Monday, February 11, 2008

Sovereign's update a shocker

(Fin24) - Yet again we have a trading update that conceals as much as it purports to reveal, this time from chicken producer Sovereign Food Investments.


Bluntly, it says that HEPS for the year to February are expected to be 35%-45% less than last year.


Now, last year HEPS were 207c. If we take the midpoint of the expected decline, or 40%, which is usually what companies really expect, though they understandably give a margin for error, 60% of 207c is 124c. But in the six months to August, HEPS were up from 82c to 102c,  and the second half of the year is usually seasonally the better.


In fact, in the six months to February 2007, HEPS were 124c, 60% of the total. If the first-half momentum had been sustained, as there was every reason to expect from the interim report published last September, which talked of stronger pricing and higher volumes being expected in the second half, we could have looked for  second-half HEPS of 154c, instead of the actual implicit 24c.
 

Eskom's buyback plan in motion

(Fin24) - State-owned power utility Eskom is negotiating to buy electricity from local industrial firms in a bid to solve an energy crisis, Public Enterprises Minister Alec Erwin said on Monday.


Eskom is under pressure to come up with a plan to increase power generation after weeks of rolling blackouts that have darkened millions of homes and forced businesses to shut. Large mining operations ground to a halt for five days last month.


"Large producers who would not normally want to be in electricity are now considering that there may be merit in them going into electricity production and selling to Eskom," Erwin told a media briefing in Cape Town.


Erwin told Reuters government was talking with Sasol, BHP Billiton and Anglo as it sought to boost power capacity.


"Clearly we are interested in that ... given the strictures on energy and the difficulties we have ... This opens an interesting possibility. We are in intensive negotiations now," Erwin said.


President Thabo Mbeki expressed confidence on Friday that the crisis would be solved quickly but did not give details of the
government's plan. There have been calls from media and opposition parties for him to sack several ministers.


Mbeki and other senior officials have blamed the country's booming economy for increasing demand for electricity, while acknowledging that warnings of such a problem went unheeded for years.
 

IMF sees sharp U.S. slowdown

(Reuters) - Economic slowdown in the United States will be significant and will last for some time, the head of the International Monetary Fund said on Monday, calling for a coordinated response to financial turmoil around the world.

While it was unclear how long the crisis facing international banks over subprime losses would last, complex financial links between regions may mean emerging economies could also be hit if the situation worsened, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in a speech.

Uncertainties facing markets and policymakers included a possible worsening of the U.S. housing market, which would hurt consumption, and any more disclosures from European banks on losses resulting from the market turbulence.

"The problem is today we have unknown unknowns," he said at the start of a three-day visit to India.

Last month, the IMF cut its forecast for world growth this year in the face of continued stress in global credit markets, and warned that economic activity could slow even further.

The IMF chief said the main reasons for the revision were the weak growth outlook in the United States and Europe.
 

Auto Insurers Boost Premiums on Injury, Crash Costs

(Bloomberg) -- Allstate Corp. and Progressive Corp. are leading the push by U.S. auto insurers to raise premiums in at least 20 states as the $160 billion industry moves to end two years of price reductions.

Insurers say they need higher prices to counter climbing repair and medical costs. Allstate, ranked second by premiums, said collision bills rose 2.2 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier and payouts for injuries gained 9.3 percent. Safeco Corp., which gets almost half its total premiums from drivers, reported a $19 million loss on auto underwriting.

The rate adjustment may reverse the 20 percent drop in the market values of Allstate and Progressive during the past 12 months, said Bear Stearns Cos. analyst David Small. Earnings should improve this year because insurers have become better at predicting driving records and then setting prices, he said.

``There's a lag before rate increases show up on the income statement,'' said Small, who works in New York. ``But it's real, it's happening, and you'll see it in earnings by the end of the year.''

The largest car insurers include No. 1 State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., which isn't publicly traded, and Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s fourth-ranked Geico Corp. Bear Stearns's Small rates Northbrook, Illinois-based Allstate ``outperform'' with a target of $69 a share, and has a ``peer perform'' rating on Mayfield Village, Ohio-based Progressive.

Allstate fell $1.10, or 2.3 percent, to $46.57 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange trading and Progressive fell 16 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $18.49.

Warren Buffett

``Auto insurance has been surprisingly good for quite awhile. That's turning now,'' said Warren Buffett, the billionaire chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, at an appearance in Toronto this week. ``Frequency of accidents just kept going down for three or four years, which was just amazing, and the severity was not particularly bad. Now both are picking up somewhat.''

Rising prices for new vehicles and expenses for labor and replacement parts contributed to a 45 percent increase in car repair costs during the past decade, according to information compiled by the Highway Loss Data Institute in Arlington, Virginia.

Collision costs rose 2.4 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, according to data compiled by the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America in Des Plaines, Illinois. The cost of auto-body work was up 3.3 percent in 2007, the U.S. Department of Labor reported.
 

Europe's Economy May Stay Sick Longer After Catching U.S. Cold

(Bloomberg) -- Europe's economy has caught the U.S.'s cold, and may be sick longer.

Persistent inflation and budget deficits may prevent policy makers in the 15 nations that share the euro from moving as aggressively as their U.S. counterparts to cut interest rates and taxes. Meanwhile, Europe's labor laws will make it harder for companies to speed a recovery in profits by reducing payrolls.

``A European downturn will take noticeably longer to run its course than the U.S. one,'' Nobel laureate Edmund Phelps, an economics professor at Columbia University in New York, said in an interview.

Next year ``might be a period of `reverse decoupling,' with the U.S. economy enjoying a sharp recovery and the euro-area economy stagnating,'' says Dario Perkins, senior European economist for ABN Amro Holding NV in London. ``A relatively inflexible economy and `sticky' inflation'' will hold Europe back, he says.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said twice last week that there is ``unusually high uncertainty'' about growth amid signs that Europe's resistance to the U.S. slowdown is finally wearing off.

``Risks are on the downside,'' he told reporters in Tokyo on Feb. 9 after a meeting of central bankers and finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrialized nations. The G- 7 officials said the U.S. economy may slow further, eroding global growth, and forecast no end to financial-market turmoil.

``Europe cannot go unscathed from the U.S.'s credit crisis,'' says Phelps.

Slower Growth

December retail sales in the euro region fell the most since 1995 and service industries grew in January at the slowest pace in more than four years. The European Union's statistics office will report Feb. 14 that the economy expanded 0.4 percent in the fourth quarter, half the pace of the previous three months, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

``Euro-zone growth is in trouble, and the risk of recession at some stage should not be underplayed,'' says David Brown, chief European economist at Bear Stearns International in London. He says the region will be ``very lucky'' to expand 1.5 percent this year, which would be the weakest since 2003.

Much of what ails Europe has its origins across the Atlantic. Borrowing costs for consumers and companies jumped as BNP Paribas SA and other European banks ran up losses on investments tied to U.S. mortgages. Exporters such as Heidelberg, Germany-based Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, the world's largest maker of printing machines, blame declines in the dollar and U.S. demand for hurting profits.

Short, Shallow Recession

Economists Jan Hatzius at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Richard Berner of Morgan Stanley say the U.S. economy is already in a recession, and they predict that action by policy makers will ensure it is short and shallow.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues have cut interest rates five times in less than five months by a total of 2.25 percentage points. Congress last week passed an economic-stimulus package worth about $168 billion.

European policy makers have been slower to administer medicine. The ECB has left its benchmark unchanged at 4 percent for eight months as inflation accelerated to the highest level in 14 years and workers sought more pay in response.

While Trichet last week signaled that he's open to cutting interest rates for the first time in almost five years, he also said he doesn't anticipate inflation will moderate until the second half of the year. Consequently, while investors increased bets on rate cuts last week, they don't expect the ECB to start easing credit before the second quarter.

Delayed Response

Trichet's ``somewhat delayed and gradual policy response'' means the euro-area economy will lag behind the U.S., growing just 1.4 percent this year and 1.6 percent in 2009, compared with 1.9 percent and 3 percent for the U.S., says Janet Henry, chief European economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in London.

Few economists yet anticipate a recession in Europe. Potential housing busts are limited to a few countries, unemployment is at a record low and demand from emerging markets offsets a decline in trade with the U.S.

Inflation still may not retreat fast enough for the ECB to continue cutting as the Fed has. Price pressures persist longer in Europe than in the U.S. for several reasons. Competition among businesses is weaker, and employers have less flexibility on wages because of regulations that set minimum levels or tie worker pay to past inflation rates. German unions are still seeking above-inflation pay agreements.
 

Societe Generale Plans Offer to Raise EU5.5 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- Societe Generale SA plans to raise 5.5 billion euros ($8 billion) by selling stock at a lower price than analysts estimated to replenish capital after the worst trading loss in banking history.

France's second-biggest bank will sell shares in a rights offer at 47.50 euros each, or 39 percent less than the Feb. 8 closing price, according to a statement today. Analysts had expected a discount of as much as 30 percent. Existing shareholders can buy one share for every four held.

Societe Generale fell as much as 6.3 percent in Paris trading to 72.83 euros. The offer comes less than three weeks after the bank said bets by Jerome Kerviel had led to a 4.9 billion-euro trading loss. Societe Generale said today that net income last year fell to 947 million euros from 5.2 billion euros in 2006.

``This rights issue is a matter of life or death,'' said Pierre Flabbee, an analyst at Kepler Equities in Paris, who has a ``reduce'' rating on the stock. The discount ``doesn't show great confidence in selling the shares,'' he said.

Societe Generale fell 2.60 euros, or 3.4 percent, to 75.12 euros in Paris trading as of 12:50 a.m. The shares have declined 24 percent this year, giving the company a market value of 35 billion euros.

The Paris-based bank said the rights offer will increase its Tier 1 capital ratio, a measure of its ability to cover unexpected losses, from 6.6 percent at the end of December to 8 percent. It will also use the cash for ``sustained and balanced growth,'' maintaining lending in France and expanding in Russia, Eastern and Central Europe, the Mediterranean, India and Brazil.

Earnings Fall

The bank announced the trading loss and 2.05 billion euros of writedowns linked to risky U.S. mortgages on Jan. 24, the same day it estimated that 2007 profit would be between 600 million and 800 million euros. It raised that forecast today after lifting its debt valuation.

Operating income, including the losses that Societe Generale blames on Kerviel, fell to 1.8 billion euros from 8 billion euros in 2006. Today's figures aren't audited. Full results will be announced Feb. 21.

``The net profit figure is anecdotal compared with what's at stake,'' said Benoit de Broissia, a fund manager at Richelieu Finance in Paris, which owns Societe Generale shares.

Societe Generale said the corporate and investment banking units lost 2.22 billion euros in 2007, down from a 2.34 billion euro profit the previous year. It reported gains from private banking and its French and overseas retail-banking networks.

Bouton Stays

Although Societe Generale Chairman Daniel Bouton offered to resign after the trading loss was announced, the board has twice voted to retain him. The 57-year-old, who has been chairman or chief executive officer since 1993, will only step down once the share sale and trading scandal are resolved, said Axel Pierron, Paris-based senior analyst at Celent, a financial research firm.

``They will wait until there is some return to normalcy,'' he said. ``Finding someone with Bouton's experience isn't easy.''

Societe Generale has become a takeover candidate. BNP Paribas SA, France's largest bank, has said it's considering an offer, while the country's No. 3 lender, Credit Agricole SA, appointed advisers to study a bid, people involved in the talks said. While the government has said it wants Societe Generale to remain French, it has no legal means to block a takeover.

`Staying Independent'

The increase in borrowing costs in the past six months might deter bidders from financing an offer, Pierron said.

``If this had happened a year ago it might have been different, but the lack of liquidity in the market may help Societe Generale stay independent,'' Pierron said. ``With the rights issue, it certainly has the means to stay independent.''

Societe Generale said it's aiming for an improvement in gross operating profit of at least 1 billion euros by 2010 and repeated that it will pay a dividend of 45 percent of net income from 2008 to 2010. The ``key strengths and profit-making capacities remain intact,'' it said.

The rights will trade separately on Euronext during the subscription period from Feb. 21 to Feb. 29. The new shares will carry dividend rights from the start of 2008. Each right is worth 5.9 euros, the bank estimated.

``We're going to participate,'' said Neuflize Banque fund manager Emmanuel Soupre, who owns Societe Generale shares. ``Societe Generale's client portfolio remains of high quality.''

The offering, which is guaranteed by investment banks, is lead managed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Societe Generale's own investment bank. Credit Suisse Group and Merrill Lynch & Co. are co-book runners.