Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Swiss Stocks Drop as China’s Growth Slows; ABB Retreats

Swiss stocks fell, with the country’s equity benchmark posting its longest streak of weekly losses since November, as China’s economy slowed more than forecast and concern about the euro-region debt crisis gained.

ABB Ltd. (ABBN), the world’s biggest power-grid supplier, led a drop in shares sensitive to economic growth. Cie. Financiere Richemont SA, the second-largest maker of luxury goods, also retreated. UBS AG (UBSN) and Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN), the country’s two biggest banks, followed a gauge of European lenders lower.

The Swiss Market Index (SMI) slipped 0.9 percent to 6,072.12 at the close in Zurich. The measure of Switzerland’s biggest and most actively traded companies sank 1.5 percent this week, its fourth straight decline. The gauge has still gained 2.3 percent in 2012 as the euro area sought to contain its debt crisis and as U.S. economic reports surpassed estimates. The broader Swiss Performance Index decreased 0.8 percent today.

“We remain in a cycle that began in 2007, marked by periods of strong rebounds followed closely by market corrections,” Francois Moute, chairman of Neuflize Private Assets in Paris, and Chief Executive Officer Olivia Giscard d’Estaing wrote in a note. “In our opinion, this means it’s best to remain cautious.”

The volume of shares changing hands in the SMI was 8.3 percent higher today than the average of the last 30 days, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

ECB Bond Program

Swiss stocks extended their decline as European Central Bank Governing Council member Klaas Knot said that officials remain far from reviving their purchases of government bonds.

“I think that we are very far from that situation, the instrument hasn’t been used for some time, but it’s still there, I hope we never have to use it again,” Knot said at an event in Amsterdam today, when asked about the need for the ECB to buy government bonds.

The cost of insuring against a Spanish default jumped to a record as Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy struggles to prevent the nation from becoming the fourth euro-region member to need a bailout. Credit-default swaps on Spain rose 17 basis points to 498 as of 4 p.m. in London, surpassing the previous all-time high closing price of 493, according to CMA.

Growth in China’s economy, the world’s second biggest, slowed last quarter more than forecast to the weakest pace in almost three years. Gross domestic product rose 8.1 percent from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics in Beijing said today. That was a slower rate than the 8.4 percent growth predicted in a Bloomberg News survey.

U.S. Economy

A report today showed that the cost of living in the U.S. increased at a slower pace in March. Consumer-price inflation climbed 0.3 percent, matching the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The index increased 0.4 percent in February. A separate release showed that consumer sentiment fell to 75.7 in April from 76.2 at the end of last month, missing the average economist estimate.

ABB lost 1.8 percent to 17.89 Swiss francs. Holcim Ltd. (HOLN), the world’s second-largest cement maker, slid 2.3 percent to 56.25 francs.

Richemont, which generated 48 percent of its sales from Asia in its last financial year, decreased 2.3 percent to 55.60 francs. Swatch Group AG (UHR), the biggest maker of Swiss watches, slipped 1.7 percent to 419.70 francs. The watchmaker made 54 percent of its revenue in Asia last year.

UBS, Credit Suisse

UBS declined 2.4 percent to 11.52 francs. Credit Suisse lost 3.8 percent to 23.60 francs. Bank stocks retreated 3.1 percent for the biggest drop among the 19 industry groups in the Stoxx Europe 600 Index. (SXXP)

Flughafen Zuerich AG (FHZN), operator of the Zurich Airport, slid 3.5 percent to 334.25 francs. Credit Suisse is placing 368,270 shares on behalf of CP2 Ltd., terms of the deal obtained by Bloomberg News show.

Newron Pharmaceuticals SpA (NWRN), a biotechnology company, advanced 4 percent to 3.93 francs. Jefferies Group Inc. raised its share-price forecast to 4.30 francs from 3 francs.

Aryzta AG (ARYN), the maker of specialty bakery products, added 2.1 percent to 44.05 francs. The stock was initiated with an outperform rating at CA Cheuvreux.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-13/swiss-stocks-drop-as-china-s-growth-slows-abb-retreats.html

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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Swiss banks still draw rich despite secrecy blows

By Emma Thomasson

ZURICH (Reuters) – Swiss bankers are on the defensive with their secretive industry under sustained attack for sheltering tax dodgers. Some cannot travel abroad for fear of arrest in tax investigations.

But the fur coats and expensive cars on display around the Paradeplatz square at the heart of Zurich’s financial district – as well as booming house prices – tell a different story: business is good in a city now ranked the world’s costliest.

Zurich overtook Tokyo as most expensive according to a new ranking by the Economist Intelligence Unit because of the soaring Swiss franc. The currency is up 30 percent since 2008, despite a cap imposed last year by the central bank, because investors view it as a safe haven in global economic turmoil.

The same factors make the country’s banks attractive despite the gradual erosion of bank secrecy: political stability and neutrality, low government debt and an economy which has been relatively resilient through the financial crisis.

Although Swiss banks – especially the country’s biggest UBS – have shared in the pain of the crisis, they have retained an image for solidity, particularly in contrast to their euro zone rivals, bolstered by new capital rules that are the world’s strictest.

The swelling ranks of Chinese and Indian millionaires who have developed a taste for Swiss luxury watches are also drawn by the country’s quality-seal when it comes to banking their new wealth, helping to replace U.S. and European tax exile clients.

Figures published in recent weeks show that six of the biggest Swiss banks together pulled in net new client assets of more than 100 billion Swiss francs in 2011.

“Switzerland PLC remains a hugely popular global epicentre of wealth. Clearly in the global environment of the last 12-24 months people have been looking for safekeeping,” said Sebastian Dovey of wealth management consultancy Scorpio Partnership.

“Net new assets might reflect a positive mood from 12 months ago. Will we see a similar strength in 12 months time? I suggest we probably will,” Dovey added.

While Singapore and London are also doing well, Dovey noted Switzerland has defended its position as the biggest centre of offshore wealth. It remains the top choice for investors in Asia even if Singapore might overtake it in a decade.

“ISLAND OF THE BLESSED”

Asia is a particular strength of UBS which drew net client inflows of 42 billion francs in 2011 despite the blow of a $2 billion trading scandal in September just as it was starting to restore trust after a 2008 state bailout.

“Many observers still see Switzerland as a kind of island of the blessed in an environment plagued by crisis,” UBS chairman Kaspar Villiger told a dinner in February to launch a year of celebrations for the bank’s 150th anniversary.

“The question is whether such a situation is sustainable given the worrying number of difficult challenges our country is confronted with.”

Most critical of those challenges at the moment is settling a long-running tax dispute with the United States, which is investigating 11 banks including Credit Suisse and Julius Baer for helping Americans evade taxes.

The sense of urgency has increased since Switzerland’s oldest bank, Wegelin, broke itself up in January a week before it was indicted on charges that it helped Americans evade taxes on at least $1.2 billion hidden in offshore bank accounts.

“In Switzerland, you would believe that was like the end of the world but if you interview wealth clients around the world … the disappearance of Wegelin is a side story,” Dovey said.

“However the wider issue of the industry needing only in future to handle compliant assets is going to have major ramifications both in Switzerland and elsewhere.”

Banks are likely to have to pay hefty fines and hand over thousands of client names to end the U.S. investigations, but the issue should not have a big impact on assets as most already closed the accounts of U.S. offshore clients after UBS paid $780 million to settle criminal charges in 2009.

A survey by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) shows that assets of North American origin shrank to 2 percent of the total $2.1 trillion of offshore wealth held in Switzerland at the end of 2010 from 18 percent just four years earlier.

That helps explain the fall in offshore assets managed in Switzerland from a 2007 peak of 2.7 trillion francs, but the country has managed to compensate by attracting clients among the new wealthy in booming emerging markets like Latin America and the Middle East and Africa.

SHIFT TO NEW WORLD FROM OLD WORLD

“Even under new circumstances and after a certain drain of assets, Switzerland has a lot to offer. For the medium-term I’m very confident, even for money from the ‘old world’,” said Zurich-based BCG partner Peter Damisch.

“Emerging markets will get more and more important. We see a tectonic shift,” he said. “Five years ago, two thirds of assets were from the ‘old world’ and one third from the ‘new world’. Five years down the road it will be exactly the opposite.”

Swiss banks remain exposed in western Europe, which accounts for about half its banks’ offshore assets under management – or $1 trillion – and where Switzerland has also come under intense pressure from its neighbours to make sure accounts are taxed.

Switzerland struck deals with Germany and Britain last year to allow citizens to pay tax on accounts without revealing their identities which it hoped would be blueprints for other cash-strapped countries in Europe, including Greece and Italy.

But the agreements have faced resistance from the European Commission, which wants Switzerland to accept an automatic exchange of bank information, and from the German opposition Social Democrats which sees them as too lenient on tax evaders.

That has led some senior bankers to voice what would have been unthinkable a few years ago: that Switzerland should stop fighting to defend what remains of bank secrecy.

“If the Americans get thousands of client data, the Europeans will want that too,” said Pierin Vincenz, chief executive of Switzerland’s third biggest bank Raiffeisen.

“We must finally show that Switzerland is serious with a ‘clean money’ strategy. And that will in the end only be possible with an internationally supported strategy.”

That idea still strikes fear into the hearts of many Swiss bankers after decades of easy profits that came from managing untaxed assets, making them “fat but impotent” in the words of Hans Baer, the late former chairman of Julius Baer.

JOBS AT RISK

Daniel Lampart, chief economist of the Swiss Trade Union Federation, said pushing banks to manage only taxed funds would shave 0.2-0.3 percent off annual gross domestic product in the next few years and put 5,000 to 10,000 jobs at risk. But he said it was in Switzerland’s interests to clean up its banking industry: “There’s no reasonable explanation for a country to give an easy way out to people with taxes to pay at the expense of other countries.”

Swiss conservatives are more worried. Thomas Matter, banker turned politician from the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP), has warned that accepting only “clean money” could cost the banking industry 50,000 jobs. The financial industry accounts for about 6 percent of jobs in Switzerland – over 200,000 – and contributes more than 10 percent to national output, accounting for a third of growth in last 20 years.

However, while Zurich’s Bahnhofstrasse shopping street might not sell as many Rolexes in future, the Swiss economy could live with fewer bankers, given that unemployment is just 3 percent.

The experience of private bank Sarasin, which has taken a pro-active stance on shedding untaxed assets in recent years, should also provide some consolation for the industry.

It is predicting 8-10 percent growth in net new assets in 2012. And despite a change of ownership which deterred customers in the second half of 2011, Sarasin still managed to attract net new assets of 1.5 billion francs for the year, many of them from clients in Asia and the Middle East.

Oswald Gruebel, former chief executive of both Credit Suisse and UBS, is sanguine about the future. “We still have a lot of indisputable advantages compared to other countries and also a good image with investors despite the incidents of recent years,” he said in a recent speech. “In 10 years we will experience another economic boom.

http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/wire-news/swiss-banks-still-draw-rich-despite-secrecy-blows_683476.html


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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Zurich Financial Profit Drops 46% on Thai Floods, Tax Rate

Feb. 16 (Bloomberg) — Zurich Financial Services AG, Switzerland’s largest insurer, said fourth-quarter profit declined 46 percent after losses from Thai floods and other natural catastrophes.

Net income fell to $557 million from $1.04 billion a year earlier, the Zurich-based company said today in an e-mailed statement. This missed the $729.1 million average estimate of 11 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

The company booked insured losses after reinsurance of $225 million in the quarter, said Chief Financial Officer Pierre Wauthier, adding that earnings were also crimped by a higher tax rate and a donation to charity. Zurich Financial said it will keep its dividend unchanged after increasing its 2010 payout to an 11-year high of 17 Swiss francs ($18.53) per share.

“Once again they are going to pay a really high dividend,” said Martin Schwab, a Zurich-based analyst with Bank Sarasin & Cie. AG. “The results were slightly below consensus generally, so at least it is a good thing they will keep the dividend at 17 francs.”

The shares fell as much as 2.4 percent in Zurich trading and were down 1.8 percent to 228.9 francs as of 10:05 a.m. That pared the stock’s gain this year to 7.8 percent.

Full-year profit rose 10 percent to $3.77 billion after the firm’s net investment result contributed $9.4 billion to total revenue, Zurich Financial said.

‘Devastating Earthquakes’

“We delivered a good result in a year characterized by natural catastrophes, including devastating earthquakes in Japan and New Zealand as well as exceptional weather-related losses around the globe,” Chief Executive Officer Martin Senn said in the statement.

The company booked insured losses of $1 billion after reinsurance last year following the floods in Thailand and the earthquake in New Zealand, compared with major catastrophe losses of $275 million in 2010.

Market declines, flood losses, a higher tax rate and a “charitable contribution” of about $100 million to the insurer’s Z Zurich Foundation cut profit in the fourth quarter, Wauthier said.

The insurer’s combined ratio, which measures claims and costs as a percentage of premiums, worsened to 98.93 percent in the quarter from 98.56 percent, following the catastrophe losses. A ratio below 100 percent means underwriting is profitable.

Zurich Financial, Swiss Life Holding AG and other insurers may post slower premium growth this year as the economy deteriorates, according to the Swiss Insurance Association, an industry lobby group.

Missing Target

Business operating profit after-tax return on equity dropped to 10.2 percent in 2011, missing its target of 16 percent over the long term. Senn said on Dec. 1 that Zurich Financial may miss its target if the “current economic outlook persists.”

The company estimates its solvency ratio under a Swiss test was about 190 percent at the end of last year compared with more than 200 percent three months earlier. The ratio was hurt when Zurich Financial increased its equity holdings to 3.2 percent of total investments from 2.7 percent, according to Wauthier.

Chief Investment Officer Cecilia Reyes said on Jan. 26 that income from bond investments will stay “low for years to come” as central banks keep borrowing costs near zero, adding that it will be a “challenge” to meet investment-income targets.

–Editors: Dylan Griffiths, Steve Bailey.

To contact the reporter on this story: Carolyn Bandel in Zurich at cbandel@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Frank Connelly at fconnelly@bloomberg.net

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-02-21/zurich-financial-profit-drops-46-on-thai-floods-tax-rate.html


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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines : Spain approves labor reforms to boost sick economy, create jobs, regain investor confidence

MADRID — Spain’s new conservative government approved sweeping labor market reforms Friday as part of a drive to revive a sick economy and solve Europe’s worst unemployment nightmare — a jobless rate of nearly 23 percent. The plan is designed to encourage companies to hire more people by cutting government-mandated severance packages and offering tax breaks for taking on young people. But the fast-track approval of the measures generated violent clashes between riot police and protesters who say they will be stripped of cherished worker benefits. More than 500 held a peaceful rally in Madrid’s central Puerta de Sol plaza late Friday, but it turned violent after some tried to march toward parliament and were blocked by police. Scuffles broke out, with officers using batons on demonstrators. At least eight protesters were detained and several officers sustained minor injuries, Spanish media reported. Before the mayhem, protester Cristina Fernandez waved a placard saying “Every cut mutilates my rights” and said the labor reforms won’t achieve the government’s goals. “To reduce unemployment, you need to create jobs, not simplify firing,” said Fernandez, a 52-year-old business consultant. Spain is eager to restore investor confidence, satisfy the European Union and other international institutions by seeking major structural reforms in order to cut its deficit and ward off fears that it could follow Greece, Ireland and Portugal in seeking a bailout. Under the new package of measures, Spanish companies facing hard times will be able to pull out of collective bargaining agreements and have greater flexibility to adjust an employee’s schedules, workplace tasks and wages depending on how the economy and the company are doing. The country’s severance packages — long seen as among the most generous of many countries — will also be cut from 45 days of severance pay per year worked to 33 days. A clause will also be introduced that will cut the amount of time companies can have their workers on temporary contracts with few benefits. Nearly a third of the work force in Spain is on temporary contracts, a huge percentage that makes the country’s jobless rate so volatile. As of Jan. 1 2013, workers must be moved on to permanent contracts after 24 months. Following Socialist reform of 2010 companies could run temporary contracts indefinitely. Small companies with 50 workers or fewer who hire people receiving jobless benefits will get 50 percent of that person’s unemployment benefit while the employee will continue to receive 25 percent of the payments along with their wage. This way the person gets a job and the government saves on a quarter of the dole payments. Meanwhile, self-employed people wishing to set up a business will receive tax breaks of €3,000 ($3,986) for the first person they hire if that person is under 30. Spain’s unemployment rate for people under 25 is almost a staggering 48 percent. The government said it will also oblige unemployed people to carry out social work or take part in job training programs, a measure officials say will help cut back on Spain’s huge underground economy.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/markets/spain-to-approve-key-labor-market-reforms-in-bid-to-create-jobs-regain-investor-confidence/2012/02/10/gIQAT8XU3Q_story.html

Posted in Economy News, Headlines, News Review | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Swiss central banker fails to calm currency scandal

Swiss National Bank (SNB) Chairman Philipp Hildebrand attends a news conference in Zurich, January 5, 2012.  REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

 

(Reuters) – Switzerland’s biggest political party on Friday piled fresh pressure on the embattled head of the country’s central bank to quit over a currency trade scandal.

Swiss media said Philipp Hildebrand had failed to defuse the crisis when he pledged at a news conference on Thursday to fight accusations of wrongdoing over the controversial trade by his wife Kashya and refused to step down.

She spent 400,000 Swiss francs ($420,000) to buy dollars last August, just three weeks before the Swiss National Bank (SNB) imposed a cap on the soaring Swiss currency.

Philipp Hildebrand, a 48-year old former hedge fund executive, told reporters on Thursday he learned of the trade the following day.

The Swiss People’s Party (SVP), a vocal critic of Hildebrand and the SNB’s intervention in foreign exchange markets under his charge, called on Friday for a special parliamentary session to examine the case.

“It is unlawful and completely untenable that leaders of the Swiss National Bank carry out currency actions also in their private affairs. Philipp Hildebrand is no longer acceptable as chairman of the Swiss National Bank,” the SVP said.

In practice it would be hard for the SVP to get a special session as they would need to secure a majority in the lower and upper houses.

Swiss tabloid paper Blick ran a picture of Hildebrand leaving an up-market restaurant in Zurich with his wife and daughter after the Thursday press conference.

Other political parties appeared satisfied with Hildebrand’s performance and his promise to improve transparency at the central bank.

The government has also backed Hildebrand, who has been under intense pressure since a Bank Sarasin (BSAN.S) employee leaked bank account details of him and his wife, showing the family bought foreign currency very close to the time the SNB capped the franc.

HOUSE RAIDED

Switzerland guards bank client confidentiality jealously and the employee is also in the firing line.

Sarasin has fired the 39-year old IT worker and police in the Swiss canton of Thurgau told Reuters on Friday that they had searched his house.

Sarasin said the former employee had worked alone and that it had filed a charge with the Zurich public prosecutor’s office against him for violating bank client confidentiality and commercial secrecy.

The bank has also filed charges against third parties for inducing those actions but did not specify who the third parties were.

“The criminal charge is thus also directed against persons who induced the Bank’s employee to violate bank client confidentiality and who received confidential information and exploited it for their own or other people’s purposes,” Sarasin said in the statement.

The Zurich public prosecutor’s office has already begun investigating the breach of client confidentiality.

According to the head of the SNB bank council, the bank details were passed to lawyer Hermann Lei, who has close links to Christoph Blocher, a leading member of the SVP and Hildebrand’s sharpest critic.

Lei was not immediately available for comment. He said on his website on Thursday that he was not the lawyer for the former Bank Sarasin employee.

Blocher approached the Swiss government with his concerns about the transactions at the end of last year.

Blocher on Friday denied he had ever actually seen any bank documents, although he said several different people had approached him about the transactions.

“If an employee of mine had done this they would have been sacked. If I’d done this I would have gone to prison (for insider trading),” Blocher told a news conference in Rorschach in eastern Switzerland.

Swiss media said Hildebrand had not ended the crisis with his appearance on Thursday.

“It is simply hard to understand that in the middle of the biggest currency crisis for decades, the president of the Swiss National Bank would have no idea whether his wife was speculating on currency markets,” Swiss newspaper St. Galler Tagblatt wrote in an editorial.

Leading newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeitung called on the central bank chief to publish the email sent by his wife ordering the dollar transaction.

Hildebrand on Thursday shifted some of the focus to his wife, an economist who worked at the same hedge fund her future husband did.

“We married relatively late, and from the beginning our marriage has always been, how shall I put it. Well, let’s say my wife is a strong personality,” he said.

Kashya, now owner of a Zurich art gallery, was born in Pakistan and later moved to the United States. She now has dual American-Swiss citizenship.

Tagesanzeiger said in an editorial that the affair had cut Hildebrand down to size, but that he should stay in his post unless new harmful revelations emerged.

“The Swiss public and in particular politicians will now debate whether a man with this flaw should still lead the central bank. If no new facts emerge then Switzerland would do well to not lose this head,” the Swiss newspaper wrote. ($1 = 0.9522 Swiss francs)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/06/us-hildebrand-snb-idUSTRE80510820120106


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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines : Michigan Plans Detroit Finance Review in Step Toward Takeover

Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) — Detroit’s finances will be given a preliminary review by state officials starting Dec. 6, Michigan Treasurer Andy Dillon said, in what may be the first step toward the appointment of an emergency manager.

The 18th-largest U.S. city may face $400 million in penalties if an emergency manager is put in charge, because of swap agreements made with two banks that helped Detroit borrow money in 2009, according to Ted Damutz, senior credit officer for Moody’s Investors Service in Chicago.

Dillon is aware of the potential penalty, Terry Stanton, spokesman for the state treasury department, said by e-mail. He said the financial review is only a first step in a process that may lead to state intervention.

Detroit faces a $44 million cash shortfall by June, on top of an accumulated $155 million deficit. Yesterday, Mayor Dave Bing and City Council members denounced the potential state action, saying the city will heal itself. Republican Governor Rick Snyder has said that while he doesn’t want to name an emergency manager, the city needs help.

“The goal of the mayor and governor is to avoid the appointment of an emergency manager,” Steve Serkaian, a Bing spokesman, said yesterday by telephone. So concern that the swaps penalties may kick in is “speculative,” he said.

UBS, Siebert

The penalties were included in a renegotiated financing agreement after the city’s credit rating was cut in 2009, Damutz said yesterday in a telephone interview. He said the city could try to renegotiate terms if an emergency manager takes over Detroit’s finances. A Moody’s report lists the banks as Zurich- based UBS AG and Siebert, Brandford, Shank & Co. in New York.

Karina Byrne, a UBS spokeswoman in New York, didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment on the swaps, left after normal business hours. A person answering a call to Siebert’s West Coast headquarters in Oakland, California, said no one was available to provide a comment on the deals.

Dillon, in a conference call with reporters yesterday, said he ordered a preliminary review because of the city’s worsening cash flow and because the mayor, City Council and union leaders have been unable to agree on a plan to reduce the deficit.

Bing has proposed eliminating 1,000 of the city’s 11,000 jobs, while the council wants to cut 2,300 positions, including 500 from the police and fire departments.

The financial examination will be completed within 30 days, Dillon said. If it shows sufficient distress, a formal review may be ordered to determine further action, which Dillon said wouldn’t necessarily mean the appointment of a manager.

‘Fixable’ Issues

The city’s difficulties “are fixable,” Dillon said. He dismissed the possibility of a municipal bankruptcy.

A state law passed this year broadened the powers of emergency managers over municipal finances, including the ability to nullify union contracts, with the treasurer’s consent. Detroit’s schools are already under control of such a state-appointed overseer.

“It’s our goal to work together with the city in coordination and to have a good, healthy city of Detroit, because that’s critical to the future of Michigan,” Dillon said.

Dillon’s action is “unfortunate,” Bing said in a statement. He said the city would cooperate with the review.

“We believe we have the right plan to address the city’s fiscal crisis,” the mayor said. “We will continue to work with the City Council, our unions and other stakeholders to achieve the necessary cuts and concessions, including pension, health- care and work-rule reform.”

A review can be triggered when a municipality’s bond rating falls to BBB or lower, or the equivalent, Dillon said. Detroit is rated Ba3 by Moody’s and BB- by Fitch Ratings — both three steps below investment grade. Standard & Poor’s puts the city’s credit one level higher at BB

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-12-03/michigan-plans-detroit-finance-review-in-step-toward-takeover.html


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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Helvetic’s Cardiff-Zurich flight’s Bristol stopover

An airline’s flights between Cardiff and Zurich will stop at Bristol, just 25 miles (40km) away, because too few tickets were sold in Wales.

Departure board at Cardiff Airport

It will add around 45 minutes to the flight in both directions.

Helvetic Airways said the stopover in Bristol would help business travellers and offer Swiss tourists a starting point for trips.

But Cardiff Airport said the airline had struggled to sell tickets in the opposite direction.

However, with the Welsh Government supporting the route through a marketing campaign in Switzerland, seat sales had been healthy from Zurich to Cardiff.

“Therein lies the issue here in why this particular airline is going to stop off in Bristol,” Cardiff Airport managing director Patrick Duffy told BBC Wales.

“It doesn’t have a problem in selling tickets for people coming into Wales, what it does have a problem with is selling tickets for people leaving Wales.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

For business travellers, they really need a daily flight and with only three flights a week, that doesn’t really make it viable”

Alan BowenTravel expert

“Our decline in traffic is largely attributable to that particular issue.”

Cardiff Airport said the Zurich service required support from Welsh travellers to convince the airline to operate directly without stopping over the summer season.

Cardiff has lost more passengers over the past three years than any of the other major regional airports in the UK.

Spanish airline

According to figures from the Civil Aviation Authority, in 2007 it had 2,111,148 and in 2010 it had 1,404,613, a fall of 33%.

However, Cardiff Airport said it was the only regional airport in the UK to attract two airlines in recent months in difficult economic conditions.

Besides Helvetic, it was announced last month that a low-cost Spanish airline is to start direct flights to Barcelona.

The announcement by the Vueling airline came two days before Bmibaby halted its services from Cardiff.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

For Swiss tourists, Bristol Airport is an ideal starting point for individual trips”

Bruno JansHelvetic

Independent travel expert Alan Bowen said it was always going to be difficult to attract enough passengers on the Cardiff-Zurich route.

Fast connection

“For business travellers, they really need a daily flight and with only three flights a week, that doesn’t really make it viable,” he said.

“It’s very viable for people who want to have a short break in Switzerland.”

Bruno Jans, chief executive of Helvetic, said: “With flights to Bristol, we develop our service in an economically strong region on the British Isles, providing many business travellers with a fast connection to Zurich.

“For Swiss tourists, Bristol Airport is an ideal starting point for individual trips.”

With the stopover in Bristol from next month, the flight between Cardiff and Zurich will take approximately two-and-three-quarter hours.

Plaid Cymru’s Neil McAvoy, deputy leader of Cardiff council, said the Welsh government needed to secure new business routes out of Cardiff.

He said the airport required routes to New York and Dubai, which would tie in with the new business district planned for Cardiff.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-15675191


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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Zurich Financial Closes Buy Of Santander Brazil, Argentina Insurance Ops

ZURICH -(Dow Jones)- Zurich Financial Services AG (ZURN.VX) Wednesday said it had closed the acquisition of a 51% stake in the insurance operations of Banco Santander SA (STD) in Brazil and Argentina.

The deal is part of a long-term alliance between Zurich and the Spanish banking giant in Latin America agreed earlier this year.

In February, Zurich said it was paying Santander $1.67 billion to enter a 25-year strategic distribution arrangement in the region.

As part of the deal, Zurich would acquire a 51% participation in the insurance operations of Santander in Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Argentina and Uruguay.

Wednesday’s agreement relates to Brazil and Argentina, with regulatory approval still awaited for the other countries.

Under the deal, each local insurance company in these countries enters into an exclusive bank distribution agreement with Santander’s respective local banking unit, subject to local regulatory requirements.

The parties expect to close the transaction for the remaining countries before the end of the year.

http://www.foxbusiness.com/industries/2011/10/05/zurich-financial-closes-buy-santander-brazil-argentina-insurance-ops/

Posted in Economy News, Financial | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: Deutsche Bank Glum on Economy

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204138204576602560577395994.html

ZURICH—Deutsche Bank AG’s Chief Executive, Josef Ackermann, Friday painted a bleak picture of the global economy, saying recent data suggest the world’s economy is on the brink of recession and that Europe and the U.S. will feel the effect of the current crisis for quarters to come.

“[Sentiment indicators] suggest that the global economy is on the brink of a recession,” Mr. Ackermann told the Swiss-American chamber of commerce in Zurich. “The European and the U.S. economies are at the heart of the financial crisis … and in our two continents the medium- to long-term fallout of this crisis will be felt most acutely.”

Mr. Ackermann expects improvements in debt-laden Portugal and Ireland, but fired a warning shot at Italy, saying the country needed to do more to fix its financial problems as investors were increasingly concerned about the country’s ability to lift its economy.

The Deutsche Bank chief was confident that Europe’s politicians were determined to keep the euro alive and that after the likely expansion of the euro zone’s bailout fund, their willingness seemed “stronger than ever,” but further coordination and cooperation will be needed.

The chief executive said that although the current trend to regulate and fragment financial markets to restore trust and reduce risk was partly justifiable, “the cumulative effect of all of these reforms … will be too massive to digest” given the upheavals in the banking industry.

Mr. Ackermann expects new rules to keep growth in check in industrialized zones and increase competition in emerging markets, which still offer lucrative growth rates. While the bank already has a strong presence in Asia and other emerging markets, it has increased investments in Africa. The Deutsche Bank chief said that industry consolidation would continue under current market conditions.


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Brightbridge Wealth Management Headlines: HP Debuts All-in-One Desktop PCs for Consumers, SMBs

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Midmarket/HP-Debuts-AllinOne-Desktop-PCs-for-Consumers-SMBs-388122/

 

As HP looks to spin off its consumer PC business, it unveils a slew of all-in-one PCs aimed at consumers and businesses.

Hewlett-Packard unveiled its largest investment in the all-in-one desktop PC market to date, debuting a portfolio of products for consumers and small and midsize businesses. The space-saving Omni series PCs—comprised of the Omni 120 and the Omni 220–are expected to be available on Sept. 21 and Sept. 11 at a starting price of $399.99 and $799.99, respectively. The PCs are designed to provide ample storage, built-in speakers, high-definition (HD) display and feature HP LinkUp, which lets users link a notebook to the PC using a home network.

Featuring a free standing design, tilt-enabled display and the latest version of TouchSmart software, the 20-inch TouchSmart 320, 21.5-inch TouchSmart 420 and the 23-inch TouchSmart 520 PCs are designed for consumers looking for a multimedia and touch experience. These TouchSmart PCs also feature integrated Beats Audio and LinkUp for enhanced sound and multimedia convenience.

The optional HP Pulse Subwoofer, paired with the TouchSmart 520 or 610, complements Beats Audio and is designed to add depth to music, movies and games. The TouchSmart 320 PC is expected to be available on Oct. 2 at a starting price of $599.99. The TouchSmart 420 and 520 PCs are expected to be available on Sept. 11 at a starting price of $699.99 and $899.99, respectively.

“The popularity of the all-in-one form factor continues to grow, and HP’s contribution to this market is significant,” said Todd Bradley, executive vice president of HP’s personal systems group. “We continue to expand our portfolio to remain the global leader in Windows-based, all-in-one PCs, introducing innovation that matters to business customers and consumers alike.”

Designed for small businesses with demanding workloads looking for a versatile PC, the 20-inch Pro 3420 all-in-one is equipped with integrated Web cams and premium stereo speakers for face-to-face communication with remote employees. The HP Pro 3420 PC is expected to be available in October at a starting price of $599.

In addition, HP’s recently announced 8200 Elite All-in-One Business PC, which lists for $974, completes the company’s new all-in-one portfolio, delivering MyRoom for connecting and collaborating with business colleagues and security features such as keyed cable lock support and an on board TPM 1.2 embedded security chip.

“HP knows people expect a lot from their technology–from the overall design to the user experience,” said Randall Martin, chief design strategist for HP’s personal computer global business unit. “That’s why HP continues to drive innovation for its all-in-one PCs, which combine a full-featured PC and a high-definition display into an elegant, modern design that complements the user’s environment instead of trying to define it.”

CEO Leo Apotheker shocked the tech industry when he announced Aug. 18 that the company is looking to spin out its market-leading PC portfolio within the next 18 months to enable it to focus more of its money and time on its higher-margin commercial systems, software and services businesses. HP’s Personal Systems Group in the company’s third fiscal quarter generated about $9.6 billion in revenues, a 3 percent drop, and generated profits of $567 million, a 21 percent increase.


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