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2012年9月10日 星期一

Are Oil Prices Nearing a Bottom?

The recent decline in the price of oil has been among the swiftest ever. Crude prices have tumbled 22 percent so far this quarter, their steepest slide since the end of 2008, back in the deep, dark days of the financial crisis. Things are bad now for sure, with Europe on the brink and an underwhelming U.S. recovery. But are they Lehman Brothers, Bernie Madoff, AIG bad? Probably not. And there’s growing evidence that oil prices may be approaching a bottom.

Both domestic and international crude prices have risen over the past week. Since June 21, domestic West Texas Intermediate is up nearly 2 percent, while the price of international Brent is up 8 percent. That’s right about where they were during the last market bottom in early October. The seven-month buildup in U.S. oil supplies finally appears to be losing steam, after the Department of Energy reported that crude inventories fell 133,000 barrels last week (PDF). That’s not nearly as big a drop as many people expected—a Bloomberg survey forecast a 1.3 million-barrel decline. But it’s a drop nonetheless, and a rare one at that. Since December, U.S. oil inventories have risen 20 percent, yet over the past month the pace has flattened out. At 387 million barrels, the U.S. is still sitting on its highest supply of crude oil since July 1990.

The U.S. recovery also got a boost on Tuesday as the Commerce Department reported that May’s durable goods orders were better than expected.

The oil trade has also changed drastically in the last few months. After pouring billions of dollars into futures contracts from October through March, oil speculators have made a dash for the exits, taking with them the artificially high price of oil. Three months after the sell-off began, the amount of managed money betting that oil prices will rise is at its lowest level since September 2010. That could mark the beginning of a new buying cycle.

“Crude oil is no longer a crowded trade, so there is greater scope for a new cycle of buying to emerge,” says Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citigroup (C). “The money is now on the sidelines and not in the market.”

For traders, oil at $80 a barrel (the current price of WTI) has significantly less downside risk than oil at $100. Barring some fundamental shock to the market that kills demand, there seems to be a natural equilibrium around $80 in the U.S. It’s high enough for producers to keep drilling and pumping, yet low enough that it shouldn’t curb consumer demand. At $3.43 a gallon, the average national price of gasoline in the U.S. is back to where it was in January.

That’s not to say a few risks aren’t out there that would lower the price of oil further. Europe is still an economic mess, and the reports leading up to this week’s EU summit in Brussels don’t offer much optimism. If the euro starts to crumble, oil prices will surely drop. China’s economy is slowing, faster perhaps than it’s letting on. And then there’s OPEC, which has significantly boosted production in recent months. Should Saudi Arabia continue to pump away at its fastest rate in more than 20 years, that will probably keep prices from rising too much.


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2012年5月10日 星期四

Housing Bottom? Fannie Mae Won't Seek Tax Dollars

Evidence is mounting that U.S. home prices are finally hitting bottom, and now comes the best news yet: Fannie Mae says that for the first time since 2008, it won’t need money from the Treasury Department to balance its books.

Fannie Mae, the biggest backer of U.S. home loans, used to brag that it would be safe from even a severe downturn in the housing market. That turned out to be tragically incorrect. It has drawn $117 billion in aid since being seized by federal regulators in 2008.

Fannie’s announcement today is good news on two counts: It means taxpayers won’t have to shell out any money to support Fannie (at least related to the first quarter—it may need support in the future). More important, it’s another signal that housing is getting ready to turn the corner.

In Fannie’s press release (PDF) the company attributed its $2.7 billion first-quarter profit to positive developments in the housing market. Credit losses declined because of “a less significant decline in home prices, a decline in the company’s inventory of single-family real estate owned (REO) properties coupled with improved REO sales prices, and lower single-family serious delinquency rates.”

The National Association of Realtors said today that the median sales price of a home increased in the first quarter from a year earlier in 74 of 146 metropolitan areas measured.

Another positive sign: Fiserv, which puts out the Case-Shiller Indexes of home prices, said on May 8 that thanks to falling home prices and low mortgage rates, the monthly payment for a median-priced home represents just 12 percent of median-family income, the lowest percentage since its recordkeeping began in 1971.

“Nearly all non-price metrics—existing home sales, rising home order volumes, increased spending on home improvement, a jump in multi-family construction—indicate that the housing sector hit bottom last year and has started along a path of slow recovery,” David Stiff, Fiserv’s chief economist, said in a press release.

To be sure, millions of homes are still worth less than the mortgages on them. That’s a dark cloud over the market. Today the Federal Housing Administration said the number of FHA-insured loans jumped in March. Half the mortgages it modified to ease repayment terms were in default again a year or more later, Bloomberg News reported.


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2011年5月29日 星期日

Freescale Rises After IPO Priced at Bottom of Reduced Range

May 26, 2011, 12:46 PM EDT By Lee Spears, Jason Kelly and Ian King

(Updates with CEO’s comment in third paragraph.)

May 26 (Bloomberg) -- Freescale Semiconductor Holdings rose on its first trading day as investors bet demand for automotive chips will help the company cut the debt burden that led underwriters to reduce its initial share-sale price.

Shares of the Austin, Texas-based company rose 95 cents, or 5.3 percent, to $18.95 at 12:17 p.m. on the New York Stock Exchange, trading under the ticker FSL. Freescale raised $783 million in its initial public offering, 25 percent less than it originally sought.

“We think all investors are ultimately going to do well,” Chief Executive Officer Richard Beyer said in a telephone interview today. The company was forced to cut its offer price because “the external market conditions are sketchy,” he said. “Would we have liked to have gone out a higher price? Yes.”

Freescale filed to sell shares to the public in February, saying it would use the proceeds to help reduce debt, which is about $7.5 billion. The company, the largest supplier of chips to the U.S. automobile industry, borrowed billions as it was taken private by Blackstone Group LP, TPG Capital, Carlyle Group and Permira Advisers LLP in a $17.6 billion transaction in 2006.

Freescale needs annual sales of about $4 billion to break even, Beyer said. The company could suffer a decline in revenue from the current level of about $4.8 billion and still be able to manage debt and invest in its business, he said.

Automotive Demand

Unlike makers of personal computer and mobile phone chips, Freescale is not experiencing a drop in demand for its products, said Beyer. Automotive demand remains strong, he said.

Freescale sold 43.5 million shares at $18 each in the IPO, according to a company statement. The company lowered the range yesterday to $18 to $20 from $22 to $24. The offering price reflects a 50 percent discount to the average of $36 that investors paid for the company, according to a regulatory filing.

“The balance sheet is a large issue,” said Cody Acree, a semiconductor analyst at Williams Financial in Dallas. “There are too many other places to put your money that don’t have this kind of issue.”

Freescale has been one of the worst performers among companies taken private during the buyout boom, with a net loss of $1.05 billion in 2010. Other private equity-backed IPOs this year have benefited their investors.

Financial Crisis

The initial share sale of Kinder Morgan Inc. raised $3.3 billion in February, valuing Carlyle Group’s stake at more than twice what it paid. Blackstone, Carlyle, KKR & Co. and Thomas H. Lee Partners LP similarly used the January IPO of Nielsen Holdings NV, to trim their stakes and reap profits. That offering raised $1.9 billion.

The global financial crisis hit Freescale less than two years after its owners closed their deal. The firms brought in Beyer, the former CEO of rival Intersil Corp., to close factories and design facilities, cut jobs, and get out of less profitable businesses. As markets recovered, Freescale also reduced borrowings by more than $2 billion after negotiating with bondholders.

Deutsche Bank AG, Citigroup Inc., Barclays Plc, Credit Suisse Group AG and JPMorgan Chase & Co. managed the offering.

Spirit Airlines Inc., the U.S. discount carrier that charges for carry-on items, raised $187.2 million in its IPO yesterday, 42 percent less than it originally planned. Spirit fell 50 cents, or 4.2 percent, to $11.50 at 12:16 p.m. on the Nasdaq Stock Market, trading under the ticker SAVE.

Reduced Offerings

Spirit and Freescale were forced to reduce their offerings even after Internet companies LinkedIn Corp. and Yandex NV expanded the sizes of their IPOs this month. LinkedIn shares more than doubled on its first day of trading, and Yandex surged 55 percent in its market debut.

Spirit, based in Miramar, Florida, sold 15.6 million shares at $12 each, it said in a statement. The carrier initially planned to raise as much as $320 million, according to a regulatory filing, before shrinking its offering from 20 million shares and lowering the range to $12 to $13 from a band of $14 to $16.

The carrier, which flies mostly between Florida and the Caribbean, had said it would use the funds for future plane purchases and to pay off debt. It is going public as jet fuel hovers near a three-year high, crimping industry profits and forcing carriers to raise fares. Gulfstream International Group Inc. was the last U.S. passenger airline to hold an IPO, selling shares in 2007. It filed for bankruptcy last year.

Private Equity

Private equity firm Indigo Partners LLC bought a majority stake in Spirit in 2006, and also invests in similar low-fare carriers outside the U.S., including Mexico’s Volaris. Oaktree Capital Management LP is the second-biggest investor.

Citigroup and Morgan Stanley led the Spirit IPO.

In other IPO news, Delphi Automotive Plc, the former parts unit of General Motors Co., registered for an initial public offering of $100 million. That amount is a placeholder to calculate filing fees, and the sale’s final size may vary, Troy, Michigan-based Delphi said yesterday in a regulatory filing.

The IPO may raise more than $1 billion, a person with knowledge of the plans said last week.

Delphi, once the largest U.S. auto-parts maker, exited bankruptcy restructuring in October 2009 with four classes of shares. Lenders including private equity firms Elliott Management Corp. and Silver Point Capital LP bought most of the original Delphi and still hold a controlling interest after Delphi bought back stakes from General Motors and the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. in March.

The offering’s proceeds will be used for general purposes, retiring debt and capital spending, Delphi said.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan are managing the deal.

--With assistance by Kevin Orland in Chicago. Editors: Lisa Rapaport, Tom Giles

To contact the reporters on this story: Lee Spears in New York at lspears3@bloomberg.net; Jason Kelly in New York at jkelly14@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jennifer Sondag at jsondag@bloomberg.net Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net


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