Featured Analysis from:Money Morning

  1. Search
Welcome to Emerginvest: One Source for Market Data and Analysis
on World Markets, Global Companies, Regions, and Sectors in over 100 Stock Markets
Soon we will be launching a new product, the Emerginvest Stream.
Sign-up to be notified when we launch:
Relevant pages on Emerginvest:
Brazil | Iraq | Peru
Investment News Briefs
by Money Morning (View the original article)
Posted on Nov 6, 2009

With our investment news briefs, Money Morning provides investors with a quick overview of the most important investing news stories from all around the world.

Retail Sales Slump; U.K. Government Fines UBS $13.3 Million; Exxon and Shell Sign Iraq Oil Contract; BOE Expands Quantitative Easing; FBI Arrests 14 in Galleon Probe; Petrobras Finds Gas in Peru; Shares of Ancestry.com Soar on IPO; Mortgage Rates Drop Below 5%

  • More than half of U.S. retail chains posted October sales that fell short of Wall Street’s heightened expectations in an ominous sign for the upcoming holiday season, Reuters reported. "October results are not going to give investors the overall warm and fuzzy that we’re on track for a strong Christmas," said Brean Murray, Carret & Co analyst Eric Beder, "It looks like we’re on track for kind of a mediocre season right now based upon October." Department store chains and teen retailers were especially hard hit by consumer reluctance.
  • Swiss bank UBS AG (NYSE: UBS) yesterday (Thursday) received a $13.3 million (8 million pound) fine from the British government for management failures that allowed employees to make unauthorized trades with customers’ accounts, The Associated Press reported. Four employees and at least 39 accounts in UBS’ wealth management business were involved in the unauthorized transactions, which took place in 2006 and 2007. UBS has paid more than $42 million compensation to the wealthy customers who were affected.
  • The Bank of England (BOE) yesterday (Thursday) said it would expand its policy of quantitative easing, by $41.5 billion (25 billion pounds). The increase brings the central bank’s total asset-buying program to $332 billion (200 billion pounds), the equivalent of more than 14% of Great Britain’s gross domestic product (GDP). 
  • U.S. prosecutors expanded the massive insider trading case against Galleon Group when the FBI charged 14 more people, including hedge fund managers and an ex-employee of Galleon, with securities violationsZvi Goffer, a former Galleon employee, and Craig Drimal, who worked at the Manhattan firm’s offices, were arrested yesterday (Thursday) the FBI said. Goffer, the alleged ringleader of the scheme and founder of Incremental Capital LLC, paid his tipsters for information on mergers and acquisitions, and gave them pre-paid mobile phones to avoid detection, as part of a probe of an alleged insider trading scheme totaling $40 million the government said. Five of those charged pleaded guilty, Bloomberg News reported.
  • Shares of Ancestry.com Inc., the world’s largest online provider of family histories, surged on the first day of trading after raising $100 million in an initial public offering. The Provo, Utah-based company’s shares advanced as much as $1.25, or 9.3%, to $14.75 in Nasdaq Stock Market composite trading. Ancestry.com, private-equity firms Spectrum Equity Investors and W Capital Partners, and other owners sold 7.41 million shares at $13.50 each, the midpoint of its forecast range in its IPO. The sale valued the company at about $572 million.  “They’re the leader in the market,” Eric Guja, an analyst at Renaissance Capital LLC in Greenwich, Connecticut told Bloomberg. “Their profit margins are impressive.”
  • Mortgage rates for 30-year fixed U.S. home loans fell for the first time in a month this week as the Federal Reserve pledged to keep its benchmark rate near zero for an extended period.  The average 30-year mortgage rate declined to 4.98% from 5.03%. The 15-year rate was 4.40%, mortgage buyer Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) of McLean, Virginia, said today in a statement, according to Bloomberg.




Emerginvest Premium Products
More Money Morning Research
New Stimulus Won’t Save Japan From Deflation, Soaring Deficit  Dec 8, 2009

Property Group Bucks Commercial Real Estate Trend with $2.23 Billion Acquisition  Dec 8, 2009

Citi’s Pandit is the Right Man For the Job – at Bank of America  Dec 8, 2009

Investment News Briefs  Dec 8, 2009

Three Reasons Commodities Prices Will Continue to Soar in the New Year  Dec 8, 2009

Copenhagen Climate Summit Could Reshape the Investment Landscape  Dec 7, 2009

Lawmakers Looking to Use Excess TARP Funds for a Second Stimulus  Dec 7, 2009

Was Friday’s Trading the First Sign of a Carry Trade Reversal?  Dec 7, 2009

Buy, Sell or Hold: Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) Brings a Strong Business Model and 100 Years of Experience Into 2010  Dec 7, 2009

Hot Stocks: Is Markel Corp. a Berkshire Hathaway in the Making?  Dec 7, 2009

Low November Job Losses Shock, but The Jobless Recovery Continues  Dec 4, 2009

Healthcare Reform May Not Cut Spending or the Federal Deficit  Dec 4, 2009

Investment News Briefs  Dec 4, 2009

With NBC Deal Done, Comcast Becomes the New Cable Juggernaut  Dec 4, 2009

Preparing For the Next Asia  Dec 4, 2009

Bank of America Hopes to Lure Top Shelf Talent by Paying Back TARP Loans  Dec 3, 2009

China Will Continue to Drive the Global Economic Recovery in 2010  Dec 3, 2009

The Five Things You Need to Know About China  Dec 3, 2009

Investment News Briefs  Dec 3, 2009

GM’s Search for CEO Won’t Likely Be Part of the “Old Guard”  Dec 2, 2009

Money Morning Bio
Money Morning is a daily e-letter brought to you by contributors, editors and writers who are comprised of former professional traders, investment bankers, international financiers, finance professors, emerging market specialists and veteran journalists. Money Morning cuts through the opinionated and overwrought analysis that plagues the scores of business news sites and blogs these days. Each weekday morning, in a readable style you can digest in just a few minutes, you will reap the benefits of our research and expert experiences. Indeed, Money Morning will bring you:

- The latest reports on China, Japan, Emerging Europe, and the other global hot spots where most investor wealth will be created in the months and years to come...

- Reports on companies you’ve likely never heard of - even though they’re poised to sell billions worth of their wares to “new middle class” customers around the world...

- Information on the U.S. companies shrewd enough to cash in on this boom in global;

- The latest developments in banking, interest rates, foreign investment and other global investing topics;

- Advice on how to invest in currencies, precious metals, commodities and energy

- Inside news on the hottest investments, including water, uranium and private equity...

- And news on rules and regulations, financial trends and strategies - and any other “market intelligence” that you will need to become a shrewd-and-successful investor in the greatest global investing boom most of us will ever see.

And it’s all delivered directly to you - and at no charge. We write about five “top hitting” articles that are syndicated daily all over the web. Money does move the markets. But Money Morning lets you move first.

©2010 Emerginvest All Rights Reserved.