'sale'에 해당되는 글 8건

  1. 2009.03.08 Belgium, BNP Paribas reach Fortis Bank sale deal by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2009.03.04 10 Suprising Sales Items by CEOinIRVINE 2
  3. 2008.12.24 November existing home sales fall by 8.6 percent by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.12.24 Play Clean With Wash Sale Rule by CEOinIRVINE
  5. 2008.12.11 Yahoo investor urges search unit sale to Microsoft by CEOinIRVINE
  6. 2008.12.11 No Relief In China For Boeing, Airbus by CEOinIRVINE
  7. 2008.11.27 New home sales fall to slowest pace since 1991 by CEOinIRVINE
  8. 2008.11.25 Research in Motion shares rise on BlackBerry sales by CEOinIRVINE
The Belgian government reached a fire sale deal Saturday to sell Fortis - the largest bank in Belgium and the Netherlands until the global financial crisis - to France's BNP Paribas.

The deal must be approved by Fortis (other-otc: FORSY.PK - news - people ) Holding shareholders, possibly on April 8 and 9.


The sale of Fortis Bank to Paris-based BNP Paribas (other-otc: BNPQY.PK - news - people ) was first concluded last October at a value of euro14.5 billion ($18.3 billion). But disgruntled shareholders of Fortis Holding won a court ruling saying the government had no right to sell the bank without consulting them.

Under the new deal, BNP Paribas will take a 75 percent stake in Fortis Bank and 25 percent of Fortis' insurance activities in Belgium. The government retains a 25 percent stake in Fortis Bank and Fortis Holding will continue to hold 75 percent of the insurance business.

Fortis shares traded at euro1.04 Friday, valuing the company at only euro2.4 billion ($3 billion).

The deal adds Belgium to BNP Paribas' market. It currently has no presence in the country.

Premier Herman van Rompuy and Finance Minister Didier Reynders concluded negotiations with BNP Paribas chief executive Baudouin Prot early Saturday, several hours after a midnight deadline had passed.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Ten Surprising Sale Items

Lauren Sherman, 03.03.09, 04:00 PM EST

Prices of luxury goods and services are being knocked down to earth with unprecedented discounts.

Trey Shores, 36, recently scored a fantastic deal. The Tokyo-based consultant scooped up an in-season Helmut Lang leather jacket in the city's Ginza district for 50% off the regular price. What was an out-of-reach $2,000 became a more reasonable $1,000 "just like that," says Shores. "I'm quite proud of [it]."

He's certainly not the only consumer benefiting from the financial hardship of retailers. From clothing to travel to cars, companies are being forced to reduce prices at a never-before-seen clip as the global economy continues to shrink.

In Depth: 10 Surprising Sale Items

In the U.S., consumer spending in the fourth quarter of 2008--which accounts for more than two-thirds of domestic economic activity--decreased by 4.3%, according to the Commerce Department. That's the worst decline since the second quarter of 1980. And while retail store sales were up 1% in January 2009 to $344.6 billion when compared with December 2008, and overall consumer spending was up 0.6% during the same period, the government has attributed those increases to massive markdowns on inventory. For many retailers, bargaining with consumers is the only option. In other words, it's a buyer's market.

More Deals, Fewer Restrictions
Kathryn Finney, editor of the the Budget Fashionista, a Web site that caters to fashion-savvy shoppers on a budget, says that right now shoppers are likely to find more deals with fewer restrictions. For example, coupons from department stores typically excluded products from the beauty counter, such as perfume or makeup. Not anymore.

Finney recently used a Saks (nyse: SKS - news - people ) friends and family coupon to buy her favorite Giorgio Armani Hydro Glow foundation at 15% off $57, which knocked the price down to $48.45 (before tax). "I buy most of my makeup at Target, but I splurge on this foundation because of the quality," says Finney. "This is the first time I've ever purchased it at a discount."

And while shoppers are the true winners in this discount war, some retailers are benefiting as well. Take discounted designer goods Web site Bluefly.com. The site is currently featuring several coveted Hermès handbags at up to 40%. You won't find the brand's popular Kelly or Birkin bags, but you will find a gray herringbone twill "Jumping" tote, discounted by 20% to $1,480. Recently, a black pebble leather Bolide was been marked down by 49% from $8,400 to $4,300 (the piece sold out soon thereafter).

Melissa Payner, CEO of Bluefly (nasdaq: BFLY - news - people ), says that exclusive deals like this have kept customers spending. Although Bluefly won't release 2008 full-year and fourth-quarter results until March 11, the company did see significant growth in last year's third quarter. Sales increased by 10% to $19.8 million, and gross profit increased 28% to $7.3 million when comparing both with the third quarter of 2007.

"As we've become more well known, more and more designers have become interested in working with us," says Payner. An elevated brand list combined with an overall consumer desire to get more value for their money has aided Bluefly's success. "We've seen growth in our customer file, e-mail subscribers and the word 'Bluefly' as a Google search term."

'Business' 카테고리의 다른 글

Amazon Kindles Interest In Content  (0) 2009.03.05
Apple adds power to Mac desktop line  (0) 2009.03.04
Who Will Pay For Obama's Plans?  (0) 2009.02.28
U.S. Economy: Bad To Worse  (0) 2009.02.28
US bank regulator expands debt guarantee program  (0) 2009.02.28
Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Sales of existing homes plunged far more than expected last month as buyers recoiled from October's financial wreckage on Wall Street. The median sales price fell by the largest amount on record.

The National Association of Realtors said Tuesday existing home sales fell 8.6 percent to an annual rate of 4.49 million in November, from a downwardly revised pace of 4.91 million in October.

Sales had been expected to fall to a pace of 4.9 million units. according to Thomson Reuters.

The median sales price plunged 13.2 percent in November to $181,300, from $208,000 a year ago. That was the lowest price since February 2004, the biggest year-over-year drop on records going back to 1968 and most likely the biggest drop since the Great Depression.

Lawrence Yun, the normally upbeat chief economist of the Realtors group, found few positive spots in the month's dismal data. But he did note that after prior stock market crashes home sales usually rebounded within a few months.

"We hope that, similarly, the current slowdown in home sales activity is a short-term phenomenon," Yun said, noting that people in the real estate industry are "crossing our fingers" that the market will recover. Sales fell around the country, with the largest drop - of 12 percent - in the Northeast.

Nationally, the Realtors group estimates that sales of distressed properties made up 45 percent of all property sales in November.



Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

You can still book some losses for this year, but be careful not to get them disallowed by the wash sale rule.


row2image

Run, don't walk, into the high yields and safety of municipal bonds. Which ones? Click here for current buys from Marilyn Cohen in Forbes Tax-Advantaged Investor.

Several times in the first half of 2008, it looked like the Federal Reserve and the Treasury just might be able to pull the U.S. economy and financial markets out of the enveloping funk that began to gather in earnest about one year ago as stocks topped out. As we now know, the pain was just beginning and stocks went on a big slide; the Dow Jones Industrial Average now has a virtual lock on finishing 2008 with one of its five worst annual percentage losses in the history of the index, nestled among Depression-era years and the horrendous Panic of 1907.

Add to the steep slide in the overall market a far more precipitous crash in all things related to commodities and emerging markets and you could be forgiven for getting caught still holding a few losers in your portfolio this time of year--maybe a copper stock, a few Chinese stocks, an oil company or fertilizer maker, or perhaps mutual funds or exchange-traded funds that hold some of these hot investments gone cold. You may have had a massive capital gains distribution this month, or are about to have one, and you'd like to reduce your tax liability.

Article Controls

imageemail

imageprint

imagereprint

imagenewsletter

comments (1)

imageshare

Yahoo! Buzz

Now it's time to counter that pain you've felt as an investor with at least a bit of relief as a taxpayer.

Selling out of losing investments inside of a taxable account allows you to realize both short-term and long-term capital losses, which you can use to offset gains for tax purposes. If your losses exceed your realized gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 from ordinary income for the tax year when you booked the loss--and carry forward anything above $3,000 until you die.

But if you want to make sure your losses do some good for you this year, you need to pay attention to something called the "wash sale rule," which disallows a realized loss if you purchase the same, or "substantially identical securities," 30 days before or 30 days after the day you booked the loss.

It is not the end of the world to have a wash sale disallowed: The IRS simply adds back the amount of the disallowed loss to your original basis, in effect lowering your tax burden in whatever year you properly dispose of the investment.

If you were counting on that loss to offset gains you made this year, however, you need to make sure to play by the rules. Section 1091 of the Internal Revenue Code details the wash rule and the IRS lays it all out in Publication 550, available on its Web site.

'Business' 카테고리의 다른 글

November existing home sales fall by 8.6 percent  (0) 2008.12.24
Stocks hold gains despite sluggish housing data  (0) 2008.12.24
Stumbling Giants: EA And Take-Two  (0) 2008.12.24
Life In A Recession  (0) 2008.12.24
Company of the Year: Nasdaq  (0) 2008.12.24
Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

One of Yahoo Inc.'s largest shareholders, Ivory Investment Management LP, is urging the Internet company to pursue a sale of its search unit to Microsoft.

In a letter to the company's board, the investment firm proposed a deal Wednesday in which Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) would acquire Yahoo (nasdaq: YHOO - news - people )'s search engine and Yahoo would retain 80 percent of revenue generated by search queries on its own site.

Ivory said Yahoo could get about $15 billion from Microsoft for the search platform alone, a deal it said would give shareholders a value of $24 to $29 per share, or more than double Yahoo stock's closing share price Tuesday of $12.19.

Yahoo shares rose 62 cents, 5.1 percent, to $12.81 in morning trading Wednesday.

Yahoo Chief Executive Jerry Yang said recently that he would resign, a response to shareholder discontent that brewed after Yahoo rebuffed a $47.5 billion takeover offer from Microsoft for the entire company. Before stepping down, Yang said he was still open to some kind of a deal with Microsoft, after antitrust concerns sank Yahoo's planned advertising partnership with Google Inc. (nasdaq: GOOG - news - people )

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has said a takeover of Yahoo is off the table but has expressed interest in the company's search business.

In the letter Wednesday, Ivory took Yahoo's board to task for not seeking a deal with Microsoft more aggressively and accused the company of ignoring shareholder interests. The firm holds 21.4 million, or about 1.5 percent, of Yahoo's shares.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Boeing and Airbus can give up any hope that Chinese demand might help offset their global sales slump. The country's aviation industry regulator has advised mainland airlines to cancel or postpone aircraft deliveries in 2009, as carriers struggle with a decline in air travel demand. Clamoring for government handouts, the airlines will listen, though they may have a hard time extracting concessions from suppliers.

The Civil Aviation Administration of China released guidelines Wednesday advising airlines to cancel or delay delivery of purchased aircraft in 2009. It also asked airlines to retire old aircraft and said it will not consider any new airline applications until 2010, according to a statement. The regulator encouraged further alliances and consolidation.

The once booming Chinese airline sector is suffering from overcapacity amid a slump in travel that started in the second half of 2008 as the economy began to cool. The airlines also have suffered from a wave of steep fuel-hedging losses, as oil plunged below $50 a barrel from over $140 a barrel during the summer.

Despite the government's encouragement, it is unclear how many aircraft orders can be canceled or postponed. "I don't think too much flexibility will be given to the airlines because Boeing and Airbus are also facing declining orders" in the U.S. and Europe, said Kelvin Lau, Hong Kong-based airline analyst for Daiwa Securities. "If they allow one airline to defer delivery, many more will want to do the same."

But Boeing (nyse: BA - news - people ) might allow more leeway than its archrival Airbus, a unit of EADS (other-otc: EADSY - news - people ), as the U.S. giant is facing difficulty meeting delivery schedules due to a labor strike that ended in November, he added.

Guotai Junan Securities analyst Martin Wang said the regulator's announcement may not have much impact without incentives, and noted that the commercial decisions remain in the airlines' hands. Delivery cancellations can also be expensive, as airlines typically put up in advance up to 30% of the purchase price, Lau said. Wang estimated penalties for contract changes may run 5% to 10% of the contract price.

Chinese airlines are on course to lose big this year. Beijing injected 3 billion yuan ($437.0 million) in November into China Southern Airlines (nyse: ZNH - news - people ), which Wang expects to post a loss of nearly 1 billion yuan ($145.7 million) for 2008. Wang and Lau expect China Eastern Airlines (nyse: CEA - news - people ) to get a similar government aid package--Wang estimates it is on track to post a loss of over 3 billion yuan ($437.0 million) for the year. Air China (other-otc: AIRYY - news - people ) is in the best shape of the three big Chinese airlines and may get by without aid.

'Business' 카테고리의 다른 글

Sector roundup: Office retailers, Apple suppliers  (0) 2008.12.11
Entrepreneurship (Or Lack Thereof) In Millennials  (0) 2008.12.11
It's A Dirty Job, And I Love It!  (0) 2008.12.11
Slimmer Rio Leads The Way  (0) 2008.12.11
Inteligent Design  (0) 2008.12.11
Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l
New home sales fall to slowest pace since 1991

Sales of new homes fell in October to the lowest point in nearly 18 years while the median price of a new home dropped to the lowest level since 2004.

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that new home sales decreased 5.3 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 433,000 homes, the lowest level since January 1991, another period when the country was undergoing a steep housing downturn.

The median price of a new home sold in October fell to $218,000, down 7 percent from a year ago. It was the lowest median sales price since September 2004.

The drop in new home sales was bigger than analysts had expected and left sales 40.1 percent below where they were a year ago.

The bad news on new home sales follows other reports this week that paint a bleak picture of the housing industry.

On Tuesday, a report on home prices and downbeat earnings results from homebuilder D.R. Horton showed further deterioration in the housing market. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index said home prices tumbled a record 16.6 percent during the third quarter from the same period a year ago. Prices are at levels not seen since the first quarter of 2004.

Fort Worth, Tex.-based D.R. Horton Inc. reported a nearly $800 million loss in its fiscal fourth quarter on slower home sales and more than $1 billion in charges.

A report Monday showed sales of existing homes fell a bigger-than-expected 3.1 percent in October to an annual rate of 4.98 million units. The median or midpoint price for existing homes plunged to $183,000, down 11.3 percent from a year ago.

The disappointing performance for both new and existing homes showed that the country is still in the grips of a severe housing downturn.

The problems in housing have sent shockwaves through the entire economy as mounting mortgage foreclosures have cost banks billions of dollars in loan losses, creating the worst financial crisis to hit the country in seven decades.

President-elect Barack Obama has said Congress should begin working on a sizable stimulus program even before he is sworn in on Jan. 20, with the goal of creating 2.5 million jobs over the next two years to keep the economy from falling into a prolonged recession. The housing industry also is appealing for help from the new administration.

The report on new home sales showed sales were down 18 percent in the West and 6 percent in the South.

Sales posted a 22.6 percent increase in the Northeast and were up 6 percent in the Midwest.

The drop in sales pushed the inventory of unsold homes up to 11.1 months, meaning it would take that long to exhaust the stock of unsold homes at the October sales pace.

Builders, who have been slashing production in an effort to get control of inventories, are being faced with soaring mortgage defaults which are dumping more unsold homes on an already glutted market.

The National Association of Home Builders reported last week that its survey of builder confidence fell to an all-time low of 9 in November, down from 14 last month. Index readings higher than 50 indicate positive sentiment about the market. But the trade group's index has drifted below 50 since May 2006 and below 20 since April.

The housing slump already has cost the country 3 million jobs in construction and related industries, and the home builders are urging Congress to help with increased support for the industry.

Tighter lending standards, rising defaults and fear about the housing market's future have sidelined buyers, an absence felt acutely by homebuilders such as Pulte Homes Inc. and Centex Corp.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Shares of Research in Motion Ltd. rose Monday amid a broader market upturn as early indications from analysts showed strong sales for the company's new BlackBerry Storm, a hand-held designed to compete with Apple's iPhone.

JPMorgan analyst Paul Coster, who rates Research in Motion shares "Overweight," said in a note to clients that the Storm has been greeted by "unambiguously strong consumer demand that has outstripped supply."

Launched through Verizon on Friday in time for the holiday season, the Storm is priced at $199 and features a sleek touch-screen rather than the traditional keyboard of most BlackBerries.

Coster noted that MySpace, the social networking site, reported Friday that its software for the new BlackBerry had been downloaded more than 400,000 times in the first week out. He took the numbers as a positive sign that younger customers are interested in using the Storm for social networking, a departure from the BlackBerry's corporate niche.

RBC Capital Markets Mike Abramsky estimated between 100,000 and 120,000 Storm units were sold over the weekend.

"Checks at Verizon retail outlets affirm stores quickly sold out of the BlackBerry Storm after opening Friday morning, given sizable lineups and pent-up demand," Abramsky told investors in a note.

The apparent demand and limited inventory may cause some blowback, however. Both analysts noted that for customers who have to order the Storm, Verizon will only guarantee an early December shipment.

"The limited availability appears to have frustrated some buyers," Abramsky said, warning that the company risks losing out on some sales in the crucial Thanksgiving week.

Research in Motion shares rose $2.65, or 5.9 percent, to $47.45.


Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l