10:33 PM
Asian stocks subdued after cautious Fed
Addison Ray
By Ian Chua
SYDNEY | Thu Feb 10, 2011 12:21am EST
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian stock markets fell on Thursday, while the dollar struggled to make much headway after the U.S. central bank chief signaled the recovery in the world's biggest economy was still fragile and warned against sharp spending cuts.
Commodity prices including crude oil were subdued after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested U.S. economic conditions were still too weak for the central bank to pull back on its vast monetary stimulus, despite a welcome drop in the jobless rate.
Japan's Nikkei .N225 slipped, while shares elsewhere in Asia .MIAPJ0000PUS slid 0.7 percent.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index .HSI and South Korea's KOSPI .KS11 have completely erased this year's gains and were back at levels not seen since late December.
In contrast, last year's laggards like the Nikkei remained well in the black for the year.
"It's not like buying in Japanese stocks has completely stopped, but investors have been looking for a reason to take profits and now they're cautious about overheating in the market," said Norikazu Kitta, strategist at Nikko Cordial Securities.
Despite the generally downbeat mood, there were patchy bright spots in the market, among them, shares in Australian bourse operator ASX (ASX.AX) jumped more than 4 percent, while Singapore Exchange (SGXL.SI) gained about 1.6 percent.
Investors are hoping that merger news between major bourses like the NYSE Euronext and Deutsche Boerse would boost prospects of ASX's own planned merger with Singapore Exchange, which is facing political hurdles.
Global miner Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) edged up 0.3 percent ahead of its December-half results. Investors, however, pushed SingTel shares (STEL.SI) down 1 percent after the telecom company unveiled a 2.2 percent fall in quarterly profit.
DOLLAR SUBDUED
Meanwhile, the dollar index .DXY, which tracks the greenback's performance against a basket of major currencies, limped up 0.06 percent to 77.690 after a steep decline overnight.
Still, many traders think the dollar is in a holding pattern for the near term as the euro was also lacking upward momentum of its own after the European Central Bank last week quelled expectations of an early rate hike.
The euro traded at $1.3715, down slightly from late U.S. levels but still up about 1 percent on the week.
"It's difficult for now for the euro to rise above the peak hit earlier this month. It will need a fresh factor to go beyond that peak," said Keiji Matsumoto, a strategist at Nikko Cordial Securities.
The Australian dollar dipped slightly in the wake of solid jobs numbers as investors bet they were not so strong as to make a rate rise more likely anytime soon.
10:13 PM
NEW YORK | Wed Feb 9, 2011 11:47pm EST
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Google Inc and Facebook Inc, plus others, have held low level takeover talks with Twitter that give the Internet sensation a value as high as $10 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported.
In December, Twitter raised $200 million in financing in a deal that valued it at $3.7 billion. The company, which allows users to broadcast 140-character messages to groups of followers, had 175 million users as of September.
The Wall Street Journal reported on its website that executives at Twitter have held "low level" talks with executives at Facebook and Google in recent months about a possible takeover of Twitter.
Citing people familiar with the matter, the WSJ said other companies have also held similar talks.
"But what's remarkable is the money that people familiar with the matter say frames the discussions with at least some potential suitors; an estimated valuation in the neighborhood of $8 billion to $10 billion," the report said.
The paper said the talks have so far gone nowhere and that Google, Facebook and Twitter all declined to comment.
Despite the valuation, the report said Twitter's executives and board were working on building a large, independent company.
"People familiar with the situation said the company believes it can grow into a $100 billion company," the WSJ said.
Twitter, created in 2006, is among a crop of popular Internet social networking services that includes Facebook, Zynga and LinkedIn.
A growing secondary market has developed in shares of the privately held Web sensations and investors are monitoring the companies closely in the hope they might float shares.
It was only in the middle of 2010 that Twitter offered marketers a way to advertise on the service.
Industry research firm eMarketer said last month that Twitter, which doesn't disclose financial information, generated an estimated $45 million from advertising in 2010 and is expected to generate some $150 million this year.
Google, the world's number 1 Internet search engine, generated roughly $29 billion in revenue in 2010 and Facebook, recently valued at $50 billion, produced about $1.9 billion, eMarketer said.
(Additional reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; writing by Neil Fullick, Editing by Dean Yates)
9:53 PM
Exchange tie-ups put focus on Asia
Addison Ray
By Michael Smith and Saeed Azhar
SYDNEY/SINGAPORE | Thu Feb 10, 2011 12:24am EST
SYDNEY/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - A wave of stock exchange consolidation globally has thrown the spotlight on Asia's bourses, sparking a rally in shares of Australia's ASX, which is trying to convince politicians to support a $7.9 billion takeover bid from Singapore Exchange.
Deutsche Boerse's advanced talks to buy NYSE Euronext to create the world's biggest trading powerhouse was a wake-up call for Asian bourses which face increasing competition in equity trading from new platforms.
The deal came just hours after the London Stock Exchange announced a bid for Canada's TMX.
The latest consolidation mounts pressure on Southeast Asian exchanges, which have avoided mergers because of tight ownerships and political obstacles, although these bourses are taking steps to promote cross-border trading [ID:nSGE71101M].
"The competitive threat from the alternative trading pools makes strategic sense for traditional exchanges to combine resources so they can compete better," said Neo Chiu Yen, vice president of equity research at ABN AMRO Private Bank in Asia.
SGX's $7.9 billion bid for the ASX faces major political and regulatory hurdles in Australia but investors said the latest deals appeared to strengthen the case for a tie-up.
Shares in both companies outperformed their wider markets on Thursday. ASX shares were trading 4.5 percent higher, while SGX shares were up 1.3 percent in Singapore.
"That whole game's moving very fast now. Maybe it gives the ASX-Singapore Exchange (deal) a bit of a kick along," said John Sevior, head of equities at Perpetual Investments, ASX's biggest shareholder.
"It just depends on how broad the government's horizons are. At the moment, it's mired very much in domestic political issues."
Sources close to the deal said there had been informal dialogue in recent weeks between SGX-ASX and Australian politicians and the country's Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB), which has the power to block any deal. However, SGX had not yet formally submitted its application to FIRB.
The ASX said the two deals highlighted its argument that consolidation was necessary.
"The developments overseas do underline the global trend toward exchange consolidation in response to the dynamic changes that are shaping the market," an ASX spokesman said.
However, the leader of Australia's powerful Greens party reaffirmed his strong opposition to the ASX-SGX tie-up.
"If I was in New York I would be advocating that the stock exchange remains in American hands," Greens leader Bob Brown said.
While many analysts said the deals should bolster the case for a SGX-ASX merger, one analyst said the LSE could now be seen as an alternative partner for ASX.
5:36 PM
By Ritsuko Ando
NEW YORK | Wed Feb 9, 2011 7:42pm EST
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Network equipment maker Cisco Systems Inc's CEO John Chambers spooked investors for the third time in as many quarters, warning of dwindling public spending and weaker margins from tough competition.
Cisco shares fell 10 percent after hours on Wednesday. Shares of peers such as Juniper Networks Inc, F5 Networks Inc and Riverbed Technology Inc also declined, but the recurring let-downs raised questions about whether Cisco is still the industry bellwether it once was.
Chambers upset investors last August with a warning of "unusual uncertainty," and followed up last quarter with a weaker-than-expected outlook that he blamed on weak orders from debt-burdened government agencies.
He offered no relief this quarter.
"Unfortunately, we believe that our concerns in the public sector will continue to be challenging in the developed world for the next several quarters," he said, adding that Cisco's government accounts in the United States, Europe and Japan had all been hit in the fiscal second quarter.
"The challenges at state, local, and eventually federal level in our opinion will worsen over the next several quarters," he said of the U.S. market.
Chambers is one of Silicon Valley's longest-serving executives, and investors take his views on industry trends seriously. He was one of the first tech executives to flag the impact of the financial crisis on the sector in late 2007.
Investors have also looked to Cisco for signs of overall technology spending due to the breadth of its customer base, which ranges from small U.S. businesses to foreign governments.
WEAK MARGINS
Cisco's second-quarter gross margin fell to 62.4 percent from 64.3 percent in the previous quarter, raising analysts' concerns that growing competition may be forcing the company to cut prices to protect market share.
The company forecast margins to be around 62 to 63 percent for the rest of the fiscal year, which ends in July.
Cisco also let down investors with a third-quarter outlook of earnings excluding items of 35 cents to 38 cents per share, below Wall Street expectations for 40 cents. And it said sales growth for the full year would likely be at the mid- to low-end of a previous 9 to 12 percent outlook.
Analysts said the outlook and low margins, a signal it may be cutting prices in response to tough pressure from competitors like Hewlett-Packard Co, overshadowed stronger-than-expected results for the second quarter.
Revenue for the quarter ended January 29 rose 6 percent from a year earlier to $10.41 billion. Analysts had expected $10.23 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Quarterly net profit fell to $1.5 billion from $1.9 billion a year earlier. Excluding items, the company had earnings per share of 37 cents, beating the market's average forecast of 35 cents and Cisco's own forecast of 32 to 35 cents.
4:36 PM
By Jonathan Spicer and Edward Taylor
NEW YORK/FRANKFURT | Wed Feb 9, 2011 7:21pm EST
NEW YORK/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Deutsche Boerse is in advanced talks to buy NYSE Euronext in a deal that would create the world's largest trading powerhouse and put a bastion of American capitalism into foreign hands.
The discussions, announced on Wednesday, came only hours after the London Stock Exchange's said it had agreed to buy Canadian stock market operator TMX, marking a shake-up for an industry under intense cost pressure from upstart electronic rivals, but one that offers new opportunities after the financial crisis in on-exchange derivatives trading.
The deals sent shares in other exchanges soaring on speculation that further match-ups would follow.
"People are staking their positions today with the intention of being a survivor," said Michael Holland, chairman of New York-based money manager Holland & Co. "It may be a good time to be Darwinian."
The LSE's purchase of the Toronto stock market operator would make it the world's fourth largest and a top center for growth sectors of mining and energy, with $4.1 trillion of stock changing hands each year.
But that deal would be dwarfed by a Deutsche Boerse-NYSE Euronext merger, which would give it annual trading volume exceeding $20 trillion.
The combined group would have headquarters in New York and Frankfurt, with Deutsche Boerse shareholders holding about 60 percent of the combined company and NYSE shareholders owning the rest.
The companies said NYSE Euronext Chief Duncan Niederauer would be chief executive of the merged company and Deutsche CEO Reto Francioni would be chairman.
Deutsche Boerse and NYSE Euronext said they could cut costs by 300 million euros ($400 million) a year in a merger that European sources said should be finalized this month.
Aggressive, upstart trading venues have eaten deeply into the market shares of these traditional exchanges, forcing the Big Board, the LSE and others to invest heavily in trading technology and to look to higher-margin areas to grow.
"The smaller players have really changed the face of these larger players around the world, and so they're forced to merge," said William Karsh, former chief operating officer at Direct Edge, one of two privately run U.S. venues that took on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq in recent years.
Shares of NYSE Euronext and Nasdaq OMX Group Inc, its chief U.S. rival, soared on Wednesday, reaching their highest levels in more than two years.
The takeovers of such national capital markets, and indeed prominent symbols of a country's business prowess, require the approval of securities regulators.
In Canada, the pact met a lukewarm response and may run into political hurdles. Early signals out of Ottawa suggested the government will not quickly approve the takeover of the Toronto Stock Exchange's parent company.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission declined to comment on the possibility of a German-based company acquiring the NYSE, which lies at the heart of Wall Street and long has been a proud symbol American finance where share trading first began under a buttonwood tree in 1792.