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Lao Sai is Good for banks & finance?

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Alfrescian
Loyal
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090420...zZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNkb3dwbHVuZ2VzMjk-


Dow plunges 290 as investors worry about banks
AP

Business Update: BofA sparks slump Play Video Reuters – Business Update: BofA sparks slump

* Stock Markets Slideshow:Stock Markets
* FOXBusiness.com LIVE: Financials Rock Market Play Video Wall Street Video:FOXBusiness.com LIVE: Financials Rock Market FOXBusiness

Related Quotes Symbol Price Change
AXP 18.98 -2.83
BAC 8.02 -2.58
C 2.94 -0.71
DOW 11.48 -1.12
IBM 100.43 -0.84
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Monday, April 20, 2009. AP – Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Monday, April 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
By TIM PARADIS, AP Business Writer Tim Paradis, Ap Business Writer – 4 mins ago

NEW YORK – Investors are back to worrying about banks. Long-present unease about soured loans bubbled over on Monday after Bank of America Corp. said it set aside $13.4 billion to cover lending losses even as it posted earnings that beat expectations. Other big banks have also increased loss provisions in the past two weeks.

Financial stocks suffered some of the day's worst declines and major market indicators tumbled more than 3 percent, including the Dow Jones industrial average, which fell 290 points.

Bank of America plunged 24.3 percent and Citigroup fell 19 percent as investors became worried that cleaning up bad loans from banks' balance sheets may have farther to go than many had anticipated.

Joe Saluzzi, co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading LLC, said traders are now viewing bank earnings with more skepticism and believe that the better-than-expected profit reports may be disguising problems.

"They're looking at bank numbers and are saying they are not that great," Saluzzi said.

Even without growing anxiety about financial stocks, traders had been looking for some pullback after the Dow jumped 24 percent from 12-year lows in early March.

The renewed worries about banks' debt problems were aggravated by news reports that their lending remains tight and that the government may swap its debt in banks for ownership stakes as its $700 billion bailout fund runs down.

Because of the central role lending plays in keeping businesses of all kinds going, investors have been hunting for signs of a recovery in banks before they get more optimistic about the broader economy.

The market has been encouraged by early indications that a government drive for lower interest rates has been helping banks step up lending, but investors are still sensitive to any signs of trouble.

Now they're on high alert about what the government will say in two weeks when it reports results of in-depth examinations to see which banks might need more help to stay afloat if the economy gets even worse.

Energy and materials companies also fell along with the prices of key commodities they rely on such as crude oil.

The market declines were broad and deep, outweighing what would otherwise be positive news about a step-up in deal activity. After a deal with IBM Corp. didn't work out, troubled technology company Sun Microsystems found a buyer in Oracle, a leading maker of business software, while PepsiCo Inc. said it would bid $6 billion to buy its two biggest bottlers.

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow fell 289.60, or 3.6 percent, to 7,841.73.

Broader stock indicators also lost ground. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 37.20, or 4.3 percent, to 832.40, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 64.86, or 3.9 percent, to 1,608.21.

About 10 stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 1.8 billion shares.

Concerns about the sustainability of bank earnings weighed on financial stocks. Citigroup Inc. lost 19.5 percent, JPMorgan Chase & Co. fell 10.7 percent and American Express Co. fell 13 percent.

Jeffrey Frankel, president of Stuart Frankel & Co. in New York, said the retreat in financial stocks is welcome after their massive gains from early March — he said too sharp a rise could endanger a long-term advance. Many bank stocks have doubled in only weeks.

"These banks have had a tremendous run," Frankel said. "Now you're hearing the bearish camp speak up a little bit."

Investors are also cautious about financials after The New York Times reported that the government might be forced to find ways to stretch the $700 billion allocated for the government's bank rescue fund by converting the government's loans into common stock. Such a move would give the government a controlling stake in banks and hurt existing shareholders by reducing the value of their shares.

Separately, The Wall Street Journal reported that banks receiving government bailout money are having a hard time making loans.

Wall Street was more upbeat about the Oracle deal, which carries a 42 percent premium to Sun's Friday closing stock price of $6.69. Sun jumped 36.8 percent, while Oracle slipped 1.3 percent.

Beverage and snack maker PepsiCo offered to acquire Pepsi Bottling Group and PepsiAmericas in a move to cut costs. Pepsi lost 4.4 percent, while Pepsi Bottling jumped 22 percent and PepsiAmericas surged 26 percent.

In earnings news, drug maker Eli Lilly & Co.'s first-quarter earnings rose 24 percent on higher sales of the antidepressant Cymbalta and as costs for Humalog, a form of insulin Lilly makes, remained flat. Shares slipped 2.3 percent.

Light, sweet crude fell $4.45 to $45.88 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Occidental Petroleum Corp. lost 6.3 percent, while Dow Chemical Co. fell 9.1 percent.

In other market moves, the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 26.88, or 5.6 percent, to 452.49.

Bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.85 percent from 2.95 percent late Friday. The yield on the three-month T-bill was unchanged at 0.13 percent.

The dollar was mostly higher against other major currencies. Gold prices rose.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average rose 0.19 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 fell 2.5 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 4.1 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 4 percent.
 

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http://hk.news.yahoo.com/article/090421/4/bsiv.html


匯豐私人銀行裁員8% 涵蓋各職級 董事總經理執包袱
(明報)4月22日 星期三 05:05

【明報專訊】本港最大銀行——匯豐銀行 再一次裁員。今次被「開刀」的是私人銀行部門,由於經營環境轉差,昨日裁減了100名員工,佔匯豐私銀在港員工約8%,是該行私人銀行部門在港最大規模的裁員行動。

有銀行界人士指出,金融海嘯令股市動盪,私人銀行首當其衝,因為高端客戶的資產被蒸發。目前股市氣氛轉好的情况若未能持續,恐怕繼匯豐、瑞銀和德銀之後,再有私人銀行要「瘦身」。

高層被裁 或涉accumulator投訴

匯豐發言人證實,昨日私人銀行在港裁減了100名員工,佔原本員工總數1200人的8%。裁員的傳聞早已在該行內流傳,惟令員工意外的,是擁有大量客戶的高級客戶經理也被「叮走」。發言人也證實,裁減的職位涵蓋高、中、低層,由後勤員工上至董事總經理也有。但有員工透露,被裁走的員工當中,低層職員仍佔大多數。

發言人解釋,裁員是因為市場環境轉變,令整體生意轉差,但她不願透露今年的業績表現。根據匯控年報,私人銀行去年稅前盈利增長15.6%至14.5億美元 ,但沒有披露香港業務的表現。有內部員工就透露,香港的生意在雷曼兄弟爆煲後一落千丈,銷售accumulator(累計股票期權)等產品引來客戶投訴,也可能是部分高層職員被裁的原因。

這次是匯豐繼向保險、個人理財、後勤及資訊科技等部門埋手後,再次手起刀落,也可說是自去年9月以來第五波裁員(見圖)。金融海嘯以來,匯豐全球已證實的裁員人數,起碼超過2800人。

海嘯後 匯豐全球裁2800人

對於今次發生「大地震」的是私人銀行,有銀行界人士表示不足為奇,因為私人銀行在金融海嘯下一直首當其衝,「股市大跌已令高端客戶的資產大幅蒸發,加上客戶的投資意欲已大減,大多都損手離場,也不再借錢做投資(leverage)。銀行所管理的資產(AUM)大幅縮水,交投量少令佣金收入急降,而客戶經理人工卻很高,沒有生意的時候,最有效的削減成本方法便是裁員!」

瑞銀上周才宣布全球裁員8700人,當中亞太區財富管理部門裁減240人,佔區內員工8%,據悉,香港的員工約佔其中100人。而德意志銀行資產管理部門在港早前亦裁減10餘人。

中原人力資源顧問有限公司董事總經理周綺萍指出,部分在去年底被裁的私人銀行員工,即使願意減薪30%至50%,但至今仍未能找到新工作。

明報記者羅羽庭報道
 
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