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S/P MAY UPGRADE WAINOCO OIL <WOL> | Standard and Poor's Corp said it may
upgrade Wainoco Oil Corp's 25 mln dlrs of C-rated subordinated
debentures due 1998.
S and P cited the company's proposed offering of two mln
units of common stock and warrants, which would raise 25 mln to
30 mln dlrs that would be used to retire bank debt.
The offering would also result in a significant
strengthening of the company's capital structure, S and P
pointed out. However, the agency said it would also consider
depressed industry conditions and Wainoco's ability to operate
in that environment. Its implied senior debt rating is CCC.
Reuter
|
U.S. BUDGET DIRECTOR WARNS AGAINST TAX INCREASE | The director of the Office of
Management and Budget James Miller warned that a tax increase
would jeapordise real U.S. economic growth.
"It's a bad idea. We don't need more money to balance the
budget. We need to reduce spending and avoid things that would
halt economic expansion," Miller told students at the
University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.
"I think economic growth could be threatened mightily if we
have a tax increase or by the perception that we're giving up
on deficit reduction," he said.
Miller criticised a proposal by House speaker Jim Wright to
put a one pct tax on securities transactions.
He said the tax would probably be ineffective because
people would avoid by holding their portfolios in other
instruments, like real estate, or simply by not trading as
often.
Miller said he doubted this proposal would pass.
"I think it is frankly all but political suicide to
advocate a tax increase unless the president championed it as
well," he said. "And he's not going to do it, in fact he would
veto a tax increase," Miller added.
Reuter
|
BALDRIGE SEES U.S. TRADE GAP DROPPING SOON | Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige
said the U.S. trade deficit should start to decline soon,
possibly in the figures for February or March.
"We could see the trade deficit start down in February or
March," Baldrige said in an appearance before the Senate
Governmental Affairs Committee.
He predicted the trade deficit, which was 170 billion dlrs
in 1986, would decline by 30 to 40 billion dlrs in 1987 and in
1988.
Baldrige said he was making his prediction without having
seen the February trade figures, but he said that the volume of
imports has dropped beginning with the fourth quarter of 1986
and will continue to drop in this quarter.
The eventual turnaround in the monthly trade figures will
reflect the impact of the decline in the dollar, Baldrige said.
Ealier, Treasury Secretary James Baker told the committee
that the trade deficit had levelled off, but Baldrige said he
was more optimistic, adding, "I think we turned the corner in
February."
Reuter
|
NORMAL WORK RESUMES AT NEW ZEALAND PORTS | Normal work has resumed at New
Zealand ports as negotiations between harbour board workers and
employers continue.
Wellington Harbour Board Workers' Union secretary Ross
Wilson told reporters talks late yesterday ended with agreement
to take unresolved issues before an industrial conciliator.
Wilson said the only remaining issue is the length of the
union award. The dispute originally was about wage rates and
the form of industry negotiations.
Cook Strait ferry sailings resumed after Marlborough
Harbour Board workers returned to work this morning, ending
their industrial action a day early.
The Waterside Workers' Federation, which struck for most of
last week and held more than one mln tonnes of shipping in
ports, meets on Monday and Tuesday in conciliation with the
Waterfront Employers' Association.
Union Secretary Sam Jennings said: "We've got two days of
talks. If it's not all cleaned up by then ... I don't know what
will happen."
Reuter
|
VARITY CORP <VAT> 4TH QTR JAN 31 LOSS | Shr loss 13 cts vs loss one ct
Net loss 18,600,000 vs profit 3,300,000
Revs 394.0 mln vs 351.0 mln
YEAR
Shr loss 21 cts vs loss 16 cts
Net loss 23,300,000 vs profit 3,900,000
Revs 1.36 billion vs 1.29 billion
Note: Current yr loss includes reorganization charge of
15.2 mln dlrs vs yr-ago reorganization charge of 17.6 mln dlrs.
Shr after preferred divs.
U.S. dlrs.
Reuter
|
INDIANA FEDERAL <IFSL> 4TH QTR NET | Net 492,000 vs 677,000
Year
Net 2,650,000 vs 2,566,000
NOTE: Company's full name is Indiana Federal Savings and
Loan Association. Per share information not available. Bank
went public on February 11, 1987.
Reuter
|
LEAR-SIEGLER HOLDING TO DIVEST AEROSPACE UNIT | Forstmann Little and Co said Lear
Siegler Holding Corp plans to divest its aerospace group
subsidiary, comprised of the Defense Electronics Group and the
Components Group.
Divestitures had been expected since Lear-Siegler, a
diversified conglomerate, was acquired last December in a 2.1-
billion-dlr-leveraged buyout by the Wall Street firm of
Forstmann Little.
Lear's aerospace group revenues for fiscal 1987 are
expected to be about 700 mln dlrs, said Forstmann.
The Defense Electronics Group designs and manufactures
weapons, management systems, flight control systems, remotely
piloted vehicles and reference and navigation systems, mainly
for military markets.
The Defense Group subsidiaries are Astronics Corp, which is
based in Santa Monica, Calif., and employs 1,076 people;
Instrument and Avionic Systems Corp, based in Grand Rapids,
Mich., and employs 3,479 people; International Corp, based in
Stamford, Conn., and employs 266 people; and Development
Sciences Corp, based in Ontario, Calif., and employs 237
people.
The Components Group manufactures pumps, bearings, and
other industrial components as well as nuclear control drive
rod mechanisms and valves.
The Group's subsidiaries include Power Equipment Corp,
based in Cleveland, which employs 880 people; Energy Products
Corp, based in Santa Ana, Calif., which employs 755 people;
Romek Corp, based in Elyria, Ohio, which employs 262 people;
and Transport Dynamics in Santa Ana, which employs 254 people.
Overall, Lear's Aerospace Group's eight subsidiaries
employs 7,200 people.
Lear Siegler said it plans to retain Management Services
Corp, engaged in aircraft maintenance modification for various
Department of Defense agencies.
Morgan Stanley and Co will act as financial advsiors for
the group's divestitures.
Last month, Lear Siegler said it planned to sell its Smith
and Wesson handgun business, Starcraft Recreational Products
Ltd, the Peerless truck trailer operations, and other units, as
part of its restructuring plans.
Lear apparently will retain its Piper Aircraft unit.
Reuter
|
RUBBERMAID <RBD> COMPLETES ACQUISITIONS | Rubbermaid Inc said it completed
the previously announced acquisitions of Viking Brush Ltd, a
Canadian maker of brushes, brooms and other cleaning aids, and
the Little Tikes' manufacturing licensee in Ireland.
Terms were not disclosed.
The acquisition of the Tikes' licensee is part of the
expansion of Little Tikes in the European toy market.
Reuter
|
KANSAS POWER AND LIGHT <KAN> CHAIRMAN LEAVING | Kansas Power and Light Co said it
will name a successor on or before May 5 to its outgoing
chairman and chief executive officer William Wall.
Wall, who will assume the position of chairman and chief
executive officer at Asbestos Claims Facility, will fill the
positions which have been vacant for several months, the
company said.
Reuter
|
CRYSTAL OIL CO <COR> 4TH QTR LOSS | Oper shr loss 16 cts vs loss 44 cts
Oper net loss 8,926,000 vs loss 14.4 mln
Revs 9,920,000 vs 21.2 mln
Year
Oper shr loss 4.30 dlrs vs loss 2.24 dlrs
Oper net loss 221.8 mln vs loss 53.7 mln
Revs 51.4 mln vs 94.4 mln
Note: Oper net excludes losses from discontinued operations
of 228,000 dlrs vs 4,253,000 dlrs for qtr and 10.4 mln dlrs vs
14.2 mln dlrs for year.
Reuter
|
CHEMFIX TECHNOLOGIES <CFIX> 2ND QTR FEB 28 NET | Shr profit one ct vs loss four cts
Net profit 53,040 vs loss 255,568
Rev 2,252,246 vs 755,605
Six months
Shr profit three cts vs loss eight cts
Net profit 217,884 vs loss 517,538
Rev 4.9 mln vs 1.6 mln
NOTE: Company's full name is Chemfix Technologies Inc.
Reuter
|
FEDERAL-MOGUL CORP <FMO> SETS REGULAR DIVIDEND | Qtly div 40 cts vs 40 cts prior
Pay June 10
Record May 27
Reuter
|
IOWA RESOURCES INC <IOR> DECLARES QTLY DIVIDEND | Qtly div 41 cts vs 41 cts prior
Pay May 1
Record April 8
Reuter
|
EIA SAYS DISTILLATE STOCKS OFF 3.2 MLN BBLS, GASOLINE UP 2.2 MLN, CRUDE UP 7.5 MLN
| |
U.S. HOME RESALES UP IN FEBRUARY, REALTORS SAY | The National Association of Realtors
said sales of previously owned homes rose six pct during
February from January levels to a seasonally adjusted annual
rate of 3.69 mln units.
The realtors' group said the sales rise was apparent across
the country and reflected lower mortgage interest rates as well
as more housing demand.
Actual resales of homes during February totaled 241,000, up
11.6 pct from the January total of 216,000, the association
said.
Reuter
|
EL PASO ELECTRIC <ELPA> TO BUY BACK BONDS | El Paso Electric Co said it plans to
redeem its 40 mln dlrs of 16.35 pct first mortgage bonds of
1991 and 60 mln dlrs of 16.20 pct first mortgage bonds of 2012.
It will buy back at par plus accrued interest the 16.35 pct
issue in May and the 16.20 pct bonds after August one.
El Paso Electric will use proceeds of about 684.4 mln dlrs
from sales and leasebacks, completed in 1986, of its entire
ownership interest in Palo Verde nuclear generating station
Unit 2 to redeem the double-digit debt.
Reuter
|
LOWER U.S. SOYBEAN LOAN IDEA SHARPLY CRITICIZED | U.S. soybean lobbyists and
congressional aides criticized a proposal from a senior
Agriculture Department official that Congress allow the U.S.
soybean loan level to be officially lowered to 4.56 dlrs per
bushel next year.
"I don't know who in Congress would propose that happening.
Politically it would be totally unacceptable," an aide to a
senior farm-state senator said.
USDA undersecretary Daniel Amstutz said this week that
Congress should give USDA authority to keep the soybean loan
at its current effective rate of 4.56 dlrs per bushel rather
than increasing it to its minimum allowed level of 4.77 dlrs.
"I'm convinced that Congress will not go along with this,"
American Soybean Association President Dave Haggard said.
Amstutz told reporters following a senate hearing that if
the soybean loan rate were 4.56 dlrs, USDA could then consider
ways to make U.S. soybeans more competitive.
His comments were seen as possibly indicating what the the
administration's position is in the debate over what should be
done to make soybeans competitive and at the same time protect
soybean farmers' income.
Using soybean specific certificates to further buydown the
loan rate or implementation of a marketing loan have been
pointed to as the most effective ways to get soybean prices
competitive. USDA secretary Richard Lyng, however, continues to
maintain his opposition to a marketing loan, saying such a move
would be too costly.
"There will be alot of other options that will be
considered before Congress looks at that one (the Amstutz
proposal," said Bill O'Conner, aide to Rep. Edward Madigan
(R-Ill), ranking minority leader of the Agriculture Committee.
"Anybody representing large groups of soybean producers
would not be very excited about supporting a lower soybean
loan," O'Conner said.
Congress may very likely look at the soybean loan and
decide that they cannot increase it from its current 5.02 dlr
basic rate, but that there has to be something mandated to
increase soybean's competitiveness, David Graves, aide to Sen.
Thad Cochran (R-Miss) said. Cochran, a staunch supporter of a
soybean marketing loan, would support a soybean loan of 5.02 or
4.77 dlrs with a certificate buydown, Graves said.
Reuter
|
FIDUCIARY TRUST CO IN FIVE-FOR-ONE STOCK SPLIT | <Fiduciary Trust Co International>
said its shareholders at the annual meeting approved a
five-for-one stock split effective May 15, 1987, to holders of
record on April 15, 1987.
The company said the split would increase the number of
authorized common shares from 440,000 to 2,200,000 shares
issued. In addition, the company said it authorized another
800,000 shares, but would not issue them at this time.
The company also changed the stock's par value from 10 dlrs
a share to 2.50 dlrs a share.
It explained it transferred 1,100,000 dlrs from its
undivided profits account to its capital account in order to
raise the new par value from two dlrs, under the five-for-one
split, to 2.50 dlrs.
Reuter
|
MODULAIRE <MODX> BUYS BOISE HOMES PROPERTY | Modulaire Industries said it
acquired the design library and manufacturing rights of
privately-owned Boise Homes for an undisclosed amount of cash.
Boise Homes sold commercial and residential prefabricated
structures, Modulaire said.
Reuter
|
U.S. HOUSE PANEL ADOPTS BILL THAT COULD BAR JAPANESE PRIMARY DEALERS
| |
LITTLE SUPPORT FOR MANDATORY ACREAGE CUTS - LYNG | U.S. Agriculture Secretary Richard
Lyng said he believes proposed legislation calling for
mandatory acreage reductions has little support in Congress and
voiced Reagan administration opposition to it.
"The administration would be very much opposed to that
legislation," he told a Virginia Farm Bureau lunch.
"But fortunately I don't detect a strong interest in that
legislation." He added, "I doubt there will be (enough) support
to get it out."
The controversial bill, supported by Representative Richard
Gephardt, a Missouri Democrat, calls for a national referendum
to be conducted that could result in mandatory unpaid acreage
cuts of up to 35 pct, paid land diversion beyond that level if
necessary and a marketing quota.
Reuter
|
UAL <UAL> UNIT LINKS RESERVATION SERVICE | UAL Inc, which on May 1 becomes Allegis
Corp, said it established a direct communications link between
its Apollo Services reservations system and Budget Rent a Car,
Hilton Hotels and Hilton International Hotels.
Under the new system, all Budget, Hilton and Hilton
International hotel reservations made through Apollo, which is
owned by UAL's Covia Corp, will pass the ARINC system and speed
up time it takes to complete a traveler's reservation, the
company said.
Reuter
|
DANA CORP <DCN> DEBT LOWERED BY S/P | Standard and Poor's Corp said it
downgraded Dana Corp's 900 mln dlrs of debt securities.
Cut were Dana's senior debentures, industrial revenue bonds
and medium-term notes to A-minus from A, and commercial paper
of Dana and its unit Dana Credit Corp to A-2 from A-1.
S and P said Dana's management plans an aggressive stock
repuchase which would result in a significantly more leveraged
capital structure. The combination of higher debt levels and
ongoing stock repurchases, about 12 mln shares in the past two
years financed mainly with debt, bring debt leverage to 48 pct
as of December 31, 1986 from 30 pct the year earlier.
Reuter
|
MINNESOTA POWER <MPL> SELLS SEVEN-YEAR BONDS | Minnesota Power and Light Co is
raising 55 mln dlrs through an offering of first and refunding
mortgage bonds due 1994 with a 7-3/4 pct coupon and par
pricing, said sole manager PaineWebber Inc.
That is 68 basis points more than the yield of comparable
Treasury securities.
Non-callable for five years, the issue is rated A-2 by
Moody's Investors Service Inc and A-plus by Standard and Poor's
Corp.
Reuter
|
LA QUINTA MOTOR INNS INC<LQM>3RD QTR FEB 28 NET | Shr profit 25 cts vs loss nine cts
Net profit 3,433,000 vs loss 1,310,000
Revs 37.1 mln vs 39.0 mln
Nine mths
Shr profit 28 cts vs profit 27 cts
Net profit 3,883,000 vs profit 3,908,000
Revs 133.2 mln vs 132.0 mln
Avg shrs 13.8 mln vs 14.2 mln
Note: Current net includes gain on sale of 31 inns of
7,719,000 dlrs for qtr and 7,975,000 dlrs for nine mths.
Reuter
|
KANSAS CITY SOUTHERN INDUSTRIES SAYS IT EAGER TO PURCHASE SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD
| |
FNMA ANNOUNCES 10 AND 20-YEAR MORTGAGE PRODUCTS | The Federal National Mortgage
Association said it will begin purchasing 10 and 20-year fixed
rate mortgages in addition to 15 and 30 year mortgages.
It said the new intermediate term mortgage purchase
programs are designed to offer home buyers more home financing
flexibility.
Edward J. Pinto, FNMA's Senior Vice President, said
intermediate term mortgages offer "lower interest rates,
substantial interest savings, lower inflation rates and, in
many cases, faster equity build-up" than longer-term mortgages.
Reuter
|
U.S. CHIPMAKERS URGE SANCTIONS AGAINST JAPAN | The Semiconductor Industry
Association urged the U.S. government to impose trade sanctions
against Japan for violating the U.S.-Japan Semiconductor Trade
Agreement.
In a letter to Treasury Secretary James Baker the group
said sanctions should be imposed against Japanese chipmakers as
of April 1 and should continue until the United States is
satisfied that there is full compliance with the agreement.
The group said action by Japan to cut back on semiconductor
exports is not what is required.
"America's interests require that agreements be honored and
that U.S. industries not bear the burden for the persistent
unwillingness or inability of the government of Japan to
deliver on its commitments," the trade group said.
The White House Economic Policy Council is expected to
discuss possible sanctions against Japan at a meeting scheduled
for Thursday.
The trade group said Japan has not lived up to the terms of
the agreement last year which was aimed at ending Japanese
dumping of semiconductors and at opening Japanese markets to
foreign-based manufacturers.
Reuter
|
U.S. LEGISLATION COULD BAR JAPANESE DEALERS | The House Banking Committee approved
legislation to bar foreign securities firms from designation as
primary dealers in U.S. government securities unless the
relevant foreign government allows U.S. securities firms the
same trading rights.
The impact of the proposed legislation would be on three
Japanese securities firms already doing business in the U.S.,
an aide to the sponsor of the provision Rep. Charles Schumer
said. Japan would have six months to open its government
securities markets to U.S. firms before the ban would start.
Other foreign firms would meet the test of reciprocal access.
The legislation was approved as part of a major trade bill,
which the House will consider next month. The bill also has to
be considered by the Senate and signed by the president.
The three Japanese firms are Nomura Securities Co. and
Daiwa Securities Co., which received approval from the U.S.
Federal Reserve Board to serve as primary dealers, and Aubrey
G. Lanston Co., owned by the Industrial Bank of Japan.
Schumer, a New York Democrat, said the Fed would not be
allowed to designate any new firms as primary dealers unless
their government allows reciprocal access to U.S. companies.
Both the House and Senate Banking Committees opposed the Fed
action on the two Japanese firms.
Reuter
|
BOLIVIAN DEBT BUYBACK PLAN GAINS GROUND | Bolivia's proposal to repurchase at a
deep discount the 900 mln dlrs it owes to foreign commercial
banks is likely to be accepted, central bank governor Javier
Nogales Iturri said.
Speaking to reporters at the annual meeting of the
Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) here, Nogales said
Bolivia's bank advisory committee, led by Bank of America, is
seeking permission from creditor banks worldwide to go ahead
with the scheme. More than 50 pct of the banks must give their
approval, and Nogales said he is confident that this threshold
will be reached.
"It's working out very well, and I think we'll get clear
majority," Nogales said.
A senior banker working on the deal also said that banks
are responding positively and said all the legal waivers
necessary could be obtained within two months.
Bolivia halted all payments on its commercial bank debt in
March 1984. Hyperinflation has been curbed and public spending
trimmed, but its debt is still trading as low as 10 cts on the
dollar on the secondary market and many banks have written off
most, if not all, of their loans to the country.
Bankers see little chance for a substantive recovery in
Bolivia's economic fortunes and so are willing to collect what
they can on the loans.
Nogales said Bolivia would offer to buy back the debt at a
market price. He said some banks might want to hold out for a
higher price, but others would see the repurchase offer as a
window of opportunity to cut their losses.
Bolivia intends to pay for the repurchase with aid that
foreign governments, especially the United States and West
Germany, are providing to help finance the eradication of coca
crops. Cocaine, although illegal, is Bolivia's largest export.
The campaign to persuade farmers to grow legal crops
instead of coca would be financed instead using local currency,
Nogales said.
Because the fiscal deficit has been reduced to some four
pct of gross domestic product, money supply could be increased
to pay for the drug-eradication drive without too much of n
impact on inflation, he added.
Nogales said he did not expect Bolivia's debt repurchase to
become a model for other debtors in dire straits. "We're not
seeking a universal solution," he said."
Reuter
|
PDVSA PICKS ARCO-AGIP CONSORTIUM IN COAL VENTURE | Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. chose a
consortium formed by Atlantic Richfield Co <ARC> and Italy's
Agip-Carbone to exploit the coal deposits at Guanare in western
Zulia state, PDVSA president Juan Chacin Guzman said.
Chacin said PDVSA will sign a letter of intent next month
to form a partnership with the consortium, which consists of
Arco's Venezuelan subsidiary ACC Venezuela Inc, and Agip, a
subsidiary of Italy's <Eni>.
He said the consortium, which will own 48 pct of the joint
venture, may be expanded later to include Carboex of Spain.
PDVSA will have controlling interest of 49 pct in Carbozulia.
Reuter
|
S/P DOWNGRADES CHASE, CHEMICAL, IRVING, MANUFACTURERS, MELLON AND SECURITY PACIFIC
| |
ICN <ICN> SAYS KODAK SALE WILL NOT AFFECT R/D | ICN Pharmaceutical Inc said
it did not view Eastman Kodak Co's <EK> decision to sell its
2.3 pct share of ICN's common stock as having any effect on the
status of its drug ribavirin or the previously reported ongoing
development of that drug in the antiviral field.
ICN recently submitted data to the Food and Drug
Administration on studies using its antiviral drug ribavirin
for treating some AIDS-related disorders.
In a statement, ICN also said the sale will not effect its
previously announced plans to seek an acquisition of a major
pharmaceutical company.
ICN also said the planned sale will have no effect on its
long-term research partnership with Kodak and Kodak's continued
funding of the Nucleic Acid Research Institute.
Two years ago Kodak agreed to invest 45 mln dlrs over six
years to form and operate a venture with ICN to explore new
biomedical compounds. It acquired a 2.3 pct stake in ICN as a
result of that agreement.
ICN said Kodak today confirmed to ICN its continuing
confidence in the progress of the joint project.
ICN also said although there were discussions today between
ICN and Kodak regarding a private sale of the shares to ICN, no
decision has been made on this matter.
Reuter
|
RECENT U.S. OIL DEMAND UP 0.1 PCT FROM YEAR AGO | U.S. oil demand as measured by
products supplied rose 0.1 pct in the four weeks ended March 20
to 16.16 mln barrels per day from 16.15 mln in the same period
a year ago, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said.
In its weekly petroleum status report, the Energy
Department agency said distillate demand was off 0.1 pct in the
period to 3.258 mln bpd from 3.260 mln a year earlier.
Gasoline demand averaged 6.72 mln bpd, off 1.2 pct from
6.80 mln last year, while residual fuel demand was 1.38 mln
bpd, off 2.1 pct from 1.41 mln, the EIA said.
Domestic crude oil production was estimated at 8.35 mln
bpd, down 7.8 pct from 9.06 mln a year ago, and gross daily
crude imports (excluding those for the SPR) averaged 3.44 mln
bpd, up 16.3 pct from 2.95 mln, the EIA said.
Refinery crude runs in the four weeks were 11.90 mln bpd,
up 1.4 pct from 11.74 mln a year earlier, it said.
In the first 78 days of the year, refinery runs were up 1.8
pct to an average 12.25 mln bpd from 12.04 mln in the year-ago
period, the EIA said.
Year-to-date demand for all petroleum products averaged
16.32 mln bpd, up 1.8 pct from 16.04 mln in 1986, it said.
So far this year, distillate demand rose 0.1 pct to 3.31
mln bpd from 3.30 mln in 1986, gasoline demand was 6.60 mln
bpd, up 0.1 pct from 6.59 mln, and residual fuel demand fell
0.4 pct to 1.42 mln bpd from 1.43 mln, the EIA said.
Year-to-date domestic crude output was estimated at 8.41
mln bpd, off 7.7 pct from 9.11 mln a year ago, while gross
crude imports averaged 3.96 mln bpd, up 28.1 pct from 3.09 mln,
it said.
Reuter
|
FED APPROVES CHEMICAL BANK ACQUISITION OF TEXAS COMMERCE BANCSHARES
| |
S/P DOWNGRADES SIX U.S. MONEY CENTER BANKS | Standard and Poor's Corp said it
downgraded six U.S. money center bank holding companies,
affecting about 13.3 billion dlrs of debt securities.
They are Chase Manhattan Corp <CMB>, Chemical New York Corp
<CHL>, Irving Bank Corp <V>, Manufacturers Hanover Corp <MHC>,
Mellon Financial Corp <MEL> and Security Pacific Corp <SPC>.
S and P said the action on Chase, Chemical, Irving and
Manufacturers primarily reflected continued vulnerability to
lesser developed countries and median financial performance.
Standard and Poor's said its downgrade of Chemical also
reflected that holding company's acquisition of Texas Commerce
Bancshares <TCB>, which was just now approved by the Federal
Reserve.
For Mellon and Security Pacific, S and P cited higher
non-performing assets and weaker operating earnings.
The rating agency said it completed a review, based on 1986
results, of the largest U.S. bank holding companies. It paid
special attention to reassessing the effect of exposures to
lesser developed countries on the holding companies' earnings
and capital.
"Brazil's unilateral moratorium on debt service payments
underscored the potential for polarization between bankers and
debtor countries," S and P said.
S and P noted that while Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and
Venezuela each face unique economic problems, the lack of
progress toward moderating their debt service burdens has been
disappointing.
However, the agency pointed out that a substantive
improvement in the large banks' financial positions has acted
as a counter-balance to the Latin American debt situation.
Citing increasing financial strength, S and P said it
affirmed the debt ratings of Citicorp <CCI>, Bankers Trust New
York Corp <BT>, Bank of Boston Corp <BKB> and J.P. Morgan and
Co Inc <JPM>.
S and P noted that most U.S. bank holding companies have
what it termed easily realizable capital resources available to
them, such as undervalued real estate, appreciated portfolio
securities and overfunded pension plans.
"Most bank managements appear committed to improving the
quality of their balance sheets," S and P said, noting many now
emphasize long-term strategies over short-term earnings.
Standard and Poor's reduced Chase Manhattan's senior debt
to AA-minus from AA, subordinated debt to A-plus from AA-minus
and preferred stock to A from A-plus. The commercial paper of
the parent and its unit Chase Manhattan Bank of Canada were
affirmed at A-1-plus.
Chase has 3.2 billion dlrs of debt outstanding. It has 6.4
billion dlrs of loans to Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and
Venezuela - one of the highest exposures to lesser developed
countries among U.S. money centers.
Chase's underlying profitability remains at median levels
because of its high expense structure, S and P said.
S and P cut Chemical's and the unit Chemical New York
N.V.'s senior debt to AA-minus from AA and subordinated debt to
A-plus from AA-minus.
About 1.2 billion dlrs of long-term debt was affected.
The agency cited Chemical's relatively large exposure to
Latin American borrowers, particulary Brazil and Mexico,
continued high levels of nonperforming assets and the pending
acquisition of Texas Commerce.
Aggregate exposure to Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and
Venezuela was almost four billion dlrs at year-end 1986, or 105
pct of equity and reserves, S and P pointed out.
Irving's senior debt was reduced to A-plus from AA-minus,
with subordinated debt and preferred stock lowered to A from
A-plus. Its commercial paper was affirmed at A-111-1plus.
Irving has about 500 mln dlrs of debt outstanding. Its
approximately 1.4 billion dlrs of loans to the four major Latin
debtor countries account for 110 pct of year-end equity and
reserves.
S and P downgraded Manufacturers Hanover's senior debt to A
from A-plus, subordinated debt to A-minus from A and preferred
stock to BBB-plus from A-minus but affirmed its A-1 commercial
paper. The bank has 3.8 billion dlrs of debt.
S and P noted that Manufacturers has about 6.7 billion dlrs
of loans to the major Latin debtor nations and has experienced
weak earnings.
However, the unit CIT Group Holdings Inc's AA-minus senior
debt and A-1-plus commercial paper were affirmed.
The rating agency cut Mellon's senior debt to A-plus from
AA and preferred stock to A from AA-minus. It has 1.1 billion
dlrs of debt securities.
The commercial paper programs of Mellon Bank Canada and
Mellon Australia Ltd, guaranteed by the parent company, were
lowered to A-1 from A-1-plus.
S and P cited continued lower operating earnings and rising
nonperforming assets and charge-offs for Mellon.
Security Pacific's 1.7 billion dlrs of debt was downgraded.
Cut were its senior debt to AA from AA-plus, and subordinated
debt and preferred stock to AA-minus from AA.
Security Pacific Overseas Finance N.V.'s debt issues were
reduced to AA from AA-plus. Affirmed were the parent's A-1-plus
commercial paper and the BBB-rated debt of the unit Security
Pacific Financial Systems.
These actions reflected Security Pacific's continued high
levels of nonperforming assets and charge-offs, S and P said.
Reuter
|
KANSAS CITY <KSU> READY TO BUY SOUTHERN PACIFIC | Kansas City Southern Industries Inc
said it is ready to promptly purchase the Southern Pacific
Transportation Co from Santa Fe Southern Pacific Corp <SFX> if
the Interstate Commerce Commission rejects Sante Fe's attempt
to reopen the merger of Southern and the Atchison, Tokepa and
Santa Fe Railway.
In a filing with the ICC late today, the company outlined
four conditions of its offer to acquire Southern Pacific.
Among the conditions are that Santa Fe enter into an
agreement to indemnify Kansas City for any contigent liabilites
of Southern Pacific existing as of the closing date, and that
the financial condition of Southern remain largely unchanged
from today onward.
"We are willing, even eager, to make a fair market value
offer in cash for the Southern Pacific," said Kansas City
Southern president and chief executive officer Landon H.
Rowland.
"This offer disproves the constant derogation of the
Sourthern Pacific by SFSP management, best exemplified by SFSP
Chief Executive John Schmidt's comment in ICC hearings that the
Southern Pacific was 'bankrupt,'" said Rowland.
He said that merging Southern with Kansas City will achieve
the benefits of an end-to-end merger while preseving the
independece of the Southern Pacific versus its existing prime
competitor, Santa Fe.
Kansas said that Southern's management had estimated the
value of the railroad in 1983 in the range of 281 mln dlrs to
1.2 billion dlrs.
It said that Morgan Stanley and Co Inc and Salomon Brothers
Inc, hired in 1983 to advise Southern and Santa Fe in their
merger, appraised Southern as worth between 500 mln dlrs and
800 mln dlrs less than Southern's own internal valuations.
Kanasa City Southern said it will make an offer for
Southern after its books, records and properties are examined.
"Once that examination has been completed (and even in the
absence of a willingnes of SFSP to negotiate) KCSI will make an
offer in writing...." said the company.
Kansas also said it argued in the ICC filing that Santa Fe
had not met the legal requirements justifying the Commission's
reconsideration of the proposed merger of Santa Fe and Southern
Pacific, two railroads that it said basically parallel each
other throughout their routes.
ICC voted four to one last summer to reject the merger as
inherently anticompetitive. Kansas said Santa Fe in petitioning
for reconsideration now argues that the trackage agreements
with the Union Pacific, the Denver and Rio Grande Western and
other railroads, adds to the value of the merger.
Reuter
|
GENCORP <GY> BID COULD BE RAISED, GROUP SAYS | An investor group said it might be
willing to raise its 100 dlr per share offer for GenCorp but so
far the company has turned down requests for a meeting.
"We might be able to see some additional value if we could
meet" and get more financial data, said Joel Reed, speaking for
the investor group.
Reed told Reuters that GenCorp chairman A. William Reynolds
"was not interested in sitting down and talking with us at this
time." Cyril Wagner sought the meeting in a recent telephone
conversation with Reynolds, Reed said.
Wagner and Brown, along with AFG Industries Inc <AFG>,
recently launched a surprise tender offer for GenCorp. The
offer is worth 2.23 billion dlrs.
Reed said under the circumstances the 100 dlr per share
tender offer, which expires April 15, is a fair offer. GenCorp
gained 3-1/2 to 114 today on the NYSE.
Reed outlined a plan to reshape GenCorp in the event his
group wins control. He said aerospace, soft drink bottling and
entertainment units are potential divestiture candidates. He
said the tire business, which the group wants to keep, may be
more viable if merged with another tire company.
"One option would be to try to grow the tire business
through combination or an acquisition," Reed said. He said he
believes such a merger could create a stronger force in the
tire industry.
Gary Miller, chief financial officer of AFG, said his
company has a record of acquiring mature businesses and
boosting productivity. Automation and incentives tied to profit
sharing have been used with success, he said.
In the case of GenCorp's RKO General broadcasting stations,
Reed said the plan of the partners is to step into GenCorp's
shoes and proceed with plans to sell the stations.
The partners said if they succed in acquiring GenCorp they
intend to consummate sale of WOR-TV in New York to MCA Inc
<MCA>. GenCorp last year entered into an agreement to sell the
station for 387 mln dlrs.
The partners also said if they acquire Gencorp they would
also proceed with the proposed sale of KHJ-TV in Los Angeles to
Walt Disney Co <DIS>. RKO General would receive 217 mln dlrs
and Fidelilty Television, which challenged the license, would
get about 103 mln dlrs.
The partners also said the Federal Communications
Commission established an expedited schedule for receiving
comments on their request for special temporary authorization
of proposed trust arrangements while the FCC considers a formal
application for transfer of the broadcast unit.
Reed said he was pleased with the expedited schedule
because it provides time for the agency to act on the request
before the expiration of the tender offer.
He said it was the aim of the partners to move as quickly
as possible to eliminate uncertainty surrounding the stations.
Asked about criticism of the takeover attempt voiced by
some municipal officials in Akron, Ohio, where GenCorp is
headquartered, Reed said, "the plan of the partners offers long
term growth for Ohio."
He noted that the aerospace business, slated for
divestiture under the partners' plan, is located in California.
"Our program is one that overall would provide the greatest
long term growth for all segments," he said.
Reuter
|
UNOCAL <UCL> PLANS INCREASE IN CAPITAL SPENDING | Unocal Corp said it intends to
increase its spending for capital projects to 929 mln dlrs in
1987, eight pct more than the 862 mln spent in 1986.
The company said in its annual report that it would
increase spending for exploration and development of petroleum
resources by about three pct to 614 mln dlrs from 1986's 595
mln dlrs, assuming oil prices hold around current levels.
The planned spending for exploration and production in 1987
remains well below the 1.1 billion dlrs spent in 1985, Unocal
said.
The company's proved developed and undeveloped reserves of
crude oil rose slightly in 1986, Unocal said. Net crude oil and
condensate reserves were 752 mln bbls as of Dec 31, 1986,
compared to 751 mln bbls at the end of 1985, Unocal said.
The company said its net crude oil and condensate
production averaged 248,200 barrels per day in 1986 compared to
251,300 bpd in 1985.
Unocal said its worldwide natural gas reserves were 6.07
billion cubic feet in 1986 compared to 1985's 6.19 billion. Net
natural gas output averaged 976 mln cubic feet per day in 1986,
down 10 pct from 1985's 1,084 mln, the company said.
Unocal said its average sales prices for crude oil was
12.67 dlrs a barrel worldwide in 1986 compared to 23.81 dlrs in
1985, and its average sales price for natural gas was 2.03 dlrs
per thousand cubic feet in 1986 against 2.24 dlrs in 1985.
Average production costs for crude oil and natural gas
declined nearly 30 pct to 3.41 dlrs per bbl of oil equivalent
in 1986 from 4.81 dlrs in 1985, Unocal said.
In the annual report, the company called for imposition of
an oil import fee by the U.S. government to set a floor price
of about 25 dlrs a barrel for crude oil.
"Simply stabilizing prices at about 18 dlrs per barrel
will not materialy slow the drop in U.S. production or the rise
in imports," Chairman Fred Hartley said in the annual report.
"Without decisive action in Washington, this nation will
once again become a hostage to OPEC's plans and policies,"
Hartley said.
Reuter
|
FED APPROVES CHEMICAL NEW YORK <CHL> MERGER | Chemical New York Corp and Texas
Bancshares Inc <TCB> said the Federal Reserve Board approved
their proposed 1.19 billion dlr merger.
The companies also said the Securities and Exchange
Commission declared effective as of March 24 the registration
statement covering the securities Chemical will issue to Texas
Bancshares shareholders as part of the merger.
The companies said they expect to complete the merger,
which will create a bank with 80 billion dlrs of assets, by the
end of the second quarter. The merger still requires
shareholder approval.
Reuter
|
VARITY<VAT> SEES IMPROVED RESULTS AFTER 1ST QTR | Varity Corp, earlier reporting a full
year loss against a prior year profit, said improvement is
expected in the balance of fiscal 1987 as new products fill the
inventory pipeline, cutbacks in operating costs are realized
and its newly acquired Dayton Walther business is fully
integrated.
However, operating results are likely to remain under
pressure in the first quarter ending April 30, it said.
Varity earlier reported a loss for fiscal 1986 ended
January 31 of 23.3 mln U.S. dlrs, compared to a year-earlier
profit of 3.9 mln dlrs.
Varity said continued deterioration in major markets, a
weakening U.S. dollar and unforeseen delays in launching major
new lines of tractors contributed to the full year loss.
Industry demand for farm machinery continued to erode
during the latest fiscal year, with worldwide industry retail
sales of tractors sliding more than 10 pct below last year's
depressed levels, the company said.
However, Varity increased its share of the global tractor
market by more than one pct to 18.2 pct, it said.
The combined impact of costly sales incentives and foreign
exchange adjustments on margins was substantial, Varity said.
Reuter
|
CAMPBELL RESOURCES <CCH> UPS MESTON LAKE STAKE | Campbell Resources Inc said it raised
its voting stake in <Meston Lake Resources Inc> to about 64 pct
from 52 pct through acquisition of another 870,000 Meston Lake
shares in its previously reported takeover bid.
Campbell, in its bid that expired March 23, offered 80 cts
cash and 1.25 "legended" Campbell shares for each Meston share.
The legended shares are not tradeable for one year.
It said the 3.4 mln Meston shares not tendered in the offer
were held by about 550 stockholders, including Quebec's La
Societe de developpement de la Baie James, with 1.3 mln shares.
Reuter
|
FPL GROUP <FPL> UNIT FILES TO OFFER PREFERRED | FPL Group Inc's Florida Power and Light
Co unit said it filed a shelf registration with the Securities
and Exchange Commission for the future sale, through one or
more offerings, of one mln shares of serial preferred stock.
It said that these shares, together with 150,000 shares of
preferred stock that are unissued under a previous shelf
registration, should cover the utility's preferred stock
financing needs for the next two years.
Reuter
|
METROBANC <MTBC> SHAREHOLDERS APPROVE MERGER | Metrobanc, a federal
savings bank, said its shareholders approved the previously
announced merger with Comerica Inc <CMCA>, a bank holding
company.
Metrobanc said the merger is still subject to regulatory
approval.
Reuter
|
CONNECTICUT ENERGY <CNE>UNIT SEEKS HIGHER RATES | Connecticut Energy Corp said
its Southern Connecticut Gas Co unit filed with state
regulators a letter of intent to raise its rates by 2.7 pct, or
about 4.2 mln dlrs, beginning in late 1987.
The company said it expects to file a formal application
with the Connecticut Department of Public Utility Control
within 60 days.
The company said a rate increase is needed to cover higher
operating and maintenance expenses that have occurred since it
last received a rate hike of three pct, or 4.8 mln dlrs, in
January 1985.
Reuter
|
CATTLEMEN ASSESSING DEATH LOSS FROM STORM | Blizzard conditions in parts of the
west and southwest U.S. severely stressed beef cattle and
Kansas cattlemen are reporting death losses from the storm,
according to livestock associations in the area.
Talk among futures traders that cattle had died from the
cold and blowing snow accounted for some of the strength in
Live Cattle futures at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange today.
"Death (of cattle) can be directly attributed to the storm,
but it's hard to get a handle on a number," Todd Domer,
director of communications for the Kansas Livestock Association
said.
Domer noted that limited reports have been filtering in of
death losses at feedyards and from grazing and cow/calf
operations. Western Kansas was hardest hit while Eastern Kansas
only had rain, he said.
Paul Johnston of the Nebraska Livestock Feeders Association
said, "There's no question that baby calves coming in that kind
of blizzard are probably not going to make it."
We were having such a nice winter and the cows were out
calving before the storm hit, he added.
The worst part of the storm came through the center of the
state. Precipitation was generally in the form of wet snow and
some feedlots are already like "soup", he said, inhibiting
cattle movements.
The storm also had an effect on weight gain of larger
animals. Drifting snow caused problems in moving feed and mud
made it hard for cattle to reach the feed once it was
available.
Domer noted that feedyards sources say a tremendous cutback
has occurred in feed consumption by cattle in the yards, which
may or may not lead to sickness over the next several days.
Cattle reduced daily feed consumption to about 12 lbs from 25
during the worst of the blizzard, he said.
Mud will be more a problem as the weather breaks and snow
melts. Mud adds to stress on full-grown animals and endangers
smaller ones which can fall and be trampled in pens. The cost
of feeding rises as animals generally consume more in cold
weather, Domer said.
Domer said it will be at least 10 days before yards get
back to normal.
Roy Gallant, from Accu Weather Services, said that although
the worst of the storm is over, there are still some strong
gusty winds which will not diminish until tonight.
The storm started late Sunday night in West Kansas and is
just now winding down. The storm has moved into South Dakota,
parts of Minnesota and Eastern North Dakota, he said.
Snow accumulations from the storm totaled six to 10 inches
in most sections and 12 to 18 in a few spots before moving
north. This equals 1/2 to 1-1/2 inches of water. Drifts of four
to six feet and up to 12 feet were reported, he said.
There's a possibility of another storm brushing that region
tomorrow night and Friday, Gallant added.
Reuter
|
PLAINS RESOURCES INC <PLNS> YEAR LOSS | Oper shr loss 31 cts vs profit three cts
Oper net loss 887,886 vs profit 646,250
Revs 9,724,418 vs 10.8 mln
Note: Year-ago oper net excludes tax credit of 230,000
dlrs.
Reuter
|
ECUADOR SIGNS 280 MLN DLR IADB LOAN | Ecuador signed four loans from the
InterAmerican Development Bank (IADB) totaling 280 mln dlrs,
the IADB said.
Ecuador's finance minister, Domingo Cordovez, and IADB
President Antonio Ortiz Mena, signed the loans after the IADB's
annual meeting here.
A 57 mln dlr loan is for urban development, 80 mln dlrs for
industrial programs, 96 mln dlrs for highway rehabilitation
and 46 mln for farm research.
Reuter
|
PERU'S DEBT OBLIGATIONS HIT 6.3 BILLION DLRS IN 1987 | Peru's foreign debt obligation this year
totaled 6.3 billion dlrs, including maturities falling due and
overdue payments, equivalent to almost twice its expected
exports of goods and services, Central Bank President Leonel
Figueroa said.
He told the InterAmerican Development Bank (IADB) annual
meeting here that Peru will have to maintain its 10 pct limit
on debt payments to preserve growth.
Figueroa said gdp grew by almost nine pct in 1986, while
inflation dropped to 63 pct from an annual rate of 280 pct in
the first half of 1985.
Reuter
|
PENNZOIL (PZL) WILLING TO SETTLE TEXACO (TX) LAWSUIT | Pennzoil Co said it had not yet
received any "meaningful settlement offer" from Texaco Inc but
added that the company remained willing to consider proposals
to settle the 10.2 billion dlr jury judgment it won against
Texaco.
In its newly-released annual report to shareholders,
Pennzoil said it expected the Texas state court judgment, which
was upheld by a state appeals court on February 12, to be
upheld if appealed again.
"To date, Pennzoil has yet to receive any meaningful
settlement offer from Texaco, though it remains open to any
realistic effort to settle the matter," Pennzoil chairman Hugh
Liedtke said in the annual report.
Pennzoil also said it had budgeted 212 mln dlrs for capital
spending in 1987, a drop from the 233 mln dlrs spent last year.
Proved U.S. and foreign reserves of natural gas declined to
964 billion cubic feet last year, from 1.01 trillion cubic feet
in 1985, because of a virtual halt in its exploration program,
Pennzoil said. Its crude oil reserves dropped to 140 mln
barrels from 158 mln barrels in 1985.
The Houston-based company said it sold an average of 339
mln cubic feet of domestic natural gas each day last year, a 17
pct drop from 1985. The average sales price for gas dropped by
60 cents per mcf to 2.16 dlrs per mcf, Pennzoil said.
U.S. crude oil and gas liquids production last year fell to
an average of 33,290 barrels per day from 34,102 barrels per
day in 1985.
The company's total revenues in 1986 declined to 482.3 mln
dlrs, from 762.5 mln dlrs the previous year. Operating income
in 1986 fell more than 80 pct, to 38.0 mln dlrs.
Pennzoil said its goals for 1987 included development of
its Point Arguello oilfield off the California coast, to
maintain current production levels in its Bluebell-Altamont
Field in Utah and to drill for prospects in the Gulf of
Mexico's Mobile Bay area.
"Production should begin late in the year from the Harvest
Platform in the Santa Maria Basin offshore California," the
company said. "Pennzoil's share of this production initially
should be five thousand barrels a day, increasing to a peak of
15 thousand barrels a day, net, by 1989."
In its sulphur business, Pennzoil said production totaled
2.1 mln long tons last year, a decline of 18 pct from 1985. The
average sales price also declined, to 138.25 dlrs per long ton
from 141.05 dlrs in 1985.
"The long term outlook for our sulphur operations remains
bright," the company said. "We expect sulphur's pricing
structure to strengthen during the current year, probably in
the third and fourth quarters."
Reuter
|
FARM CREDIT SYSTEM TO ASK FOR CONGRESSIONAL AID | A senior representative of the
financially-troubled U.S. farm credit system is expected for
the first time tomorrow to ask Congress to provide assurances
that stock held by system borrowers will be guaranteed.
Farm credit sources said Brent Beesley, president of the
Farm Credit Corporation which represents the system, will make
the request at a Senate Agriculture subcommittee hearing.
They said Beesley would ask Congress to take some action to
assure borrowers the stock is secure. But Beesley is expected
to stop short of requesting other forms of government aid.
Borrowers from the farm credit system hold some four
billion dlrs in system stock which could be devalued if the
mounting losses of the system persist, officials said.
Beesley's request expected tomorrow is seen as the first
official acknowledgment from the system itself that federal aid
will be needed to guarantee the value of the stock.
Yesterday, Jim Billington, a member of the Farm Credit
Administration board which regulates the system, said Congress
should plan to spend at least 800 mln dlrs beginning late this
year to bail-out the system.
Congress is moving swiftly toward legislation to aid the
system. Sen. James McClure, R-Idaho, has drafted a resolution
which would put the Senate on record as guaranteeing the value
of farm credit system stock. The resolution may be brought to
the Senate floor soon, Congressional sources said.
In addition to requesting a guarantee of borrower stock,
Beesley is expected tomorrow to endorse the creation of a
secondary market, called "Aggie-mae" by some proponents, for
the resale of farm real estate loans.
Sources said the farm credit system will support the idea
if the system is included in the operation of the market.
Farm credit sources said the system decided to request a
guarantee of borrower stock at a meeting this week in Denver of
the 12 presidents of farm credit system districts.
Beesley's testimony to the Congressional hearing tomorrow
will not include any new financial forecast of system losses,
officials said.
Chairman of the FCA, Frank Naylor, yesterday said the
system may lose as much as 1.4 billion dlrs this year.
Reuter
|
GV MEDICAL INC <GVMI> 4TH QTR LOSS | Shr loss 20 cts vs loss 26 cts
Net loss 798,289 vs loss 777,667
Rev 262,738 vs nil
Avg shares 3,930,360 vs 2,959,029
Year
Shr loss 96 cts vs loss 1.25 dlrs
Net loss 3,202,355 vs loss 3,060,407
Rev 676,341 vs nil
Avg shares 3,339,174 vs 2,445,423
Reuter
|
FIRST FEDERAL/ARKANSAS <FARK> IN COURT RULING | First Federal Savings of
Arkansas FA said a federal district court denied a motion
seeking class-action status for a lawsuit that alleges the bank
violated securities laws in an offering of common stock.
The lawsuit alleges that First Federal violated securities
laws in connection with its initial public offering.
Reuter
|
IBC PRESIDENT NOT TO ATTEND ICO EXECUTIVE BOARD | Brazilian Coffee Institute (IBC)
president Jorio Dauster said he will not attend the ICO
executive board meeting and was surprised to hear that a report
of his absence had a slightly depressing effect on the New York
coffee market today.
"I have too much work to accomplish here in Brazil at the
moment. Besides the presence of the IBC president at an ICO
executive board meeting is not a tradition," Dauster said.
Dauster said except in rare cases, Brazil has always sent
its London-based representative to ICO board meetings.
Ambassador Lindenberg Sette will attend the meeting, he said.
Reuter
|
COLOMBIA TO MAINTAIN FOREIGN BORROWING LEVELS | Colombia plans to maintain foreign
borrowing at levels similar to the 1982-86 period, during which
it received a net 1.3 billion dlrs net of repayments, Finance
Minister Cesar Gaviria said.
He told the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) annual
meeting here that despite Latin America's debt crisis, Colombia
continues to achieve positive credit flows reflecting the
strength of its economy that grew five pct last year.
Public Credit Director Mauricio Cabrera said Colombia plans
to launch a foreign bond issue in the second half of 1987,
possibly for 60 mln dlrs.
Cabrera said a 50 mln dlr floating rate note (FRN) issue by
Colombia is expected to close next month. It carries a 1-1/8
pct margin over Libor, with a seven year maturity and four
years grace.
He also told Reuters he did not expect any increase in
Colombia's financing needs as a result of current falling
coffee prices, after a surge last year doubled export income
from this source to around three billion dlrs.
"The drop will simply bring us back to 1985 levels, with a
loss of no more than about 100 mln dlrs," he said.
Colombia, with a total foreign debt of around 13 billion
dlrs, has a foreign borrowing programme of around three billion
dlrs this year, of which about one billion is new credits.
Its foreign reserves ended 1986 at 3.5 billion dlrs,
equivalent to more than nine months of imports and
non-financial services, and GDP growth is again expected to
reach five pct this year, Gaviria said.
Reuter
|
EXCHANGE RATE BILL CLEARS U.S. HOUSE PANEL | The House Banking Committee adopted
legislation to direct the U.S. Treasury to begin negotiations
aimed at seeking regular adjustment of exchange rates by
countries such as Taiwan and South Korea, whose currencies are
pegged to the value of the U.S. dollar.
The measure was adopted as part of a wide-ranging trade
bill that will be considered by the full House in April before
it moves on to the Senate.
The bill's many provisions also set as a priority for the
U.S. the negotiation of stable exchange rates and urge
government intervention as necessary to offset fluctuations.
In addition, the Banking Committee bill would authorize
U.S. banks to use a variety of means to deal with the debt
problems of developing countries, such as lowering interest
rates on existing debt, renegotiating loans or debt
forgiveness. The bill would give a blanket waiver of any
federal banking regulations that bar such actions.
The bill would direct Treasury Secretary James Baker to
discuss with debt-ridden developing countries the possibility
of the U.S. setting up a public debt management agency that
would purchase their debt at a discount and negotiate the
restructuring of the debt.
The Banking bill authorizes U.S. participation in a
multilateral investment guarantee agency (MIGA) as requested by
the administration. Congress would approve an initial U.S.
subscription of 22 mln dlrs.
And, it sets up a council on industrial competitiveness
composed of industry and administration members to explore ways
to make the U.S. more competitive in world markets.
Reuter
|
U.S. CHIPMAKERS URGE SANCTIONS AGAINST JAPAN | The Semiconductor Industry
Association urged the U.S. government to impose trade sanctions
against Japan for violating the U.S.-Japan Semiconductor Trade
Agreement.
In a letter to Treasury Secretary James Baker the group
said sanctions should be imposed against Japanese chipmakers as
of April 1 and continue until the U.S. is satisfied there is
full compliance with the agreement.
The group said action by Japan to cut back on semiconductor
exports is not what is required.
"America's interests require that agreements be honored and
that U.S. industries not bear the burden for the persistent
unwillingness or inability of the government of Japan to
deliver on its commitments," the trade group said.
The White House Economic Policy Council is expected to
discuss possible sanctions against Japan at a meeting scheduled
for Thursday.
The trade group said Japan has not lived up to the terms of
the agreement last year which was aimed at ending Japanese
dumping of semiconductors and at opening Japanese markets to
foreign-based manufacturers.
Reuter
|
LOMAC TO PAY COSTS IN FIRST SUPERFUND AGREEMENT | Lomac Inc, a publicly traded
company, will pay the U.S. and Michigan governments to help
clean up a toxic waste site in the first major settlement under
the 1986 Superfund-Two act, Michigan officials said.
Lomac will pay 17 mln dlrs to help clean the site, they
said.
Stewart Freeman, Michigan's chief environmental attorney,
told Reuters that Lomac, a new company, agreed to buy a
chemical site near Muskegon, Mich., formerly operated by Bafors
Nobel Inc, a bankrupt subsidiary of A.B. Nobel of Sweden.
The settlement was also the largest in history in a
bankruptcy case involving environmental issues, Freeman said.
Other companies with Superfund disputes are watching the
case closely, he said. "There are a number of very large
corporations talking to the attorney general," Freeman said,
referring to Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley.
Freeman would not identify the companies involved, saying
he was not sure whether confidentiality agreements had been
made.
Lomac will pay 25-26 mln dlrs in the settlement. Five mln
dlrs will be paid to the federal and 12 mln dlrs will go to the
Michigan government for cleanup at the site, the Lakeway
Chemical plant.
The remaining funds will go to medical surveillance of
former workers at the plant.
Under the agreement, a trust fund will be set up "to
monitor the health of employees who may have been exposed to
dangerous chemicals that were manufactured at the plant before
1971," the Michigan attorney general's office said in a
statement.
Freeman said the medical fund was necessary because of
possible medical problems among workers at the site.
The Muskegon facility was formerly used to manufacture
dyes. Freeman said Bofors Nobel spent 50 mln dlrs cleaning up
the site, formerly owned by Lakeway Chemical Co, before "the
economic decision was made in Sweden" to place the operation in
bankruptcy.
Under the agreement, Bofors Nobel will sell the site, which
still holds an operating chemical plant, to Lomac. Some 150
employees work at the plant, a spokesman for the Michigan
attorney general said.
The state attorney general said cleanup at the site will
begin "immediately," and will be supervised by federal and
state officials.
Freeman said the plant site is not presently listed on the
federal superfund list, which qualifies the toxic waste site
for federal cleanup funds.
He said federal officials will try to get the Muskegon
facility onto the superfund list. If they are unable to do so,
the 5.0 mln dlr federal portion of the settlement will be
turned over to Michigan officials to be used in the cleanup,
Freeman said.
Reuter
|
WORLD BANK AFFILIATE PROVIDES CREDIT FOR HAITI | The World Bank today approved a 40
million mln dlr loan to assist an economic reform program under
way in Haiti.
The bank said the loan is being made through its affiliate,
the International Development Association, and will be used to
restore economic confidence, approve the allocation of
resources, and stimulate economic growth.
The bank said the the 50-year credit, which is interest
free, comes as there is growing evidence that reforms already
underway have improved the country's economic situation.
REUTER
|
U.S. AGRICULTURE SECY DOUBTFUL ON DEFICIT GOAL | U.S. Agriculture Secretary
Richard Lyng today publicly expressed doubts that the federal
government would meet the fiscal year 1988 deficit reduction
target set by the Gramm-Rudman law.
"I don't think anyone believes we'll meet the 108 billion
dlr target," Lyng told the Virginia Farm Bureau.
Lyng is believed to be the first top administration
official to publicly express doubts the target would be met.
The remark was quickly disavowed by the White House Office
of Management and Budget (OMB). "His 'no one' does not include
the OMB," said spokesman Edwin Dale.
Lyng made the remark while describing the need for the
agriculture sector to share the burden of cutbacks under last
year's Gramm-Rudman law.
"There needs to be some reduction of some expenditures to at
least get close to the Gramm-Rudman figure," he said.
"Agriculture would not be independent from that."
Lyng's special assistant, Floyd Gabler, said the remark
was an opinion based on Lyng's discussions with congressmen.
"If the Secretary said that he's simply expressing an
opinion he's gotten from the progress or lack of progress on
the Hill," he said.
Reuter
|
CLABIR <CLG>, AMBRIT <ABI> CALL OFF MERGER | Clabir Corp and AmBrit Corp
said they called off their plans for Clabir to buy the 16 pct
voting interest in AmBrit that it does not already own.
The companies said they agreed not to pursue the merger
because several actions recently taken by AmBrit would mean
substantial delays in completing the deal.
They said they might revive merger plans at a later date or
seek other ways for Clabir to increase its holdings in AmBrit.
Reuter
|
FAA ORDERS VOICE RECORDERS ON NEW COMMUTER CRAFT | The Federal Aviation Administration
said it will require cockpit voice recorders to be installed on
all newly made commuter aircraft by May 26 1989.
The FAA said data from the cockpit voice recorder, which
makes a record of cockpit conversation during flight, was
invaluable to accident investigators.
The new rule covers newly made jet and turbo prop commuter
aircraft that carry six or more passengers and that must be
flown by two pilots.
Reuter
|
TELECOMMUNICATIONS BILL CLEARS U.S. HOUSE PANEL | The House Energy and Commerce
Committee approved major trade legislation that will give
President Reagan authority to retaliate if negotiations to open
foreign markets to U.S. telecommunications products fail.
The provision was part of a major trade bill the committee
approved on a vote of 26 to 15. It will be wrapped into a trade
bill being written in several House committees and due to be
considered in the full House in late April.
The bill also requires foreign investors to file detailed
reports to the Commerce Department on their U.S. holdings in
real estate, securities or U.S. companies.
In response to congressional concern over the Fujitsu
proposal to take control of Fairchild Semiconductor Corp., the
bill would give Reagan the power to bar foreign acquisitions of
U.S. firms if the sale threatened U.S. national security.
The legislation would bar for one year imports of advanced
audio digital tape machines unless the recording capability is
disabled. The action was taken after the U.S. recording
industry said the new machines would lead to rampant recording
piracy and legislation was needed to protect their rights.
The bill authorizes government spending of 100 mln dlrs a
year for five years to help pay for research by a consortia of
semiconductor manufacturers.
Reuter
|
BANK BOARD TAKES CONTROL OF FLORIDA THRIFT | The Federal Home Loan Bank Board
said it took control of the South Florida Banks and transferred
its assets and deposits to a newly chartered federal mutual
association.
The Bank Board said it approved a new five-member board for
the association. South Florida was a state chartered stock
institution with 175.2 mln dlrs in assets.
The Bank Board said the savings bank suffered from poorly
underwritten loans and investments plus a high cost of funds
and operating expenses, including excessive compensation of
some former officers.
Reuter
|
MOODY'S DOWNGRADES ZENITH ELECTRONICS <ZE> DEBT | Moody's Investors Services Inc said it
downgraded 200 mln dlrs of long-term debt of Zenith Electronics
Corp.
Cut were Zenith's senior debt to Ba-2 from Baa-3,
convertible subordinated debt to B-1 from Ba-2 and commercial
paper to Not-Prime from Prime-3.
Moody's cited the company's overall losses.
The agency also said it believes that future profits in the
consumer electronics business will be limited because of
intense competition from international market participants.
Moody's pointed out that Zenith's total debt increased
sharply over the past year and is being serviced by weak cash
flow.
A spokesman for Zenith criticized the action.
"The company believes the downgrade is unwarranted.
Operating results for 1986 improved over 1985 and Zenith was
profitable in the second half of 1986," he said.
Reuter
|
SDC SYDNEY REPLACES CHAIRMAN | <SDC Sydney Development Corp>
said it terminated its service agreement with chairman and
chief executive Walter Steel on March 24, and appointed Donald
Michelin as acting chief executive.
"The performance of the company since Mr. Steel's
appointment in June, 1985 has not fulfilled either Mr. Steel's
plans or the objectives of Alexis Nihon Investments Inc, the
principal creditor and largest shareholder, and a change in
senior management was viewed as essential to redirecting the
business of the company," SDC Sydney said.
Michelin is an Alexis Nihon officer and director.
Reuter
|
COST OF PIK CERTIFICATES TO BE EYED BY CONGRESS | Congress, eager to find budget
savings, launches a review of the U.S. Agriculture Department's
generic commodity certificate program tomorrow, amid signs USDA
and the General Accounting Office, GAO, are at odds over how
much the program has cost U.S. taxpayers.
The GAO concluded in a preliminary report last week that
payment-in-kind, or PIK, certificates cost between five and 20
pct more than cash outlays, administration officials who asked
not to be identified said.
USDA officials, however, took issue with the report, saying
it did not take into account storage, handling and transport
savings that accrue to the government. The GAO then decided to
re-examine the costs, sources said.
The issue is an important one, because congressional budget
committees are known to be considering limiting the use of
certificates as a means of cutting spending.
Agriculture Under Secretary Daniel Amstutz and GAO Senior
Associate Director Brian Crowley are set to testify before the
Senate Agriculture Committee tomorrow.
Amstutz is expected to tell the committee that there are
uncertainties in determining the cost of certificates compared
to cash outlays, and that savings to the Commodity Credit Corp,
CCC, almost equal costs, department sources said.
USDA estimates that it costs the government about 75 cents
to store, handle and transport each bushel of commodity put in
government storage.
It was unclear whether the GAO, Congress' investigative
arm, would stick by its original analysis that it costs the
government more to use certificates instead of cash in farm
price and income support programs, Reagan administration
sources said.
The GAO is expected to point out that use of
payment-in-kind, PIK, certificates has helped relieve tight
storage by moving grain that otherwise might not have been
sold.
The testimony by Amstutz and GAO Senior Associate Director
Brian Crowley comes as congressional budget committees
intensify their efforts to pinpoint ways to cut the federal
budget deficit -- including considering limits on the use of
PIK certificates.
The CCC issues dollar-denominated PIK certificates, or
certs, as a partial substitute for direct cash outlays to
farmers or cash subsidies to exporters. Certs can be used to
repay nonrecourse loans or exchanged for CCC commodities or
cash.
Between April and December 1986, CCC issued 3.8 billion
dlrs worth of certificates, according to USDA. Up to another
6.7 billion dlrs worth could be issued between January and
August 1987, according to USDA.
Certs can cost the government more than cash primarily
because recipients can use the certificates to pay back
government loans at levels below the loan rate.
Eliminating this practice, called "PIK and roll," would save
the government 1.4 billion dlrs between 1988-92, according to
the Congressional Budget Office, CBO. That estimate, according
to a CBO official, was based on an assumption that certificates
cost the government about 15 pct more than cash payments.
The Senate and House Budget Committees are known to be
considering curbs on PIK-and-roll transactions among other
savings alternatives.
The GAO last week reached the tentative conclusion that the
estimated three billion dlrs of certificates redeemed to date
have cost the federal government between 150 mln and 600 mln
dlrs, or between five and 20 pct, more than cash outlays, one
administration official said.
However, the GAO has decided to reassess those estimates
based in part on USDA criticism, department officials said.
The broad range of the cost estimate is partly attributable
to the different effect certificates can have on market prices
over the course of a crop year.
USDA's Economic Research Service, for example, has found
that between June and August last year, the 215 mln bushels of
corn exchanged for certificates lowered the price of corn by
between 35 and 45 cents per bushel.
Between September and November, however, certificates had
only a marginal impact on corn prices, according to the ERS
study, obtained by Reuters.
Reuter
|
DAILY TELEGRAPH IN DEAL WITH NEWS INTERNATIONAL | <Hollinger Inc> said 58 pct-owned <The
Daily Telegraph PLC>, of London, agreed to form a joint venture
printing company in Manchester, England with <News
International PLC>. Financial terms were undisclosed.
It said the deal involved News International's acquisition
of a 50 pct stake in the Telegraph's Trafford Park Printing Ltd
subsidiary. The joint company will continue to print northern
editions of the Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph, with spare
capacity used to print The Sun and News of the World.
The arrangement will significantly cut Telegraph costs,
Hollinger said.
Reuter
|
USACAFES <USF> UNIT POSTS RECORD WEEKLY SALES | USACafes LP said sales at its Bonanza
Restaurant unit rose 16.6 pct to a record 10.4 mln dlrs for the
week ended March 22.
That compares with sales of 8,909,000 dlrs for the
comparable week last year, the partnership said.
USACafes, which said year-to-date sales from the Bonanza
chain were up 13 pct, attributed the increase to the budget
steakhouse chain's decision to add chicken, seafood and salad
entrees to its menu.
It said the new entrees now account for two-thirds of the
chain's sales.
Reuter
|
MACAO TO KEEP EXISTING SYSTEM FOR 50 YEARS | Portuguese Prime Minister Anibal Cavaco
Silva said Portugal would hand back Macao to China on December
20, 1999, but added the existing political, economic and social
system there would be maintained until the year 2050.
Cavaco Silva, speaking on national television hours before
the initialling in Peking of an agreement on the handover, said
that under the accord Macao would be a special administrative
region of China and would have a large measure of autonomy.
Under the accord, Portuguese administration of the
territory would end on December 20, 1999 but the existing
system there would be maintained until the year 2050, Cavaco
Silva said.
"The existing way of life in Macao, the Portuguese laws,
basically our political, economic and social system, will
remain in force for a further 63 years from now," he said.
Cavaco Silva said he would go to Peking in the first half
of next month to formally sign the agreement with China, which
would then be submitted to Portugal's parliament for approval.
Cavaco Silva said that after Portuguese administration of
Macao formally ended in 1999, the future government of the
territory would enjoy complete autonomy except in the areas of
defence and foreign relations. It would however be able to make
economic, trade and finance agreements with other countries.
The head of government would be named on the basis of
elections held for the post.
Macao would have an elected legislative assembly and an
independent judiciary. There would be religious freedom, a free
press and freedom of expression. The Portuguese language could
continue to be used in the government, assembly and courts.
Cavaco Silva said the current financial system would
continue after the year 2000. The existing banks and freedom of
capital movements would be maintained as would the
convertibility of the pataca as the territory's monetary unit
and the legal protection of foreign investment.
Only the Macao government would be able to collect taxes.
Cavaco Silva said that those among Macao's 400,000
population who held Portuguese nationality on the date of the
handover would thereafter continue to be able to use their
Portuguese passports and their nationality rights.
The nationality issue had been one of the points of
disagreement in the complex handover talks.
The special administrative status to be granted to Macao
after its handover mirrors a similar accord for the nearby
British colony of Hong Kong, which reverts back to Chinese rule
in 1997 under a 1984 Sino-British agreement.
Reuter
|
FRIEDMAN INDUSTRIES INC <FRD> QUARTERLY DIV | Qtly div seven cts vs seven cts prior
Pay June one
Record May four
Reuter
|
CHIRAC SEES FASTER PRIVATISATION | France's right-wing government now
expects to raise about 40 billion francs this year from its
privatisation program, 10 billion more than it targetted, Prime
Minister Jacques Chirac said.
The success of the program, launched late last year, meant
the government would be able to go beyond the 30 billion franc
figure it estimated in its 1987 budget, he said in a television
interview.
About 75 pct of the additional revenue would be used to cut
state debt and 25 pct to provide additional funds for public
sector investment, he said.
Chirac said Finance Minister Edouard Balladur proposed to
make two billion francs of supplementary funding available for
a five biillion franc accelerated motorway building program.
The remaining three billion francs for this would come from
a motorway loan now in the domestic market.
Balladur also proposed to make some extra cash available to
the French national railways, SNCF, for the construction of
high-speed rail track, and to boost research in the aerospace
industry, he added.
An estimated 15,000 jobs would be generated by speeding up
motorway construction, Chirac said.
Reaffirming his long term strategy of cutting the state
sector deficit and easing taxes, Chirac repeated government
pledges to cut the corporate tax rate to 42 pct from 45 pct in
the 1988 budget.
Personal income tax would also be reduced but details had
still to be worked out, he added.
The government aimed to make France the leading economic
power in Western Europe within five years, he told his
television interviewer.
Reuter
|
IADB MEETING ENDS WITH U.S. ISOLATED ON REFORM | The United States remained isolated among
the Inter-American Development Bank's 44 members as the Bank
ended its annual meeting here today without agreement on U.S.
proposals to reform the regional lending institution.
The three-day meeting was dominated by the dispute and by
the failure of Brazil and its creditor banks to make any
breakthrough on debt talks after Brasilia suspended interest
payments last month.
Brazil's Central Bank governor Francisco Gros said after
talks with its 14-bank advisory committee here yesterday that
it could not make a token interest payment now, as sought by
banks, but would maintain contact with the banks.
Delegates agreed to shelve discussion of IADB reforms until
the half-yearly International Monetary Fund and World Bank
meetings in two weeks time in Washington at which a decision
will be urgently sought in order to maintain credit flows to
the recession-hit region.
"The Bank cannot maintain an adequate lending level unless
it is given increased resources," IADB president Antonio Ortiz
Mena told a press conference.
Ortiz Mena said 42 countries opposed Washington's proposal
to lower veto power over loans to 35 pct of the Bank's voting
shares from a simple majority as at present.
U.S. Treasury Secretary James Baker said Monday the United
States, as 34.5 pct shareholder and provider of the bulk of the
Bank's resources, should have more say in approving loans and
conditioned a nine billion dlr increase in its contribution on
approving the reforms.
But Ortiz Mena said Latin America and the non-regional
members including Europe and Japan had all supported a 40 pct
veto level. Canada declined to state a position.
Behind the dispute was a U.S. attempt to radically change
the direction of the Bank, which has lent 35 billion dlrs to
Latin America in its 28 years, and give it a bigger role in the
current debt strategy with increased lending but more stringent
conditions attached.
But Ortiz said the Bank cannot divert too much of its
resources to so-called sectoral lending, whereby loans to
specific sectors are tied to economic reforms, because this
could affect the Bank's Triple A rating as a borrower in world
markets.
"For this reason we have agreed to limit sectoral loans to
25 pct of the total, leaving the rest for investment in
projects," he said.
Ortiz Mena earlier told the Bank's closing session that as
a result of negotiations here, the Bank can expect a new
injection of about 25 billion dlrs for the period 1987-90.
The United States has said it will only be able to support
a level close to the sixth replenishment of funds, which came
to 15.7 billion dlrs, unless its proposals are accepted.
But despite the impasse, some Latin American delegates
including Mexican Finance Minister Gustavo Petricioli said they
were optimistic a compromise agreement could be reached next
month.
Reuter
|
LATIN OIL PRODUCERS TO MEET IN CARACAS | Five regional oil producing nations
will gather in Caracas tommorrow for a two-day meeting expected
to center on ways to combat proposals for a U.S. tax on
imported petroleum, the Venezuela's ministry of energy and
mines said.
Oil ministers from Mexico, Trinidad and Tobago, Ecuador and
Venezuela will be on hand for the fifth meeting of the informal
group of Latin American and Caribbean Petroleum Exporters,
formed in 1983, it said. Colombia will also attend for the
first time, as an observer nation, the ministry said.
Energy and Mines Minister Arturo Hernandez Grisanti said
the conference has no set agenda but one entire session Friday
will be devoted to proposals for a tax on imported oil.
Two of the group's members, Venezuela and Mexico, are
second and third largest foreign suppliers of oil to the United
States, respectively, following Canada.
Venezuela, concerned about the effect such a tax would have
on its exports, undertook a diplomatic push to coordinate
strategy against such measures. In February, Canadian Energy
Minister Marcel Masse was invited to Caracas for talks with
Hernandez on proposals for an oil import tax.
Reuter
|
AUSTRALIAN RESERVE BANK CUTS REDISCOUNT RATE | The Reserve Bank of Australia this morning
cut the rediscount rate from 17.30 pct to 17.00 pct.
The rediscount is the rate at which the bank buys back
treasury notes.
Market sources said the cut reflected the recent easing in
market interest rates. They also pointed to yesterday's
treasury note tender where the 400 mln dlrs of 13-week notes
went at an average yield of 15.473 pct, down from 15.870 last
week. The 100 mln dlrs of 26-week notes went at an average
15.414 from 15.790 last week.
Reuter
|
ARGENTINA SAYS COULD FOLLOW BRAZILIAN DEBT MOVE | Central Bank President Jose Luis
Machinea said Argentina could adopt the same posture as Brazil
and suspend payments on its foreign debt if it failed to meet
creditor bank demands.
"If Argentina had the same difficulties in being unable to
refinance (its debt) under the desired (creditor) conditions,
that (Brasil's) is a path to take," Machinea said.
Brasil last month suspended payments on a large part of its
109-billion dlr debt, the highest in the developing world.
Machinea said Brasil did not suspend payments because it
wanted to but because it lacked reserves.
Argentina has since last month been negotiating a 2.15
billion dlr loan with the steering committee for its
international creditor banks to meet 1987 growth targets.
But Machinea said the talks were difficult and Argentina
wanted to conclude them as soon as possible.
"What the (creditor) banks are demanding is not the same as
what Argentina is prepared to concede," Machinea said.
Argentina has a global foreign debt of 50 billion dlrs. Its
debt with private banks is about 30 billion dlrs.
Reuter
|
GENOVA <GNVA> SIGNS DEFINITIVE MERGER AGREEMENT | Genova Inc said it signed a
definitive agreement for the previously announced merger with
<Genova Products Inc>.
Under the agreement, Genova Products will pay 5-3/8 dlrs a
share for the 29 pct of Genova's outstanding common shares it
does not already own.
The company said it plans to complete the transaction,
which requires shareholder approval, by the end of March.
Reuter
|
PENOBSCOT SHOE CO <PSO> 1ST QTR FEB 27 NET | Shr 69 cts vs six cts
Net 421,306 vs 44,132
Revs 3,721,178 vs 3,125,935
Note: Current qtr net includes a gain of 281,000 dlrs,
mostly from the sale of securities and property.
Reuter
|
DREXEL SAYS BUSINESS STRONG DESPITE TRADE PROBE | Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc said
Wednesday its business is booming, despite its inability to
distance itself from the insider trading scandal that has
spread rumors and doubts through Wall Street.
"For a company that's supposed to be under siege, we are
doing extremely well. We are exceedingly profitable," a
spokesman for the firm told Reuters.
The rumors that have swirled around Drexel, more than any
other broker, have involved concerns that its business will be
threatened by the Federal probe, say Wall Street sources. The
firm has long been at the leading edge of the mergers business
and had ties to now-disgraced speculator Ivan Boesky.
In the latest chapter of the story, Drexel said that some
commodities firms have begun to limit the amount of business
they will do with the firm, citing credit risks. Drexel has
long been a powerful competitor in precious metals markets.
But Drexel spokesman Steve Anredder told Reuters that
Drexel's overall business is proceeding normally and the
first-quarter profit "could be the strongest of anybody on Wall
Street."
"I wouldn't say we're not feeling any effect (from the
trading probes)," he said. "But we're doing extremely well."
The firm was among the first to be subpoenaed in the
government's wide-ranging probe of illegal trading involving
the use of confidential company information on Wall Street.
Believed to be under particular scrutiny was Drexel's "junk
bond" operation -- the issuance of high-risk speculative debt
that it pioneered for financing corporate takeovers.
"We have done nothing wrong," said the Drexel spokesman.
"After a thorough investigation, we have found no evidence of
any wrongdoing by the firm or anyone within the firm."
The spokesman said that in the aftermath of the Boesky
arrest, Drexel had not been charged. Nor had any individual at
the firm been charged with illegal acts while employed by
Drexel. One of its top merger specialists, Martin Siegel, was
charged in connection with a former job.
Still, more than any other firm on Wall Street, Drexel has
suffered the consequences of the insider trading probe. To
begin with, there have been a series of brief shocks in the
junk bond market, in nervousness linked to rumors that Drexel
might be in trouble.
At one point, Drexel said Wednesday, a large Midwest bank
refused to allow Drexel-issued bonds as collateral on credit
lines. Two weeks ago, the restriction was withdrawn, it said.
The company also was notified last month that the outside
insurer of Drexel's individual brokerage accounts had decided
not to renew coverage. Drexel has set up its own subsidiary
handling part of the insurance. American International Group
and a group of British underwriters have handled the rest.
Drexel also appears to have lost ground to others in the
mergers and acquisition business recently, market sources said.
However, Anredder said that there was no sign that Drexel had
lost any customers at all owing to the insider trading cases.
But in citing results for the quarter, the company points
mostly to other areas of success.
Corporate financings have totaled 8 billion dlrs, including
3 billion dlrs in new junk bonds in the January-March period,
Drexel said. Drexel maintains the lion's share of this
lucrative business, trade sources noted.
The market for junk bonds, although jittery, "has rallied
back with a vengeance," Anredder said.
Although they see new competition in the junk bond arena,
market sources concur that Drexel remains king of the hill.
While some of the leading Wall Street firms were limiting
head-to-head dealings with Drexel in the commodity markets
based on worries over the credit of the company, the Drexel
spokesman called this "ridiculous."
Reuter
|
DAUSTER SAYS NO CHANGE IN BRAZIL'S COFFEE POLICY | Brazil will not announce any
changes to its coffee export policy, Brazilian Coffee Institute
(IBC) president Jorio Dauster said.
He told Reuters Brazil was not planning to modify the
position it held before the recent International Coffee
Organisation meeting.
Earlier this month, talks in London to set new ICO export
quotas failed.
Commenting on the outcome of a coffee producers' meeting in
Managua last weekend, Dauster said that they discussed nothing
involving the market.
"In the meeting we agreed to work on behalf of the union of
the producers in matters related to an international agreement,"
Dauster said.
The Managua meeting was attended by representatives from
Brazil, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Costa Rica,
Nicaragua and Panama, the latter represented at the meeting
merely as an observer.
Reuter
|
EXCHANGE RATE BILL CLEARS U.S. HOUSE PANEL | The House Banking Committee adopted
legislation to direct the U.S. Treasury to begin negotiations
aimed at seeking regular adjustment of exchange rates by
countries such as Taiwan and South Korea whose currencies are
pegged to the value of the U.S. dollar.
The measure was adopted as part of a wide-ranging trade
bill that will be considered by the full House in April before
it moves onto the Senate.
The bill's many provisions also set as a priority for the
U.S. the negotiation of stable exchange rates and urge
government intervention as necessary to offset fluctuations.
Reuter
|
CONSOLIDATE CAPITAL TRUST <CIOTS> 4TH QTR NET | Shr 32 cts vs nil
Net 1.2 mln vs 100,000
Avg shrs 3,692,000 vs 3,148,000
Year
Shr 1.02 dlrs vs 54 cts
Net 3.7 mln vs 800,000
Avg shrs 3,607,000 vs 1,461,000
Note: Net is after depreciation.
Full name is Consolidated Captial Income Opportunity
Trust/2.
Reuter
|
SARNEY REITERATES THAT BRAZIL WILL NOT GO TO IMF | President Jose Sarney rejected calls
from foreign creditors and from some Brazilian businessmen that
the government talk to the International Monetary Fund.
In a speech to about 3,000 mayors and local officials,
Sarney reiterated that the government would not accept any
monitoring of its economy by the IMF.
He said, "We are going to struggle with courage for Brazil
and its growth. For this reason I have said that Brazil will
accept no monitoring by the IMF."
In highly-publicized talks with Sarney near Sao Paulo last
Saturday, several Brazilian business leaders said they favoured
a return to the IMF, arguing that it would make debt
negotiations easier and bring new money into the country.
Reuter
|
U.S. BANKS SEEN STEPPING UP SECURITIES ROLE | The Glass-Steagall Act separating
banking and securities activities in the U.S. is all but dead
following decisions by federal and state authorities, the
chairman of Bankers Trust Co asserted.
"There are plainly nails in the coffin of Glass-Steagall,"
Alfred Brittain said in remarks prepared for delivery to a
meeting of bank and financial analysts.
He noted the Federal Reserve Board is due to decide Bankers
Trust's application for a subsidiary that can underwrite
certain securities.
Brittain said New York State bank regulators have welcomed
applications for affiliates of New York-chartered banks which
could underwrite corporate securities. And he said a U.S. Court
of Appeals upheld Bankers Trust's commercial paper business.
He said eventually the financial services industry will see
fewer but bigger companies drawn from the ranks of the present
commercial banks, investment banks and conglomerates.
On another topic, Britain called for a redefinition of the
role of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
"I think we should return to the original purpose of FDIC
insurance -- to protect small despositors and not depository
institutions themselves," Brittain said.
He suggested banks be permitted to offer both insured
deposits and uninsured deposits. High quality assets would be
segregated to back up insured deposits.
He said big banks could then fail without draining the
insurance funds. "Stockholders could be wiped out, management
rmemoved and uninsured creditors could take their fair share of
any losses," he said. But insured deposits under 100,000 dlrs
would be protected.
Reuter
|
PALO VERDE UNIT 3 GRANTED OPERATING LICENSE | The United States Nuclear
Regulatory Commission granted a low-power operating license to
Unit 3 of the Palo Verde nuclear plant, plant's owners said.
Owners of the Palo Verde plant include AZP Group's Arizona
Public Service Co unit, which holds a 29.1 pct interest, and
Southern California Edison <SCE> and El Paso Electric Co, which
each own a 15.8 pct stake.
The owners said the license will allow for fueling and
testing of up to five pct of the plant's power. Fueling will
begin in a few days, they said.
The commission must review the results of the low-power
testing before it can approve full-power operation.
The owners of plant said they expect to begin full-power
operation by the end of 1987.
Reuter
|
TREASURY'S BAKER SAYS HE STANDS BY PARIS PACT TO FOSTER STABLE CURRENCIES
| |
MEMBERS VOTE TO DISSOLVE U.S. FARM CO-OP | The shareholders of Illinois
Cooperative Futures Co voted to dissolve the 26-year-old firm,
the futures trading arm of 85 farm cooperatives, its president
said.
Thomas E. Mulligan, president of the board of directors,
said 87 pct of the 61 members voting favored dissolution.
The directors recommended the move, citing falling volume
and higher costs, when it called a special shareholders meeting
last month.
Mulligan said the cooperative would continue operating
until April 24, when the member cooperatives will have to begin
clearing their futures trades through other companies.
Mulligan said one of the members, Farmers Commodities of
Des Moines, Iowa, was attempting to organize a new cooperative
to replace Illinois Coop as a clearing company.
Sources close to Farmers Commodities confirmed its plans,
but Hal Richards, president, could not be reached immediately
for comment, and it was unknown how many cooperatives might be
willing to band together.
Industry sources said Farmers Commodities would face a
difficult task in setting up a new clearing organization by
April 24, the day Illinois Cooperative will be dissolved.
They would have to obtain commitments from a sufficient
number of cooperatives to meet minimum capital requirements,
obtain trading memberships, and set up the office mechanisms to
handle futures trading.
In the meantime, commercial clearing firms have been
courting the individual coops, trying to obtain their business
with low trading rates.
If Farmers Commodities is unable to set up a clearing
organization by April 24, individual members will find other
homes, and they're unlikely to change clearing firms a second
time, one industry source said.
The demise of Illinois Coop was set in motion by the
withdrawl of Growmark, Inc., the largest member with more than
70 pct of the capital stock, according to sources within the
cooperative.
Mulligan acknowledged prior to the vote that Growmark had
no need to belong to the cooperative since it became affiliated
last year with Archer Daniels Midland.
But he said Illinois Cooperative would still have been able
to meet minimum capital requirements without Growmark.
The vote to dissolve the organization was met with "a
certain amount of pang," he said. "But in the final analysis,
the decision has to be economic, not emotional."
Reuter
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U.S. SENATE FARM PANEL MAKEUP STILL IN DOUBT | The composition of the Senate
Agriculture Committee, in question since the death of Nebraskan
Democratic Sen. Edward Zorinsky, remains in doubt.
Zorinsky's death earlier this month cut the Democrats'
majority on the committee to 9-8.
Zorinsky's replacement, Republican David Karnes, has said
he would like a seat on the panel, and Senate Republican Leader
Robert Dole (R-Kan.) is said to have thrown his support behind
Karnes, who would add a Midwestern vote to the panel.
But Karnes' appointment to the committee would require at
least one Republican to step off the committee.
Aides to Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and Pete
Wilson (Calif.), whose spots on the panel were rumored to be in
jeopardy, said their bosses were categorically opposed to being
pushed off the committee.
Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) told Reuters he
had rejected a suggestion that Democrats and Republicans each
add one member to the committee.
Leahy said he would be "delighted" to have freshman Sen. John
Breaux (D-La.) join the committee. But Breaux's appointment was
being resisted by Midwestern Democrats, who feel southern
states are adequately represented on the committee.
An aide to Sen. James Exon (D-Neb.) said the senator,
supported by Midwestern Democrats, had not ruled out the
possibility of moving to the committee.
The inability of the two parties to settle the matter could
increase the possibility that the Democratic majority would be
left untouched at 9-8.
The issue is expected to be resolved any day, Senate staff
said.
Reuter
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BAKER SAYS HE STANDS BY PARIS CURRENCY AGREEMENT | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
he stood by the Paris agreement among leading industrial
nations to foster exchange rate stability around current
levels.
"I would refer you to the Paris agreement which was a
recognition the currencies were within ranges broadly
consistent with economic fundamentals," Baker told The Cable
News Network in an interview.
"We were quite satisfied with the agreement in Paris
otherwise we would not have been a party too it," he said.
Baker also noted the nations agreed in the accord to
"co-operate to foster greater exchange rate stability around
those levels."
He refused to comment directly on the current yen/dollar
rate but said flatly that foreign exchange markets recently
tended "to draw unwarranted inferences from what I say."
Baker was quoted on British Television over the weekend as
saying he has no target for the U.S. currency, a statement that
triggered this week's renewed decline of the dollar.
"I think the Paris agreement represents evidence that
international economic policy co-ordination is alive and well,"
Baker said.
The Treasury Secretary stressed however it was very
important for the main surplus countries to grow as fast as
they could consistent with low inflation to resolve trade
imbalances.
He added that Federal Reserve Board chairman Paul Volcker
has also "been very outspoken" in suggesting main trading
partners grow as fast as they can.
Baker noted that the J-curve, the delayed beneficial effect
of a weakening of a currency on that country's trade balance,
takes 12 to 18 months to work its way through to the trade
deficit and it is now 18 months since the Plaza agreement to
lower the dollar's value.
He also said improvements in the trade deficit should come
from other sources besides the exchange rate, and pointed out
the administration's package to improve U.S. Competitiveness
was now before Congress.
REUTER
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BAKER DECLINES COMMENT ON VOLCKER REAPPOINTMENT | Treasury Secretary James Baker
declined to comment on whether President Reagan would reappoint
Paul Volcker to a third term as chairman of the Federal Reserve
Board.
"I spent four years and two weeks in the White House job
refusing to comment on personnel matters," he said in an
interview with the Cable News Network. "I'm not going to change
now."
But Baker did say Volcker has "done a tremendous job" and
added they get on "extremely well", both when he was White House
chief of staff and during his term at Treasury.
When asked whether he differed with Volcker on
international economic policy, Baker said "there's really no
difference of opinion between us with respect to these matters."
In other comments, Baker said he did not think a tax rise
was a good idea and nor did President Reagan. But he believed
Congress would enact some spending cuts. "The minute you say
raise taxes, all restraints on spending go by the board."
He once again pointed out that taxes were 19 pct of gnp but
spending was at 24 pct, a statistic he used to argue strongly
for spending cuts.
reuter
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CHINA SAYS 1986 BUDGET DEFICIT 7.08 BILLION YUAN | China posted a budget deficit of 7.08
billion yuan in 1986, the fourth highest since 1949, after a
surplus of 2.82 billion in 1985, Finance Minister Wang Bingqian
told the National People's Congress.
He put 1986 revenue at 222.03 billion yuan, against a
budgeted 214.17 billion, and up from 185.41 billion in 1985,
and expenditure at 229.11 billion, against a budgeted 214.17
billion and 182.59 billion in 1985.
Official figures show the record post-1949 budget deficit
was 17 billion yuan in 1979.
Wang said the 1986 deficit was due to excess capital
construction and administrative expenses and unjustified and
extravagant investments outside the state plan.
He also blamed the inefficiency of firms whose production
costs and losses rose. He said subsidising state firms' losses
cost 32.25 billion yuan. The 1985 budget did not give a
separate figure for this.
He said the processing industry developed too fast and some
projects could not start operations because of power shortages,
while too many non-productive facilities were set up.
Wang said 1986 and 1985 investment in fixed assets rose
15.3 pct and 41.8 pct respectively year on year and consumption
funds rose 12.5 pct and 23.7 pct, outstripping the growth in
national income.
Wang said revenues were affected by the steep fall in world
oil prices, the decline in the price of primary products, a
drop in income from customs duties and the rising cost of
earning foreign exchange through exports.
Revenue also fell because the state raised the rate of
depreciation for fixed assets of certain state firms, reduced
their regulatory tax and made other tax cuts for firms.
Wang said 1986 tax receipts rose to 206.45 billion yuan
from 201.82 billion in 1985, state treasury bond receipts to
6.2 billion from 6.04 billion and receipts from foreign loans
rose to 7.87 billion from 2.5 billion.
He said 1986 budgetary spending on capital construction
rose to 65.57 billion yuan from 56.97 billion in 1985, on
technical renovation and new products to 12.62 billion from
10.05 billion, aid to rural production and other farm expenses
to 12.03 billion from 10.16 billion, culture, science,
education and public health to 38 billion from 31.72 billion
and defence to 20.13 billion from 19.15 billion.
Wang said expenditure for repaying principal and interest
on foreign loans in 1986 was 3.4 billion yuan, up from 3.26
billion in 1985.
REUTER
|
GUYANA FINANCE MINISTER OPTIMISTIC BUT SEEKS HELP | Guyana hopes to overcome its financial
problems within three to five years and is now seeking help
from donor governments, Finance Minister Carl Greenidge said.
He said Guyana took its problems in January to the
Caribbean Group for Cooperation and Development, which includes
governments and multilateral agencies, with a view to finding a
long-term recovery plan.
Guyana's arrears to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
are now 70 mln dlrs and it would not be eligible for new loans
in the near future, Greenidge told Reuters during the
Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) annual meeting here. MORE
Greenidge also said a World Bank mission would visit
Georgetown this week to assess prospects for a rescue plan that
would enable Guyana to revive its economy. But he said the
government does not expect to be able to reduce its arrears
this year.
Arrears to the IMF and the World Bank are projected to rise
to 100 mln dlrs by the end of 1987. About 90 mln dlrs of this,
equivalent to nearly half Guyana's annual exports, would be
owed to the IMF.
"Expecting us to pay arrears is like asking a dying man to
give a pint of blood," Greenidge said.
But Greenidge said Guyana has taken steps to reduce its
fiscal deficit, which now amounts to 65 pct of GDP. It has
increased taxes, reduced public expenditure and refinanced its
internal debt.
He said the World Bank would meanwhile look at investment
requirements for potential export-earning projects such as gold
mining, timber, oil and kaolin.
Because of its arrears, Guyana has been unable to draw down
a 40 mln dlr World Bank loan for a bauxite industry
rehabilitation project. Bauxite accounts for 90 mln dlrs of
exports, or 40 pct of the total.
REUTER
|
BAKER OPPOSES STOCK TRANSACTION TAX PROPOSAL | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
he opposed a stock transactions tax proposed by House Speaker
Jim Wright, D-Tex, or other special taxes.
"The stock transfer tax would be a particularly unfortunate
approach to take," Baker said in an interview with Cable News
Network.
The United States has some of the most efficient capital
markets in the world and new taxes would impair efficiency, he
said.
REUTER
|
BAKER SEEKS MORE BANK LOANS TO DEVELOPING NATIONS | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
banks must do more lending to developing countries.
Baker, in an interview on Cable News Network, was asked
about such loans after Standard and Poor's Corp today
downgraded the debt of six major money centre bank holding
companies, largely because of their heavy loan exposure to
developing nations.
Baker said developing countries must adopt free market
economic policies such as that of the United States. He said
capital flows will be required to support the needed reforms in
those countries' economic systems.
The money must come either through equity or debt and Baker
said developing nations' "investment regimes do not support
enough equity investment, so you've got to have some debt
there."
REUTER
|
LIBYANS APPEAR TO BE PULLING OUT OF CHAD | Libyan forces appear to be
withdrawing from their last stronghold in Chad after suffering
defeats at the hands of French-backed government troops,
according to officials in both the U.S. And France.
In Washington, a State Department spokesman told reporters
"we have no reason to doubt that Libyan forces are leaving Faya
Largeau," Libya's main garrison in Chad.
The French Defence Ministry said it could not confirm the
departure of the Libyan troops, but an official said "it is
extremely likely. They are deprived of air cover and supplies,
and their morale must be zero."
REUTER
|
CHINA, PORTUGAL INITIAL MACAO PACT | China and Portugal today initialled a
joint declaration under which the 400-year-old colony of Macao
will be handed over to Peking on December 20, 1999, the
official New China News Agency reported.
Portuguese Prime Minister Anibal Cavaco Silve said in
Lisbon yesterday that China had promised that Macao's existing
political, economic and social system will be maintained until
the year 2050.
Macao, located across the Pearl River estuary from Hong
Kong, has a population of about 400,000 people.
REUTER
|
BAKER SEES 15 TO 20 BILLION DLR DROP IN TRADE GAP | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
he expected the U.S. Trade deficit to fall by 15 billion to 20
billion dlrs in 1987.
Commenting on the deficit during an interview on Cable News
Network, Baker said "I think you're going to see a 15 to 20
billion dlr reduction this year." The deficit was 170 billion
dlrs in 1986.
Baker noted that the benefits of a weaker currency take 12
to 18 months to affect the trade balance, and said it is now 18
months since the Plaza agreement to lower the dollar's value.
REUTER
|
Sumita says further yen rise would adversely affect Japanese economy
| |
Sumita says major nations will continue to cooperate to stabilize currencies
| |
N.Z. MONEY SUPPLY RISES 2.4 PCT IN JANUARY | New Zealand's broadly defined,
seasonally adjusted M-3 money supply grew an estimated 2.4 pct
in January against a 3.4 pct (revised from 3.6) rise in
December and a 0.7 pct rise in January 1986.
It said unadjusted M-3 increased to an estimated 30.13
billion N.Z. Dlrs from 30.08 (revised from 30.06) billion in
December and 25.18 billion in January 1986.
Year-on-year M-3 rose 19.66 pct in January from 17.80 pct
(revised from 17.77) in December and 20.10 pct in January 1986.
Narrowly defined year-on-year M-1 growth was 21.94 pct in
January against 15.89 pct in December and 14.10 pct a year
earlier.
M-1 grew to an estimated 4.72 billion dlrs against 5.03
billion in December and 3.87 billion in January 1986.
Year-on-year private sector credit, PSC, grew 31.07 pct in
January against 30.64 pct (revised from 30.68) in December and
21.40 pct in January 1986. PSC grew to 22.69 billion dlrs from
22.24 billion in December and 17.31 billion in January 1986.
REUTER
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