Global Investment News Briefs Thursday April 23, 2009
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ContrarianProfits/~3/0uDd9rhbbRs/15847Posted on Thursday, April 23rd, 2009 | In Market Commentary, United Arab Emirates
Contributed by: Contrarian Profits (http://contrarianprofits.com) -
MF Cuts Global Outlook; Brazil Hedge Fund Sells Banks, Homebuilders; February Home Prices Up 0.7%; Home Prices in Dubai Could Fall 70%; Apple Tops Forecasts; Feds Search Siemens’ Offices; Freddie Mac CFO Found Dead; E-Bay Beats Street
- In its latest global outlook, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) slashed the growth forecast for every major country and urged more recovery actions. The IMF said the global economy will likely contract 1.3% this year and post a 1.9% gain next year, Reuters reported.
- Mercatto Estrategia FI, a Brazilian hedge fund that is beating 97% of its peers, is selling assets of the country’s largest homebuilders and banks, saying they are overvalued, Bloomberg reported. “Since we’ve lived through a liquidity crisis, it shook up the economy a lot and there have been huge declines in healthy names,” Regis Abreu, the head of equity at Mercatto, told Bloomberg.
- Prices of U.S. single-family houses rose a seasonally adjusted 0.7% in February, the Federal Housing Financing Agency (FHFA) said. The FHFA’s index is calculated by purchase prices of houses financed with mortgages sold or guaranteed by Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), Reuters reported.
- Home prices in Dubai could sink as much as 70% from their peak values late last year on sour demand and a halt in mortgage lending, UBS AG (UBS) said in a report. “We are still in relatively early stages of the property down-cycle in United Arab Emirates,” Saud Masud, a Dubai-based analyst at the Swiss bank, wrote in a report to clients, Bloomberg reported. “We believe risk-reward profiles are not yet compelling for investors to consider market re-entry, hence continued price declines are expected.”
- Apple Inc. (AAPL) reported second-quarter profit and sales that exceeded analysts’ estimates. Apple’s iPhones and new iPod models helped spur sales of $8.16 billion that yielded net income that amounted to $1.21 billion, or $1.33 a share, in the period which ended March 28 Apple said today in a statement. Analysts predicted profit of $1.08 a share and sales of $7.95 billion, according to a Bloomberg survey.
- Agents with the Pentagon’s Defense Criminal Investigative Service searched the Malvern, PA offices of a unit of Germany’s Siemens AG (ADR:SI) on Wednesday. The search was part of an ongoing investigation, a Pentagon spokesman said. Ed Bradley, special agent in charge, said the search began early on Wednesday and continued throughout the day, but he gave no details on the nature of the investigation, according to Reuters.
- David Kellermann, the acting Chief Financial Officer at Freddie Mac (FRE), was found dead early Wednesday in the basement of his home in a Washington suburb, police said. Early reports from sources in the police department indicated Kellermann’s wife reported a suicide. There were no signs of foul play, and the death is under investigation, Fairfax County, Virginia, Police Officer Shelley Broderick told Bloomberg. The medical examiner’s office said it’s conducting an autopsy.
- In a sign that efforts to overhaul its main auction and fixed-price retail site may be working, EBay Inc. (EBAY) reported sales and profit that beat analysts’ estimates, Bloomberg reported. The most-visited U.S. e-commerce site said net income was $357.1 million, or 28 cents a share, compared with $459.7 million, or 34 cents, a year earlier. Excluding some items, earnings were 39 cents a share, beating the 34-cent estimate by analysts.
Source: Global Investment News Briefs Thursday April 23, 2009
Last 5 posts by Contrarian Profits
- How and Why China Will Flood the Gold Market - November 25th, 2009
- Gold – getting in while the bull’s still hot - November 25th, 2009
- Gold – Not the end, but possibly a correction - November 24th, 2009
- How do retail sales stack up in an atypical recovery? - November 24th, 2009
- The Best Energy Investments in the World - November 23rd, 2009
Tags for this Post:
Abreu;, Apple Inc, Bank, Bay Beats Street;, bloomberg, Brazil Hedge Fund;, cent;, contrarian profits, David Kellermann;, Dubai, e-commerce site;, eBay Inc., Ed Bradley;, Fairfax County;, Fannie Mae, Federal Housing Financing Agency;, FHFA, fixed-price retail site;, Found Dead;, Freddie Mac, Germany, International Monetary Fund, Market Commentary, Mercatto;, Pentagon, Pentagon's Defense Criminal Investigative Service;, Regis;, Reuters, Saud Masud;, Shelley Broderick;, Siemens Ag, Ubs Ag, United Arab Emirates, United Arab Emirates, United States, USD, Virginia, Washington
Abreu;, Apple Inc, Bank, Bay Beats Street;, bloomberg, Brazil Hedge Fund;, cent;, contrarian profits, David Kellermann;, Dubai, e-commerce site;, eBay Inc., Ed Bradley;, Fairfax County;, Fannie Mae, Federal Housing Financing Agency;, FHFA, fixed-price retail site;, Found Dead;, Freddie Mac, Germany, International Monetary Fund, Market Commentary, Mercatto;, Pentagon, Pentagon's Defense Criminal Investigative Service;, Regis;, Reuters, Saud Masud;, Shelley Broderick;, Siemens Ag, Ubs Ag, United Arab Emirates, United Arab Emirates, United States, USD, Virginia, Washington



ContrarianProfits.com is a financial news and opinion website with a twist. As investment guru Rick Rule puts it, “You are either a contrarian or a victim.” In the financial world, most people are losers because they just don’t know what game they’re playing. They think they can just get “into the market” along with everyone else, do what everyone else does, and they will make money. Not likely. By the time you’ve paid commissions, spreads, fees, taxes – and suffered the consequences of inflation – you’ll be very lucky just to have as much money as you started with.
ContrarianProfits.com is a contrarian site, in the sense that we provide ideas, opinions and recommendations that often run counter to the mainstream financial press. We do this not just to be contrary, but because we’ve realized that Rick is right. You don’t make money by following the crowd; you make money by leading it.
Why is this so? Well, it’s obvious that if you do the same thing everyone else does you’ll get the same results everyone else gets. On average, and over the long run, real investment returns for the typical investor cannot exceed the rate of growth of the economy itself. Everybody can’t get richer faster than everybody else. Real economic growth in the US today averages about 3% per year; if you don’t make any mistakes, that’s about what you can expect. Few people may be satisfied with 3% per year, but most feel comfortable in the middle of the financial herd and are happy to take whatever that gets them. If you’re one of those people, you will probably not like our site. It will make you uncomfortable.
If, on the other hand, you’re willing to look at things a little differently, you’ll appreciate the views of many of our columnists, contributors and visionaries.