4:34 PM

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News Corp profit misses on movies and papers

Addison Ray

NEW YORK | Wed May 4, 2011 5:07pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - News Corp (NWSA.O) posted lower-than-expected profits on a weaker movie box office than a year ago and struggling newspapers, which were partly offset by strong performance at its cable and broadcast television business.

Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, which owns broadcaster Fox and publishes newspapers including the Wall Street Journal and the UK's News of the World, said operating net profit fell to 26 cents before adjusting for one-time charges from 29 cents.

Analysts had on average forecast profit of 27 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

It said the quarter compares with a year ago when it benefited from the record-breaking performance of Hollywood blockbuster 'Avatar'.

Revenue dropped 6 percent to $8.26 billion.

News Corp's filmed entertainment operating income fell by 50 percent to $248 million, compared with the quarter a year ago due to 3D movie Avatar.

Publishing operating profits also dropped significantly to $36 million due to a $125 million charge at its marketing service business and primarily due to advertising revenue declines at Australian and UK newspapers.

The story was better at its overall television business, which enjoyed a resurgence in advertising revenues and rising cable affiliate fees like other rivals at CBS Corp (CBS.N) and Time Warner Inc (TWX.N).

Operating income at its U.S. cable networks -- including FX, National Geographic and Fox Sports -- rose by 22 percent, while operating profit at its international networks -- including Star TV and Fox Deportes was up by 34 percent.

The Fox television business received a huge bump from its coverage of this year's football Super Bowl and broadcast retransmission fees, boosting its revenue by 23 percent.

News Corp's expected strong earnings have been overshadowed in recent months by speculation about the companies dealmaking and the controversy surrounding its phone hacking scandal at its UK weekly tabloid News of the World.

The New York-based company is in the process of trying to buy the 61 percent of BSkyB (BSY.L) it doesn't already own.

News Corp made a 700p a share offer last June and the board said it's looking for around 800p or around $14 billion.

Wall Street expects News Corp may have to raise its bid even higher than 800p, especially as the UK satellite company has posted much improved earnings results since News Corp first made its bid [nLDE7270PA].

News Corp is also in the process of assessing buyout offers for its struggling entertainment site Myspace, a one-time pioneer of social networking which has long fallen far behind Facebook. News Corp said Myspace continued to rack up increasing losses during the third quarter.

(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke, editing by Bernard Orr)



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7:34 AM

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Private sector adds 179,000 jobs in April: ADP

Addison Ray

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



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6:24 AM

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Stock futures edge lower before ADP jobs data

Addison Ray

Wed May 4, 2011 7:31am EDT

(Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures pointed to a slightly higher open for Wall Street on Wednesday, reversing the previous session's losses, with futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones futures and Nasdaq futures up 0.1-0.2 percent by 0849 GMT.

U.S. stocks fell on Tuesday as traders booked profits from a recent rally, with the S&P 500 .SPX down for the second day after hitting its highest level in nearly three years on Friday.

The focus will be on economic data later in the session, including the ISM non-manufacturing index for April due at 1400 GMT and forecast to tick-up to 57.4 from 57.3 on the back of growth in its business activity index, in a confirmation of modest economic recovery.

Data from the labor market, however, was likely to point to modest slowing, with the ADP Employment report at 1215 GMT expected to show private jobs grew by 198,000 in April compared with 201,000 a month earlier.

Earnings results will continue to dominate near-term direction, with the likes of IntercontinentalExchange (ICE.N), Kellog (K.N) and News Corp (NWSA.O) scheduled to report quarterly numbers.

News Corp's anticipated strong quarterly profit will likely to take a back seat to Rupert Murdoch's dealmaking appetite and a phone-hacking scandal at its British newspapers.

Some 74 percent of companies on the S&P 500 that have so far reported results have posted in-line or above-forecast figures, with the rest coming in below expectations, data from Thomson Reuters StarMine showed.

In company news, TV firms CBS Corp (CBS.N) and Comcast Corp (CMCSA.O) rose 1 percent and 4 percent respectively in after-hours trade after they reported earnings that beat most forecasts and set the stage for healthy price increases in the next round of ad sales.

General Electric (GE.N) has put its railcar leasing business up for sale, its second attempt in three years to offload a business that could be worth more than $3 billion, a source familiar with the situation said.

Chrysler (FIA.MI), Ford (F.N) and General Motors (GM.N) showed faster U.S. sales growth rates in April than Toyota and most other Japanese brands, in a sign that supply disruptions as a result of Japan's March 11 earthquake were hitting Japanese manufacturers hardest.

U.S. grocery operator Safeway (SWY.N) expanded its recall on edibles containing grape tomatoes in several states, due to possible salmonella contamination.

An unsolicited takeover bid by Nasdaq OMX Group (NDAQ.O) and IntercontinentalExchange for NYSE Euronext (NYX.N) would break up NYSE Euronext and most likely cut jobs at its Paris operations, its European chief said in an interview.

In Europe, the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top shares dipped in early trade, with heavyweight mining shares pressured by falling commodity prices.

(This story was corrected in seventh paragraph to say 74 percent of companies, not 74 companies)

(Reporting by Harpreet Bhal; Editing by Dan Lalor)



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6:04 AM

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Glencore targets $11 billion as IPO draws key investors

Addison Ray

HONG KONG/LONDON | Wed May 4, 2011 7:42am EDT

HONG KONG/LONDON (Reuters) - Top commodity trader Glencore sought a strong debut for this month's share offering, capping planned proceeds at $11 billion and placing 31 percent with key investors led by Abu Dhabi.

The world's largest diversified commodities trader set a 480 to 580 pence per share price range for the London initial public offering (IPO). That values it at 36.5 billion pounds ($60 billion) at the mid-point, which is below the price some analysts say the company is worth, and was seen as an attempt to leave something on the table.

"It's smart for investment bankers to be conservative in their pricing, so as not to disappoint too many people," John McGloin at Collins Stewart said.

But institutional investors may take some convincing.

"The key thing Glencore needs to bear in mind is yes, they have an interesting model, but not everyone has bought into the idea of how the business is run," a portfolio manager at a UK investment company said.

"To be pricing Glencore over $55 billion is way out of line, I would not buy that."

Glencore, which is planning a dual London and Hong Kong listing, said Wednesday it was looking to raise gross proceeds -- before fees and other costs -- of around $10 billion. That is before a 10 percent "greenshoe" or over-allotment option which can be sold if there is demand.

The listing will boost Glencore's firepower for deals amid a boom in commodity prices, but will also push it into the public eye after 37 years as a discreet private company.

The IPO will turn publicity-shy executives including chief executive Ivan Glasenberg, a former coal trader, into paper billionaires. Glasenberg, Glencore's largest shareholder, will have his precise holding, along with other details, made public when the full prospectus is published later Wednesday.

"Glasenberg is more or less going to be worth around $10 billion," a source close to the matter said.

Some details have begun to trickle out. Glasenberg will be paid 925,000 pounds a year according to a draft prospectus, and will be entitled to a bonus of up to twice that amount. Simon Murray will be one of the best-paid FTSE non-executive chairmen with annual fees of 675,000 pounds.

Glencore's estimate of its future market capitalization puts the company just above the mid-point of a wide $45 to $73 billion value implied in its intention-to-float last month. The mid-point of analyst research was around $60 billion, though that excludes proceeds from the offering.

"We could have gone out with a much higher price range. (Glencore) knows a sensible price range is needed," another source close to the deal said.

Glencore said it had struck agreements with cornerstone investors, who will take up around 31 percent of the total offer, one of the largest cornerstone books to date. A separate term sheet reveals Abu Dhabi's IPIC Aabar will be the largest cornerstone investor, committing $850 million to the IPO.

Singapore has agreed to invest $400 million and BlackRock Inc $360 million, while other investors include Credit Suisse Private Bank and Och Ziff, have each agreed to buy $175 million worth of shares.

The source close to the deal said the cornerstones were oversubscribed, with not every early investor getting the full allocation they had requested.

STRONG DEBUT

People close to the matter have said Glencore is looking to target a strong market debut. A less ambitious valuation will also attract investors who have fretted over its motivations for going public at what some see as the top of the commodity cycle.

"We expect it to be a successful float. It's well-backed by some very high-profile cornerstone investors," John Meyer, analyst at Fairfax in London, said.

The company confirmed it is looking to raise around $7.9 billion from the sale of new shares in a primary offering, while its partners planned to raise about $2.1 billion in a secondary sale to pay off a tax bill linked to the IPO.

That would value Glencore at about 8 to 10 times estimated 2011 earnings, based on the average forecast of the three banks underwriting the IPO.

Founded in 1974 by trading sensation Marc Rich, Glencore has until now held on to a fiercely prized tradition of public discretion. As a result, investors will scour the prospectus, expected to be more than 1,000 pages long, for details ranging from its existing investors to risks and trading.

The prospectus is also expected to give the first indication of how much the commodities giant will pay its bankers in one of the biggest paydays for the sector this year.

Citigroup, Credit Suisse and Morgan Stanley are the joint global coordinators for the offer.

In its release Wednesday, Glencore said it had appointed an extra 14 banks to lower ranking roles, boosting the syndicate disclosed last month and taking the total to 23 institutions.

Conditional trading is set to begin on May 19, with unconditional dealings in London on May 24 and Hong Kong on May 25.

Glencore is expected to be fast-tracked into the FTSE 100

bluechip index at close of business on the first day of trading, given its size and share of the FTSE all-share index.

Glencore gave no specific earnings figures for the first three months of the year, but said it had continued to benefit from improved market conditions, with "substantial" improvements in its oil division. Glencore added the strong conditions would continue into the second quarter, with robust demand.

(Additional reporting by Kylie MacLellan, Sarah Young, Julie Crust and Chris Vellacott in London, Denny Thomas and Fiona Lau in Hong Kong; Editing by Alexander Smith)

($1=.6072 Pound)



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12:03 AM

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Asia stocks fall, dollar rises as risky positions cut

Addison Ray

SINGAPORE | Wed May 4, 2011 12:13am EDT

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Asian shares fell and the U.S. dollar rose on Wednesday, with falling commodity prices spooking investors and causing a broad pullback in risk taking.

This week's 14 percent plunge in silver prices and a lower-than-forecast manufacturing growth reading in China have made investors nervous about holding big bets ahead of the European Central Bank meeting on Thursday and the April U.S. payrolls report due on Friday.

Sentiment was also turning negative after the U.S. S&P 500 stocks index .SPX closed lower for a second day after hitting a 3-year high on Monday, hurt by fears corporate earnings would not live up to high expectations.

"Risky assets are having a respite, having advanced rather quickly in more recent weeks," said Andy Ji, a currency strategist and economist with Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Singapore.

"I continue to see fundamental support either waning or fully priced in many risky assets, including currencies that are more risk-sensitive."

The dollar gained 0.12 percent against a basket of currencies .DXY as there was some unwinding of stretched short positions maintained by hedge funds betting on a rise in Asian currencies.

Deutsche Bank's internal gauge of market positioning that tracks moves among hedge funds had shown that long positions in some of the Asian currencies had been close to a record high as of last Thursday, said Mirza Baig, the bank's senior currency strategist in Singapore.

"In general it feels really, mostly like a position reduction kind of a move," he said, referring to the dollar's broad rise against emerging Asian currencies." Positioning was definitely quite stretched."

Ji said the likelihood of further unwinding was making some Asian assets less attractive.

"While I still think the general USD weakness would linger and provide a lift to risky assets, the trade-off in chasing aggressively the strength in these assets has turned less attractive or is dependent primarily on the extent of USD weakness in the coming months," he said.

In Australia, the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index .AXJO was down 48 points or 1.0 percent at 4,7337 as of 0347 GMT (11:47 p.m. ET on Tuesday), adding to a 0.8 percent fall on Tuesday. The Australian and New Zealand dollars also lost ground as a reluctance to take risk prompted investors to book profits on hefty gains made last month.

Stock markets in Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea and New Zealand also fell. The Hang Seng index .HSI was off nearly 1.3 percent. Japan's financial markets were closed for the Golden Week holiday.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS, which also has a strong correlation to silver prices, fell more than 1.4 percent.

Silver suffered its biggest two-day loss since October 2008, dragging down gold and other commodities. After hitting an all-time high within a whisker of $50 an ounce last Thursday, spot prices were at $41.2 on Wednesday. Gold was also down about 0.6 percent.

Oil prices were dragged down after data showed U.S. crude stocks rose sharply last week, adding to concerns about demand and gains in the dollar that helped spark a technical sell-off.

ICE Brent crude for June fell 70 cents to $121.75 a barrel by 0205 GMT, near Monday's low of $121.67 and its third straight session of losses.

In currency markets, euro/sterling was at 0.89830, within striking distance of a 13-mth high of 0.90065 hit on Tuesday. The pair climbed one percent on Tuesday after disappointing UK PMI data signaled that a rate hike may be further away than expected.

In contrast, the European Central Bank is expected to signal its readiness to raise interest rates after its policy meeting on Thursday, and may prepare the market for a June hike.

(Additional reporting by Masayuki Kitano and Jongwoo Cheon; Editing by Richard Borsuk)



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