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Markets News Afternoon: Goldman Sachs downgrade hits banking stocks in US and Europe; Shares fall steeply in Dublin
By Finfacts Team
Oct 13, 2009 - 5:08:31 PM
BP's Thunder Horse platform in the Gulf of Mexico - - Oil prices are unlikely to spike to very high levels in the next two to three years due to rising spare capacity and relatively low demand growth, the chief economist at BP Plc said on Tuesday.
"There will soon be 6 million barrels per day (bpd) of spare production capacity," BP's Christof Ruhl told Reuters on the sidelines of a conference in London. "In the good years, global demand was rising by 1.2 million bpd each year - - so even if the good years were to return tomorrow, it would still take more than three years to burn through that spare capacity and to create markets as tense as they were a year ago."
Babcock Networks Ireland Limited: Appointment of Provisional Liquidator.
The High Court on Monday appointed Ken Fennell of Kavanagh Fennell Provisional Liquidator to Babcock Networks Ireland Limited.
Babcock Networks Ireland Limited, with offices in Ballymount, Dublin and Athlone, employees 64 staff, the majority of whom are field based engineers. The principle business of the company is the construction, installation and commissioning of telecommunications equipment. They provide skilled services to large multinational phone manufacturers such as Ericsson, Nokia and Motorolla, with 85% percent of its work carried out for Ericsson.
The proposed petition was presented to the High Court by Matheson Ormsby Prentice who are the solicitors for the etitioner. The petitioner Adrian Nash, Director of Babcock Networks Ireland Limited, is proposing the petition to wind up the company on behalf of all the directors of the company.
Fennell of Kavanagh Fennell, the provisional liquidator, hopes to sell the business as a going concern and has been handling a large number of insolvencies during the recession.
Government urged to revert to the standard calculation of preliminary taxation for 2009
The Institute of Certified Public Accountants in Ireland today urged the Government to revert to the standard calculation of preliminary taxation for 2009. “It is one thing to increase taxes, it is quite another to change rules in a retrospective manner and to put an unnecessary financial and administrative burden on the tax payer” said John White, President of the CPA.
Preliminary tax for a year is normally calculated by paying either 100% of the previous year’s tax liability or by estimating the full tax liability for 2009 and paying 90% of this figure.
To ensure certainty most taxpayers opt to pay 100% of the previous year’s tax bill. However, this year the calculation rules have changed. To avail of the ‘previous year’ option, it is necessary to retrospectively apply the new income levies introduced in 2009 to last year’s tax liability, in order to accurately estimate the preliminary tax due for 2009.
“At a time when all energies should be devoted by taxpayers to protecting and developing their businesses it is very unfortunate that this new administrative burden should be imposed, particularly when it will deliver very little benefit to the overall tax take”, said John White.
The Institute of Certified Public Accountants (CPA) is calling for the rules to be changed so that preliminary tax can be calculated on the basis of the 2008 tax paid, as has always been the case. “There should be no requirement to recalculate last year’s tax liability in order to take the income levy into account. This avoids an extra compliance cost which must be borne by the taxpayer, their advisor, or both”, said White.
“Compliant taxpayers must have ease of administration. Introducing additional complexity benefits no-one – least of all small business owners trying to survive. This is an unnecessary additional cost on small businesses. It is also a mechanism to ensure that more small businesses pay a higher proportion of their tax a year in advance. At a time when credit restrictions are putting increasing pressure on these businesses, the further squeeze by government on their cash flow means this extra cost of could be the final straw for many,” warned White.
UK banks still don't have enough money to lend and there is a long way to go before their balance sheets will be fully cleaned up, Lord John Eatwell, member of Lords Economic Affairs Committee, told CNBC Tuesday. Lord Norman Lamont, former Chancellor of the Exchequer, joined the discussion:
0% entry fee for Rabodirect Investment Funds
RaboDirect, aa unit of the Dutch bank Rabobank Group, today announced that it is reducing the entry fee across all of its investment funds for the remainder of 2009. The 0% entry fees, which are normally 0.75%, will apply to RaboDirect’s entire portfolio of 51 managed funds including Robeco Emerging Stars Equities, Henderson Horizon Global Technology, J.P. Morgan Natural Resources and RaboDirect’s most recent addition, its Sustainable Asset Management Funds – Smart Energy, Sustainable Climate and Water. The 0% rate is effective immediately and will benefit new and existing RaboDirect customers.
Killian Nolan, Investment Manager at RaboDirect said: “Our portfolio of funds offers investors the opportunity to invest in rated funds that span the globe from emerging European, Asian and Latin American markets to more traditional European and US markets. The transparency, flexibility and low fee nature of RaboDirect’s investment offering has proven to be a huge hit with our customers. With our 0% entry fee for the rest of 2009, we aim to make investing even more accessible and further encourage Irish consumers to take their investment decisions into their own hands.”
With a minimum entry amount of only €100, RaboDirect investment funds are designed to appeal to a range of investors with varying profiles. The investor decides which funds to go into and at what level. Exit fees are 0.75% and investors can exit the funds partially or in full any time they like, as there are no additional early encashment penalties or switching costs.
FDIC Chair Sheila Bair discusses the state of the US banking industry with CNBC:
Chief of embattled lender CIT to quit
Bloomberg reports that CIT Group Inc., the 101-year-old lender that may file for bankruptcy protection, said Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Peek plans to resign.
Peek, 62, joins Bank of America Corp. chief Kenneth Lewis and Morgan Stanley head John Mack, who have said they will step down in the past month. CIT’s board formed a search committee to find a new CEO, the New York-based company said in a statement today.
The U.S. government rejected a second bailout for CIT after committing $2.33 billion in taxpayer funds in December to keep the lender afloat. The company turned to bondholders in July after it was denied access to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s program to sell US-backed debt.
US markets
US financial stocks were hit on Tuesday when well-known analyst Meredith Whitney downgraded Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and said she was “far less bullish” on banking shares.
Goldman Sachs fell 2.3% after Whitney cut the bank to “neutral” and said investors should take profits after the stock more than doubled since March.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 38 points, or 0.4%, at 9,847.
The Nasdaq Composite Index dipped 0.3% and the S&P 500 declined 0.6%.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, oil for November delivery is trading at $73.29 up 2 cents from Monday's close. In London, Brent crude for November delivery is trading at $72.07 a barrel.
The pound is being trashed across the board and is now "catastrophically weak," Nicole Elliott from Mizuho Corporate Bank told CNBC Tuesday. Elliott thinks the UK currency could reach parity with the euro and weaken further from there:
Currencies
The euro is trading at $1.4815 and at £0.9338.
For live currency updates, check the right-hand column of the Finfacts home page.The dollar traded at a record low $1.6038 per euro on July 15, 2008.