wrong. The incursion from Kuwait was not a diversionary force but the main focus of the attack. A Pentagon report on the matter did not explicitly address the possible of disinformation, but said that "such external sources of information were only one of the fog-generators obscuring the minds of Iraq's senior leadership." Ms. Rice appeared to imply that the Kremlin might not have known of any leak to Baghdad. "Let's see what's there and let's talk with the Russian government," she said on "Fox News Sunday." "I would not jump to the conclusion that this — if, indeed, the reports are true, that it had to be Moscow-directed." Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, the ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, was also cautious, noting that "the intelligence world is a very murky world." But if Russia did pass American secrets, he said on Fox News, "it would be very disgusting." Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, said on the CBS News program "Face the Nation" that the United States should review the allegation and consider boycotting this summer's economic summit conference of the Group of 8 big industrialized countries, which is to be hosted by Russia in St. Petersburg. But Stephen J. Hadley, the national security adviser, said that while the United States have some "tough questions" for the Russians, it was also important to remain engaged with them. "This is not the Soviet Union," he said, also on CBS News. "And one of the things you have to think about is, if you want to encourage democracy in Russia, do you want to kick Russia out of all these institutions that are trying to enshrine these values." Russian spokesmen have rejected reports of the leak as "absolutely nonsense," suggesting that the Pentagon might have publicized the reports to increase pressure on Russia to press Iran more actively to curb its nuclear program. Ms. Rice noted that diplomatic consultations regarding Iran were continuing over the weekend among United Nations Security Council members, but suggested that American patience was limited. She also said that if Afghan authorities had in fact canceled the planned execution of the Christian convert, Abdul Rahman, then "it would be a very good step forward." The notion that a government installed with American help could contemplate the death penalty in such a case has provoked outrage in many parts of the world. But Ms. Rice, while welcoming reports that the case against Mr. Rahman was faltering, said outsiders should also judge the Kabul government with patience. It was not yet a fully fledged, modern democracy, she said, but "It's also a far cry from the Taliban." She similarly counseled patience with Iraqi politicians struggling to form a unity government — even though President Bush had said Wednesday that "it's time to get a government in place that can start leading this nation." The Iraqis, Ms. Rice said, were not simply dividing up government posts, but were grappling with "some very important, really existential, issues." She said that if she thought it would help to travel to Baghdad to intervene personally, "I would do it."
By BRIAN KNOWLTON, International Herald Tribune
theglobalchinese
325,000 seals may die in cull Times Online
Prime Minister claims Canada is a propaganda victim and says the killing is necessary.
CANADA stood firm in the face of international protests as it began an annual cull of baby seals over the weekend that will kill up to 325,000 pups. That will be the second-highest number in history. Animal rights activists clashed with the hunters and used boats and helicopters to film the killing. There were calls for a boycott of Canadian goods in the US and Europe, but Stephen Harper, the Canadian Prime Minister, insisted that the hunt on the ice floes of the Canadian Atlantic coast would proceed. He said that Canada was a victim of an international propaganda campaign, and that the slaughter was economically and environmentally justified. The Canadian Government has asserted that the cull is necessary to control seal numbers, saying that the seal population is approaching six million, nearly triple that of the 1970s. The activists have brought in celebrities such as Sir Paul McCartney and his wife, Heather Mills McCartney, to draw attention to what the World Society for the Protection of Animals calls “the largest and cruellest slaughter of marine animal species found anywhere on the planet”. The pictures are graphic. Hunters prefer to use spiked clubs to crush the seals’ skulls, rather than shooting them, which might damage the pelts with bullet holes. But fishermen in the isolated island communities of Quebec and Newfoundland say that the hunt supplements their meagre winter incomes, particularly because cod stocks have dwindled substantially in the past decade. Mark Small, who has been sealing for 40 years, said: “I think the Canadian public realises these are coastal people who live off the sea and depend on the hunt to survive in small communities, where the fish stocks are not there.” The hunt produced the equivalent of £8.3 million in revenue last year. Fishermen sell the pelts, mostly for the fashion industry, in Norway, Russia and China, and their blubber for oil, earning about £34 a seal. They resent the activists, asserting that they have little understanding of their traditions. There have been some ugly clashes. A sealing vessel sped up to a small inflatable boat carrying protesters and the hunters hurled seal guts at them. Rebecca Aldworth, of the Humane Society of the United States, said: “This is standard behaviour out here. The sealers feel that they’re completely above the law.” The pups are born on the ice and nursed for two weeks, after which their mothers abandon them. In the early 1980s protesters achieved international condemnation of the cull with pictures of the youngest pups, with their white fluffy fur, being slaughtered. The pups must now be two to three weeks old and have shed their white coat before they can be killed. Sally Stratford, the widow of Tony Banks, the Labour minister, is leading a campaign to persuade leading British supermarkets to boycott Canadian goods. Ann Widdecombe, MP and former Tory minister, has also written to retailers urging a boycott, and 188 MPs have signed an Early Day Motion to support a boycott. Bloody Business: From Floes To Catwalk
  • As many as 325,000 baby seals will be clubbed or shot dead in the cull off the Atlantic coast of Canada
  • The pups are skinned. Most of the carcasses are discarded. A hunter can kill 3,000 seals during the three-week season
  • Pelts are sold for the equivalent of about £34 each to processing companies
  • Processing takes about a month. The pelts are usually soaked in brine for several weeks, then tanned. Sometimes they are dyed
  • The pelts are then sold on to brokers worldwide
  • Norwegian companies bought nearly seven million pelts last year, Greenland four million, Finland nearly two million
  • The pelts are then sold to companies alleged to include Gucci, which last year marketed an ebony sealskin coat
  • Some seals have their blubber processed into health supplements because of high omega-3 fatty acid content
  • Seal’s penis, ground into a powder, is sold as an aphrodisiac in East Asia
By Tim Reid
theglobalchinese
Social Networking Connects For Businesses InformationWeek
But the value provided by personal connection sites is murky, as is their potential for becoming profitable.
Since 2002, social networking companies have been generating buzz, but not much income. Or if they do, they don't want to talk about it. Despite 24 million members and 9 million unique visitors a month, Friendster's answer to the question "Are you profitable?" is "We're privately held and don't share any financial info." Orkut, Google's social networking service, was launched in January 2002, but has yet to take off. Or if it has, Google doesn't want to talk about it. "We don't disclose the exact number of users, but it's safe to say there are millions of users worldwide," Google spokesperson Sonya Boralv writes in an E-mail. "To date we have been focused on improving the service and user experience and have not monetized the product." The value provided by social networking sites can be vague--helping members stay connected with friends or participate in an online community--or specific--helping members conduct investment research or find a job or a sales lead. Despite their evident ability to find friends, social networking companies have had a hard time connecting with cash. Google, like Yahoo and its Yahoo 360 service, can afford to build its user base before making it pay off, but cash-strapped startups need a real business model. A few appear to have found one. After three years, LinkedIn, a social networking site that caters to business people with both free and fee-based options, has 5 million subscribers. Konstantin Guericke, VP of marketing for the company, believes that number will reach 8 to 10 million by the end of the year. "We're expecting to reach profitability this month," says Guericke. "We already have had some days where we've taken in more money than we spent." That may not sound like much, but Guericke says it's a welcome validation for Web companies that advertising support isn't the only viable business model. "The question is, do people pay for subscription-based services on the Internet?" he says. "Especially in the business arena, if you provide enough value, the answer is yes." Reached via LinkedIn for this article, Karl Jacob, former CEO of anti-spam company Cloudmark, says he loves LinkedIn and finds the ability to share contact networks within an organization particularly useful. For his current company, a startup he describes as being in stealth mode, Jacob hired three people through LinkedIn. "We found people who weren't looking for a job, but were interested in hearing about new opportunities," he explains via E-mail. "Even better, they are the kind of people who might not have returned a call from a recruiter, but when they see an intro from a management-level person who I usually have in my network, they respond." Adrian Scott, CEO and founder of business social networking site Ryze.com, claims his site, with its six employees and 400,000 users, has been profitable for several years. He says Ryze helps people build business relationships that "can lead to significant business." It's harder to say that about social networking sites that peddle personal rather than commercial connections. Scott remains skeptical about the prospects of MySpace despite its supposed 50 million users. "I don’t think it's really clear that MySpace has shown a business model that works," he says. Even so, MySpace, the fifth most popular site on the Internet at the moment after Yahoo, Microsoft, Google, and eBay, appears to be in a good position following News Corporation's purchase of its parent company last year for $580 million. A company spokesperson wasn't immediately available for comment. While some may doubt whether millions of users necessarily translate into income, Jeff Roberto, public relations marketing manager for Friendster, believes consumer-oriented social networking is thriving. "We're doing very well," he says. "We're growing." He insists that social networking is still an area of growth and investor interest, but he also observes that companies like Friendster have to develop services that go beyond connecting friends and cater to interests like media sharing and community-relevant applications. Friendster is doing just that, having recently introduced a personalized radio service and personal media sharing. But the fact that these services are built on technology from other Internet startups--Pandora and Grouper, respectively--suggests that, in the consumer space at least, a viable online business requires more than just connecting. Efforts to provide enterprise business value have been paying off for LinkedIn in part because users are no longer thinking about it as a social networking site; they see it as a search engine. "More and more people are going to LinkedIn to be found," Guericke says. Social networking company Visible Path, which calls itself a "relationship capital management company," is also improving its search capabilities. Earlier in March, it announced a deal with business information broker Hoover's to help salespeople using Visible Path's software find and contact executives listed in the Hoover's database. Contrast the $60 to $2,000 fee LinkedIn users pay to be found with the sense of violation that often accompanies being googled. That's a sentiment presumably evident in Google's short-lived decision to cease communicating with online news organization CNET last year when one of the site's reporters googled Google CEO Eric Schmidt and wrote about her findings. The difference is that users opt in to social networking sites, whereas search engines index online information until site owners opt out. And commercial data brokers collect information regardless of whether those in their databases object. Later this month, LinkedIn plans to extend the ability to search its site to nonusers, furthering its ambitions as a search engine for business people. Beyond recruiting and sales lead generation, Guericke says LinkedIn has become a powerful research tool. He explains, "A typical thing that someone in a hedge fund might do is work their network for people who recently left that company to see what they can glean from that."
By Thomas Claburn
theglobalchinese
Napster.com Grabs The Spotlight Forbes
Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster maintained an "outperform" rating and $6 price target on Napster, expecting the Street to shift its focus from subscriber additions to the company's new Napster.com initiative over the next few months. Napster shares have declined 15% over the last four weeks and, excluding cash, shares are trading at 0.4 times Munster's revenue estimates for calendar 2006. "Clearly, Street sentiment is negative on Napster, given little faith that the company can materially add to its sub base in calendar 2006," said the analyst in a research note Monday. However, "even under the assumption that the Napster music service faces a significant headwind for new sub adds in calendar 2006, the overall business will not be materially impacted. Meanwhile, the company will be beginning to ramp up its Napster.com ad-based business in mid-calendar 2006, which will likely lead to increasing interest from the Street." Munster is currently modeling for Napster music service net subscriber additions of 237,000 in calendar 2006. If he cuts his estimate in half, to 119,000, revenue for 2006 goes down by only 10% and EPS declines by 5%. The premise of the Napster.com initiative is to leverage the brand and take advantage of the two to three million visitors to Napster.com every month through an advertisement-based business model, according to the Piper analyst. In time, Napster believes this new business has the potential to be bigger than the existing music service. "We believe the company is taking the right steps to continue to take advantage of one of the most recognized brands in online music," Munster said. The music downloading industry's dominant player continues to be iTunes from Apple Computer, with more than three-quarters of all audio downloads. Napster, Yahoo!, Microsoft unit MSN and RealNetworks are fighting for the remainder of the pie.
By Maya Roney,
theglobalchinese
Digital River May Pursue 'Strategic' Acquisitions Forbes
Piper Jaffray senior research analyst Safa Rashtchy raised the target price on shares of Digital River to $56 from $45, citing increased fiscal first-quarter guidance and strong mid-quarter progress. Last Tuesday, Digital River raised its first-quarter 2006 guidance to earnings of 48 cents per share on revenue of $77 million, from 40 cents on revenue of $70 million. In a Monday report, Rashtchy said he sees strength across the board in the first quarter, particularly in securities. "The securities vertical has been strong, despite no major viruses, indicating that digital downloads continue to gain share of the overall market." In addition, the company's improvement in its marketing programs may also be driving upside, said the analyst. Going forward, Rashtchy said Digital River is well-positioned to gain further market share and increase its activity with large software publishers. For instance, he believes the company may be able to increase its business with Microsoft and "could potentially distribute Microsoft's One Care security suite and/or Vista operating system." The analyst also expects Digital River to increase its presence in gaming this year. In addition, he sees the company acquiring companies that expand its e-marketing capabilites and enhance its electronic payment processing. Digital River recently sold 4 million shares, giving it an extra $170 million in cash to "aggressively pursue strategic acquisitions," Rashtchy said. The analyst reiterated an "outperform" rating on the stock and raised his 2006 and 2007 earnings-per-share estimates to $1.67 and $1.95, respectively, from $1.55 and $1.84.
Kate DuBose Tomassi,
theglobalchinese
High court to hear landmark eBay patent case Yahoo! NEWS
The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday will hear arguments in a patent case involving online auctioneer eBay Inc. that is part of a wider struggle between the software and pharmaceutical industries over the future of the U.S. patent system. Lawyers for eBay and small e-commerce company MercExchange will square off over whether eBay should be barred from using its popular "Buy it Now" feature, which infringes on two MercExchange patents. The case is being closely watched to see if the high court will scale back the right of patent holders to get an injunction barring infringers from using their technologies. Software companies complain they can be held to ransom by owners of questionable patents while drugmakers oppose any weakening of patent rights, which they say would chill their investment in new medicines. Patent experts said that, depending on how the high court rules, the case could have a profound impact on the way the courts treat intellectual property in the United States. "Any time we talk about altering injunctions we really are talking about altering the fundamental balance of power," said Steve Maebius, a patent lawyer with the firm Foley & Lardner. The arguments come on the heels of a recent court fight by a small patent-holding company seeking an injunction to shut down of Research In Motion Ltd.'s popular BlackBerry wireless e-mail devices. RIM settled the case after a judge made it clear that he would impose an injunction. At issue in the current case is a decision by a federal court of appeals upholding an injunction imposed on eBay at the request of MercExchange. EBay was found to have infringed on two e-commerce patents that MercExchange said were key to eBay's "Buy it Now" feature, which handles fixed-price sales. But a U.S. District Court refused to issue an injunction and awarded MercExchange a small amount of damages instead. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which hears most patent case appeals in the U.S. courts, reversed the decision, citing legal doctrine that gives patent holders the right to an injunction "absent exceptional circumstances." Hopeful the Supreme Court will overturn the doctrine, some of the largest U.S. software companies have filed friend-of-the-court briefs supporting eBay. "Money that could go to productive investments is instead diverted to legal fees and settlement payments. The costs of these practices are less innovation or a slower rate of innovation and higher costs for consumers," a group of computer technology companies wrote in a friend-of-the-court brief. EBay has argued that federal judges should have more discretion to deny an injunction and instead issue a monetary award to the patent holder. But drug makers oppose watering down the rights of patent holders. They say the right to an injunction is at the core of the U.S. intellectual property system, much like a landowner's right to evict trespassers. "Limiting the availability of an injunction after a judge or jury have found a patent to be valid and infringed would severely undermine the patent system and drive up the cost of innovation," the industry trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America said in a friend-of-the-court brief filed with the Supreme Court. The prospect of change also provoked opposition from a group of U.S. inventors, who said in their court brief that large companies want to support intellectual property rights "only for themselves and companies like theirs." Separately from the Supreme Court case, the software industry has pressed a campaign on Capitol Hill to weed out illegitimate patents and rein in the power of patent holders. Lobbying efforts center on legislation being drafted by Rep. Lamar Smith (news, bio, voting record), a Republican from Texas who chairs a key House subcommittee. Smith introduced a patent reform bill last year to modernize and overhaul patent laws and help the Patent and Trademark Office do a better job vetting new patents. Smith's bill originally included a provision making it more difficult to get an injunction, but it was removed from the bill after running into opposition from drugmakers and others. Smith is expected to introduce a similar bill soon and has been trying to find a compromise on several matters that would be acceptable to the software and pharmaceutical industries, lobbyists said. The Supreme Court is expected to issue its ruling in the eBay case in several months.
By Peter Kaplan
theglobalchinese
Online music makes up for CD sales losses: survey Yahoo! NEWS
Online music sales will grow rapidly over the next five years, although traditional music sales will still make up almost two thirds of revenues in 2011, a survey by market researcher Forrester said on Monday. The study forecast a 30 percent decline in European sales of traditional music formats like CDs and DVDs, but music downloads on the web from shops like iTunes Music Store from Apple will fill the gap. Online sales are seen growing more than tenfold to 3.9 billion euros ($4.70 billion) in 2011 from 279 million euros in 2006. The total music sales market will grow to nearly 11 billion euros by 2011, up from less than 9.5 billion euros now, as the new sales channels will boost demand. The survey coincides with the launch of new services aimed at boosting the take-up of online music sales. Mobile technology and services companies mBlox and NewVisions on Monday introduced a mobile phone delivery system which includes the network charges for mobile phone download of music. Until now, these network fees were often several times the price of the 2 euro ($2.41) song itself. "They just pay one, one-off price, of around 1.50 pounds ($2.62)," said U.S. transaction firm mBlox which negotiated wholesale tariffs with carriers like Vodafone. Music publishers Ministry of Sound and V2 will sell the songs straight from their sites for mobile phones, without going through the portal of a mobile carrier. This will be another catalyst that will boost digital music sales, said technology consultant Jolyon Barker at Deloitte. "Digital music sells best when sold in the most appropriate format for the end devices, as shown by the market for ring-tones which are designed specifically for mobile phones and mobile phone networks," Barker said. The shift to online music will mean more sales of single tracks rather than whole albums, Forrester said. British mobile carrier 3 said on Monday it had reached average sales of over 200,000 single music tracks per month. The French parliament passed a law last week that will force online music stores to sell their songs in a copy-protection format which can be used on multiple devices, potentially opening the digital songs market to more competition.
theglobalchinese
Jajah gets funding from Sequoia, starts in US Yahoo! NEWS
A European start-up company that promises to make Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) calls simpler said on Monday it has won funding from Sequoia Capital and will launch services in the United States. The company, Jajah, headquartered in Luxembourg just like its rival Skype, which was taken over for $4.1 billion by eBay, has pledged to make cheap Internet calls as simple as using a search engine. Jajah asks its users to go its Web site and type in the telephone numbers they want to connect. Jajah will call both parties and will route most of the call over the Internet. Only the last mile of the call will be made over the existing phone infrastructure, either mobile or fixed line, and for this the company asks a fee related to charges made for local calls by telecommunications operators. The company will further simplify calls by integrating its service with applications that already have contact information such as e-mail systems, online search engines and contacts databases such as LinkedIn and Plaxo. The first integrations, some of which will be automatic without downloads, will be live within a week. "We will collect customers where the telephone numbers are," said co-founder Roman Scharf. A further improvement of the service will take place in two months time when customers can initiate VoIP calls from their mobile phones. "In May we will bring Jajah to the mobile phone. Consumers will be able to use Jajah from any mobile phone to any destination. We'll solve it by sending a little bit of software to the phone," said co-founder Roman Scharf. Charges vary per call. Jajah says it will charge 0.18 euros (21 U.S. cents) per minute for a mobile to mobile call between the Netherlands and the United States, which will cost a minimum of 0.50 euros for a subscriber on the Dutch Vodafone network. Jajah will charge 0.02 euros for a call between two fixed line phones between the two countries, which is half the price of some of the lowest call rates from existing operators like Tele2 and slightly more expensive than a Skype call from a computer to a normal phone. "We're not the cheapest. Our aim is to get to the normal Internet user. Market research group found that only three out of every 100 Internet users make VoIP calls from their computer. But 95 out of 100 are able to use a search engine. These people may know about VoIP, but it needs to be easier," Scharf said. Jajah is offering its services to consumers in 60 countries. Calls from those 60 countries can be made to any destination in the world. Sequoia is a known for investments in high profile companies such as Google, Cisco Apple Oracle and Yahoo. Scharf declined to say how much Sequoia had invested.
Snuffysmith
Lay Faces a Second Trial, Alone

By Carrie Johnson

HOUSTON, March 27 -- As lawyers for Enron Corp.'s former leaders prepare to start their defense next week, another potentially more dangerous trial looms for founder Kenneth L. Lay.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
theglobalchinese
Interoute takes on Skype with secure VoIP service Yahoo! NEWS
Pan-European network operator Interoute plans to offer a Skype-type free Internet-based voice calls service to corporations, hoping to replicate Skype's success in the business market and expand its core data business. Skype, owned by online auctioneer eBay Inc, has in three years built up a base of around 75 million users who use its software to make free calls from their computer to another computer anywhere in the world. Interoute said on Tuesday its iSiP service, which like Skype uses the Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology, will also allow companies to offer free Internet calls, free national calls and cheaper calls to mobiles, but without any security concerns. Companies are increasingly adopting VoIP, in which a voice call is broken up into data bits and carried over the Internet, to cut communication costs, but have shied from embracing some of the cheaper and popular consumer applications for fear it could expose their networks to hackers and viruses. "iSiP is like Skype without the 'Skypemares'," Interoute's Executive Chairman James Kinsella told Reuters, adding that it could be safely deployed by companies as corporate IT departments would have full control over its use. Companies could use the service to cut communication costs with their staff, customers or suppliers anywhere in the world. Interoute plans to offer iSiP for a flat fee of 1,500 pounds ($2,620) a month to companies, with no limit on the number of users. Kinsella said Interoute, which is controlled by the Swiss-based Sandoz Family Foundation, was hoping to get existing customers to spend more and sign up new business with the new service. Unlike some of the traditional telecoms companies, Interoute said it had no voice revenues to protect and it hoped to use its cheap voice calls service to sign up more corporations for its data services. "For us voice is also data. That's our pitch to customers," said Kinsella, the man who sold Dutch Internet service provider World Online -- another Sandoz investment -- near the market's peak in 2000. Interoute, which posted revenues of 86 million euros in 2005, was taken into administrative receivership by key French creditor and supplier Alcatel and emerged from administration three years ago. The firm runs a 30,000 km (18,750 mile) long network that stretches from New York to Bratislava and Stockholm to southern Italy, connecting 61 cities in 19 countries. The firm counts planemaker Airbus and the Italian military among its roughly 14,000 customers.
By Santosh Menon
theglobalchinese
Google gains search share, widens lead on Yahoo Yahoo! NEWS
Web search leader Google Inc. gained an additional 6 percentage points of the U.S. search market based on total queries, widening its lead last month against Yahoo Inc. and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN, according to data released on Tuesday. Google's share of the search market rose to 42.3 percent in February from 36.3 percent a year earlier, according to data provided by tracking firm ComScore. Searches on Yahoo Internet sites represented 27.6 percent of the market, down from 31.1 percent a year earlier, while queries on MSN fell to 13.5 percent from 16.3 percent. IAC/InterActiveCorp.'s Ask.com was the only other search engine to gain share, to 6 percent of the market from 5.3 percent a year earlier. Industry analysts picked up on the data, citing it as a strong sign for Google in its rivalry for advertising revenue. An overall 11 percent increase in total search queries for the month also bodes well for the sector, they said. "We expect Google's increased market share in search queries, and better monetization of queries to lead to increased share of ad dollars relative to its competitors" in the first half of 2006, Merrill Lynch analysts Justin Post and Lauren Rich Fine wrote in a research note on Tuesday. Merrill Lynch said Google also stood to gain in the coming months as its main competitors "struggle" to improve the technology and experience surrounding their search engines. Google could eventually capture a 70 percent market share, according to RBC Capital Markets analyst Jordan Rohan. "The question really comes down to how long it could take," Rohan wrote in a research report. He rates both Google and Yahoo shares at "outperform." At the same time, Rohan noted that market share data does not always correlate with the ability of companies like Google to generate revenue from Web searches. For example, Rohan noted that Google revenue rose 20 percent for the third quarter, even though the volume of searches on its site were down during the period. Google shares traded 1.4 percent higher on Tuesday at $374.77, Yahoo rose 1.5 percent to $31.93.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2009 Invision Power Services, Inc.