Entries Tagged 'Investing' ↓
July 30th, 2009 — Cars, Investing, Stocks
The German Daimler Group recorded a net loss of 2.34 billion euro in the first half of this year, compared to a net profit of 2.72 billion euro in the same period last year, as sales collapsed because of a strong decline in demand in the car market.
Auto sales by the carmaking giant – owner of Mercedes-Benz – decreased by over 23% in the first half of the year to 38.29 billion euro from 50 billion euro in January-June period of 2008.
Daimler sales dropped by about 270,000 vehicles to 732,800 cars in the first half of this year compared to over one million units sold in the corresponding period last year.
Daimler eliminated over 17,000 employees and had 257,000 on staff as of June 30th. At last midyear, Daimler had 275,000 employees.
Mercedes-Benz, which generates over half of the business group’s revenues, registered a decrease of 22.7% in sales in the first half to 19.63 billion euro from 25.41 billion in the same period of past year.
July 16th, 2009 — Finance, Investing, Stocks
Yesterday Goldman Sachs, the most important financial institution on Wall Street, reported a profit for the second quarter of $3.4 billion, up a whopping 89%. The size of the profit caught many analysts by surprise, with some saying it was one of the most tangible signs that the financial crisis is nearing an end.
Despite Goldman’s stellar quarter, the results of other banks are less encouraging. Georges Ugeux, Chairman of Galileo Global Advisors, is of the opinion that to assess the recovery of financial system we must evaluated health of commercial banks, not investment banks.
“To see if the financial system was repaired, we must analyze the impact of the crisis at banks that are engaged in private credits”, says Ugeux. “The bank results may be less encouraging.”
One example is CIT Group, which today is struggling with bankruptcy. For this reason, the financial results of JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley this week will be more telling.
Chairman of Galileo Global Advisors, Ugeux is Dr. in Law and Bachelor of Economics at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium. He was a banker at Societe Generale, Morgan Stanley, Kidder Peabody, President of the European Investment Fund and Chairman of International Division NYSE. Galileo Global Advisors is a bank and consulting business founded by him.
June 19th, 2009 — Insurance, Investing, Stocks
Many seniors are now selling their life insurance policies to raise cash, according to a recent issue of Kiplinger’s. In 2006, a whopping $6.1 billion in life insurance policies with death benefits changed hands.
Here’s how it works: when you sell your policy to a stranger, that person pays you a cash sum and continues to pay the premiums on the policy to keep it current. Here’s where it gets weird: the stranger to whom you sold your policy only profits when you die.
These transactions are called life settlements and they are becoming more common. Huge banks like JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs invest in packages of life settlements because the return is not correlated with the stock market. So as an investor, life settlements can be a great way to diversity and hedge your stock market exposure.
Investors in life settlement policies prefer people over 65 who are insured for at least $500,000 or more. So would you sell your life insurance policy to a stranger?
June 15th, 2009 — Finance, Investing, Stocks
U.S. banks have returned to profit in the first quarter, after dismal 2008 and in particular a disastrous fourth quarter. But these profits are only on paper while the reality is completely different, warn a number of economists.
Major Banks in the United States say that they are on the point of return and is rushing to return money received from the state to make face the crisis broke out in September after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers.
The five of them were in first quarter on profit, shares and prices are rising, KBW Bank Index and the doubling of March 6. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner stated at the beginning of May, after implementation of stress tests designed to determine the capacity of 19 banks to face the deterioration of economic conditions, as Americans can be confident in the stability and soundness of banks.
However, this return could be short, writes Bloomberg. Analysts who have examined quarterly profits and government tests say that the changes made in terms of accounting rules and optimistic estimates make institutions to seem stronger than they are.
June 1st, 2009 — Investing, Loans, Money, Stocks
Bank of America, the largest bank in the U.S., plans to repay 45 billion dollars to the U.S. Treasury. Other leading banks such as Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase and Morgan Stanley have announced a similar intention in recent days.
The reason of the Bank of America is the desire to eliminate the debts created by state aid collected. A good sign we would say, if keep in mind that the amounts are part of a plan to support banks in difficulty.
Reimbursement will be supported including the capital increase. Worth over 35 billion dollars, it would take place by the end of September, according to sources cited by the publication “Financial Times” taken by Reuters.
Through a bond issue, Bank of America has already obtained a capital increase of 13.47 billion dollars and concludes, therefore, an important step in the goal set by the U.S. government after the application of stress tests in the banking system.