Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | SciTech | SOEs | Tax | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | More Categories

 


While you were sleeping: Buffett buys railroad

While you were sleeping: Buffett buys railroad, US factory orders rise, UBS loss

Nov. 4 (BusinessWire) – Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the investment company led by billionaire Warren Buffett, agreed to buy railroad company Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. for $26 billion in a deal he says is a bet on U.S. economic growth.

Buffett will pay US$100 per share cash for the 77.4 % of Burlington he doesn’t already own. Shares of the railroad soared 28% to US$97.64 on the announcement. Berkshire will have spent US$44 billion all up for the company.

Berkshire’s Class rose 1.6% to US$100,276.00.

New orders at U.S. factories rose a greater-than-expected 0.9% in September as companies worked down their inventories, according to the Commerce Department. The figures helped stoke optimism that factory output will help underpin economic recovery in the U.S.,

Inventories dropped for a 13th straight month, with a 1% decline in factory stockpiles in the latest month.

Shares on Wall Street slipped after Switzerland’s UBS AG posted a bigger-than-expected loss, weighing on financials, and Morgan Stanley downgraded its rating on Intel Corp.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.2% to 9769.56 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 declined 0.2% to 1044.86. The Nasdaq Composite edged 0.06% lower to 2050.42.

Citigroup fell 0.3% to US$3.99, Bank of America gained 0.6% to US$14.74 and Bank of New York Mellon fell 2.3% to US$26.63.

Intel declined 2.8% to US$18.48 after Morgan Stanley lowered its rating on the stock to ‘cautious.’

Black & Decker Corp., the power tool company, soared 24% to US$58.74 after agreeing to be acquired by tool maker Stanley Works for US$3.46 billion in stock. The new company is to be called Stanley Black & Decker and expects to squeeze out annual cost savings of US$350 million.

Stocks fell in Europe after UBS posted a net loss of 564 million francs, about a third worse than expected, sending the shares down 5.8%.

Royal Bank of Scotland tumbled 7% after announcing its second bailout from the U.K. Treasury, which will inject 25.5 billion pounds into the lender, lifting the government’s stake to 84.4%.

RBS will sell its insurance unit and some branches and put 282 billion pounds of loans and securities into the government’s Asset Protection Scheme.

Lloyds Banking Group rose 2.7% after the lender announced it would raise 21 million pounds in the U.K.’s biggest rights offer, avoiding having to cede control to the government.

Allied Irish Banks sank 14% and Bank of Ireland slumped 12% after the Lloyds announcement, which may tighten avenues to capital for other lenders.

The banking industry “remains fragile” with further losses predicted for next year, according to the European Commission.

The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index fell 1.2% to 254.11. Among national benchmarks, the U.K.’s FTSE 100 fell 1.3% to 5037.21, France’s CAC 40 declined 1.5% to 3584.25 and Germany’s DAX 30 dropped 1.4% to 5353.35.

Swiss Reinsurance gained 6.4% after the world’s second-largest reinsurer unexpectedly reported a profit for the thirds quarter, reflecting gains in investments.

The dollar rose to the highest in a month against the euro as sinking European bank stocks stoked concern the financial sector has further to travel to recover.

The dollar rose to US$1.4719 per euro from US$1.4775 yesterday. The yen rose to 132.92 per euro from 133.32. The greenback traded at 90.32 yen from 90.21.

The Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, edged up 0.2% to 76.38.

Crude oil climbed more than US$1 a barrel after India’s central bank increased its holdings of gold, underpinning demand for commodities.

Crude oil for December delivery rose 1.3% to US$79.18 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Gold futures for December delivery rose to a record $1,085.30 an ounce in New York after the Reserve Bank of India bought 200 tonnes of gold from the International Monetary Fund.

Copper fell to a two-week low after a gain in stockpiles monitored by the London Metal stoked concern demand for the metal is waning.

Copper for delivery in three months fell 1% to US$6,490 a tone on the LME.

(BusinessWire)

 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

Smellie Sniffs The Breeze: Oil Fever Follows Wind

What an irony it would be if, after nine years of a government pushing uneconomic investment in wind power, it was followed by an equally uncommercial push by the current government to establish a bigger oil and gas industry in New Zealand. More>>

Getting There: Joyce Gives Telecom More Time For Separation

Communications Minister Steven Joyce has granted Telecom Corp. nine months to cut down potential information-sharing among its units as part of the company’s government-enforced operational separation. More>>

Scoop Business: Wrightson To Raise $180M In Discount Rights Issue

PGG Wrightson, the rural services company aiming to shed debt to woo a new cornerstone investor, plans to raise $180 million in a rights issue at a deep discount. More>>

Medical: Liley Medal Holds The Key To Fertility

The Health Research Council of New Zealand’s (HRC) Liley Medal was awarded to Professor Allan Herbison. Professor Herbison has been honoured for his outstanding work, which has made a breakthrough that may lead to new treatments for infertility. More>>

ALSO:

Consensus-Breaking: Goff To Give Reserve Bank Magic Wand

The ideal is a stable and competitive exchange rate. But our Reserve Bank policy targets are not well designed to produce a stable and competitive exchange rate, nor to keep interest rates as low as possible. More>>

ALSO:

Economy: Not Such A Good Year

Gross domestic product (GDP) in current prices increased 2.0 percent for the year ended March 2009, Statistics New Zealand said today. This increase is the lowest since the year ended March 1999 and follows a 7.7 percent increase in the March 2008 year. More>>

ALSO:

Miner Strike: Negotiations Resume

1000 Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union members at Solid Energy’s four main mines have voted to return to work at 6am Saturday morning. More>>

ALSO:

LATEST HEADLINES

MOST READ HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news