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test/15221
test/15221 |@title tranzonic:1 cos:1 tnz:1 4th:1 qtr:1 feb:1 28:1 net:1 |@word shr:2 54:2 ct:2 vs:8 24:1 net:2 633:1 300:2 859:1 sale:2 15:1 2:3 mln:4 13:1 0:2 avg:2 shrs:2 1:5 165:1 047:1 224:1 982:1 year:1 two:1 dlrs:2 64:1 379:1 400:1 011:1 924:1 58:1 6:1 187:1 828:1 223:1 511:1
TRANZONIC COS <TNZ> 4TH QTR FEB 28 NET Shr 54 cts vs 24 cts Net 633,300 vs 300,859 Sales 15.2 mln vs 13.0 mln Avg shrs 1,165,047 vs 1,224,982 Year Shr two dlrs vs 1.64 dlrs Net 2,379,400 vs 2,011,924 Sales 58.6 mln vs 54.0 mln Avg shrs 1,187,828 vs 1,223,511
test/15222
test/15222 |@title security:2 pacific:2 expect:2 brazil:2 loan:2 action:2 cut:2 net:2 7:2 2:2 mln:2 dlrs:2 |@word
SECURITY PACIFIC EXPECTS BRAZIL LOAN ACTION TO CUT NET BY 7.2 MLN DLRS SECURITY PACIFIC EXPECTS BRAZIL LOAN ACTION TO CUT NET BY 7.2 MLN DLRS
test/15223
test/15223 |@title white:1 house:1 say:1 japanese:1 tarriff:1 likely:1 |@word white:1 house:1 say:3 high:1 u:2 tariff:3 japanese:2 electronic:1 good:1 would:2 likely:1 impose:1 schedule:1 april:1 17:1 despite:1 effort:1 japan:2 avoid:1 presidential:1 spokesman:1 marlin:1 fitzwater:2 make:1 remark:1 one:1 day:1 official:1 meet:1 emergency:1 provision:1 july:1 1986:1 semiconductor:1 pact:1 discuss:1 trade:1 punitive:1 apply:1 full:1 court:1 press:1 certainly:1 put:1 foot:1 forward:1 term:1 explain:1 position:1 add:1 indication:1 take:1 effect:1
WHITE HOUSE SAYS JAPANESE TARRIFFS LIKELY The White House said high U.S. Tariffs on Japanese electronic goods would likely be imposed as scheduled on April 17, despite an all-out effort by Japan to avoid them. Presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater made the remark one day before U.S. And Japanese officials are to meet under the emergency provisions of a July 1986 semiconductor pact to discuss trade and the punitive tariffs. Fitzwater said: 'I would say Japan is applying the full-court press...They certainly are putting both feet forward in terms of explaining their position.' But he added that 'all indications are they (the tariffs) will take effect.'
test/15226
test/15226 |@title showboat:1 sbo:1 take:1 charge:1 see:1 3rd:1 qtr:1 loss:1 |@word showboat:7 inc:1 take:1 charge:3 19:1 20:1 mln:1 dlrs:3 pretax:1 result:2 third:4 quarter:4 end:1 march:1 31:1 director:1 assistant:1 president:1 j:2 kell:1 houssel:2 iii:1 tell:1 reuters:1 say:3 pre:1 operating:1 expense:2 recently:1 open:2 atlantic:3 city:3 n:1 hotel:3 casino:2 bowling:1 center:1 cause:1 loss:1 probably:1 fiscal:4 1987:1 well:1 houssels:1 earning:1 1988:1 show:1 sharp:1 increase:1 1986:2 level:1 due:1 contribution:1 new:1 facility:2 earn:2 1:1 753:1 000:2 last:2 year:1 5:1 769:1 since:1 opening:1 start:1 interest:2 connect:1 debt:1 sell:1 finance:1 directly:1 income:1 rather:1 capitalize:1 able:1 previously:1 gaming:2 begin:1 thursday:1 regular:1 basis:1 test:1 complete:1 earlier:1 week:1
SHOWBOAT <SBO> TO TAKE CHARGE, SEES 3RD QTR LOSS Showboat Inc will take a charge of 19 to 20 mln dlrs pretax against results for the third quarter ended March 31, director and assistant to the president J. Kell Houssels III told Reuters. He said the charge results from pre-operating expenses of its recently-opened Atlantic City, N.J., Showboat Hotel, Casino and Bowling Center and will cause a loss for the third quarter and probably for all of fiscal 1987 as well. But Houssels said Showboat's earnings for fiscal 1988 should show a sharp increase from fiscal 1986 levels due to the contribution of the new Atlantic City facility. Showboat earned 1,753,000 dlrs in last year's third quarter. For all of fiscal 1986 it earned 5,769,000 dlrs. Houssels said Showboat since the opening of the Atlantic City hotel/casino, Showboat has had to start charging interest expenses connected with debt it sold to finance the facility directly against income rather than capitalizing the interest as it had been able to do previously. Showboat opened the hotel during its third quarter and gaming began last Thursday on a regular basis after test gaming was completed earlier in the week.
test/15227
test/15227 |@title security:1 pacific:1 spc:1 loan:1 put:1 non:1 accrual:1 |@word security:3 pacific:3 corp:1 say:6 place:1 medium:2 long:2 term:3 loan:3 brazil:4 ecuador:4 non:1 accrual:1 basis:1 march:2 31:1 move:1 reduce:1 first:3 quarter:3 earning:3 7:1 2:1 mln:4 dlrs:7 nine:1 ct:1 per:2 share:2 taxis:1 despite:1 anticipated:1 reduction:1 quarterly:1 still:1 expect:2 report:2 high:1 88:1 1:1 11:1 1986:1 bank:5 hold:1 company:2 action:1 affect:1 401:1 73:1 suspend:2 interest:5 payment:3 68:1 billion:3 debt:3 february:2 20:1 foreign:2 roughly:1 eight:1 pay:1 since:1 would:1 rest:1 year:1 earthquake:1 halt:1 export:2 oil:1 account:1 75:1 pct:1 country:1 revenue:1 announcement:1 record:1 income:1 receive:1 cash:1 also:1 believe:1 reach:1 agreement:1 resume:2 later:1 1987:1 brazilian:1 negotiation:1 friday:1 new:1 york:1 central:1 governor:1 francisco:1 gros:1 ask:1 90:1 day:1 roll:1 9:1 5:1 mature:1 april:1 15:1
SECURITY PACIFIC <SPC> LOANS PUT ON NON-ACCRUAL Security Pacific Corp said it is placing medium and long-term loans to Brazil and Ecuador on a non-accrual basis as of March 31, a move that will reduce first quarter earnings by 7.2 mln dlrs, or nine cts per share, after taxes. Despite the anticipated reduction to quarterly earnings, Security Pacific said it still expects to report first quarter earnings higher than the 88 mln dlrs, or 1.11 dlrs per share reported for the first quarter of 1986. The bank holding company said the action affects 401 mln dlrs of loans to Brazil and 73 mln of loans to Ecuador. Brazil suspended interest payments on its 68 billion dlrs of medium- and long-term debt on February 20. Ecuador, which has foreign debt of roughly eight billion dlrs, has not paid any interest to foreign banks since February. In March Ecuador said it would suspend interest payments for the rest of the year because of an earthquake which halted the export of oil, which accounts for about 75 pct the country's export revenues. In its announcement, Security Pacific said it will record interest income only as it is received in cash. The company also said it believes that Brazil will reach an agreement with its banks and that interest payments will resume later in 1987. The Brazilian negotiations resume on Friday in New York when Central Bank Governor Francisco Gros is expected to ask banks for a 90-day roll-over of some 9.5 billion dlrs of term debt that matures on April 15.
test/15230
test/15230 |@title iraqi:1 troop:1 report:1 push:1 back:1 iranians:1 |@word iraq:3 say:8 today:2 troop:3 push:1 iranian:5 force:3 position:2 initially:1 occupy:3 launch:1 new:2 offensive:1 near:1 southern:1 port:1 basra:2 early:1 yesterday:1 high:1 command:1 communique:4 iraqi:4 win:1 significant:1 victory:1 continue:2 advance:2 foil:1 three:2 pronged:1 thrust:1 10:1 km:1 six:2 mile:1 admit:1 iranians:2 grind:1 hold:1 mohammed:1 al:1 qassem:1 unit:2 one:1 division:1 attack:2 revolutionary:1 guard:1 assault:1 warplanes:1 helicopter:1 gunship:1 heavy:1 artillery:1 tank:1 purge:1 last:1 foothold:1 iran:2 kill:1 wound:1 4:1 000:1 iraqis:1 stabilise:1 baghdad:1 plane:1 also:2 destroy:1 oil:1 installation:1 southwestern:1 ahvaz:1 field:1 raid:1 deny:1 report:2 jet:1 shoot:1 naval:2 battle:1 northern:1 tip:1 gulf:1 defend:1 offshore:2 terminal:2 sank:1 28:1 boat:1 attempt:1
IRAQI TROOPS REPORTED PUSHING BACK IRANIANS Iraq said today its troops were pushing Iranian forces out of positions they had initially occupied when they launched a new offensive near the southern port of Basra early yesterday. A High Command communique said Iraqi troops had won a significant victory and were continuing to advance. Iraq said it had foiled a three-pronged thrust some 10 km (six miles) from Basra, but admitted the Iranians had occupied ground held by the Mohammed al-Qassem unit, one of three divisions attacked. The communique said Iranian Revolutionary Guards were under assault from warplanes, helicopter gunships, heavy artillery and tanks. 'Our forces are continuing their advance until they purge the last foothold' occupied by the Iranians, it said. (Iran said its troops had killed or wounded more than 4,000 Iraqis and were stabilising their new positions.) The Baghdad communique said Iraqi planes also destroyed oil installations at Iran's southwestern Ahvaz field during a raid today. It denied an Iranian report that an Iraqi jet was shot down. Iraq also reported a naval battle at the northern tip of the Gulf. Iraqi naval units and forces defending an offshore terminal sank six Iranian out of 28 Iranian boats attempting to attack an offshore terminal, the communique said.
test/15233
test/15233 |@title golden:1 enterprises:1 inc:1 gldc:1 3rd:1 qtr:1 feb:1 28:1 net:1 |@word shr:2 15:1 ct:6 vs:9 nine:2 qtly:1 div:1 six:2 prior:1 qtr:1 net:2 2:4 002:1 261:1 1:3 168:1 638:1 revs:2 29:2 mln:8 3:1 avg:2 shrs:2 13:4 0:2 mth:1 49:1 36:1 6:1 404:1 536:1 4:1 623:1 295:1 92:1 88:1 note:1 dividend:1 payable:1 april:2 30:1 holder:1 record:1 20:1
GOLDEN ENTERPRISES INC <GLDC> 3RD QTR FEB 28 NET Shr 15 cts vs nine cts Qtly div six cts vs six cts in prior qtr Net 2,002,261 vs 1,168,638 Revs 29.2 mln vs 29.3 mln Avg shrs 13.1 mln vs 13.0 mln Nine mths Shr 49 cts vs 36 cts Net 6,404,536 vs 4,623,295 Revs 92.2 mln vs 88.2 mln Avg shrs 13.1 mln vs 13.0 mln NOTE: Dividend is payable April 30 to holders of record April 20
test/15234
test/15234 |@title group:1 five:1 meeting:1 end:1 |@word meeting:2 finance:2 minister:3 central:1 banker:1 group:2 five:1 end:1 nearly:1 three:2 half:1 hour:1 west:1 german:1 gerhard:1 stoltenberg:1 british:1 chancellor:1 exchequer:1 nigel:1 lawson:1 decline:1 comment:1 emerge:1 u:1 treasury:2 european:1 monetary:1 official:1 say:1 seven:1 country:1 would:1 gather:1 p:1 local:1 1900:1 gmt:1
GROUP OF FIVE MEETING ENDS A meeting of finance ministers and central bankers of the Group of Five ended after nearly three and a half hours. West German Finance Minister Gerhard Stoltenberg and British Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Lawson declined to comment on the meeting as they emerged from the U.S. Treasury. A European monetary official said the ministers of the Group of Seven countries would gather at about three p.m. local (1900 GMT) at the Treasury.
test/15237
test/15237 |@title usda:1 propose:1 foreign:1 meat:1 inspection:1 rule:1 |@word u:1 agriculture:2 department:1 prepare:1 proposal:1 would:3 require:1 foreign:2 meat:2 product:2 inspect:2 point:1 arrival:1 united:1 states:1 usda:3 official:1 say:2 donald:1 houston:2 administrator:1 food:1 safety:1 inspection:1 service:1 fsis:1 tell:1 house:1 subcommittee:1 develop:1 propose:1 change:1 regulation:1 put:1 end:1 current:1 practice:1 permit:1 unload:1 one:1 port:2 another:1 requirement:1 phase:1 several:1 year:1 avoid:1 disruption:1 economic:1 hardship:1
USDA TO PROPOSE FOREIGN MEAT INSPECTION RULE The U.S. Agriculture Department is preparing a proposal that would require all foreign meat products to be inspected at their point of arrival in the United States, a USDA official said. Donald Houston, administrator of USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service, FSIS, told a House Agriculture subcommittee USDA was developing a proposed change in regulations that would put an end to the current practice of permitting foreign meat products to be unloaded at one port and inspected at another port. Houston said the requirement would be phased in over several years to 'avoid disruptions and economic hardship.'
test/15238
test/15238 |@title union:1 texas:1 oil:1 reserve:1 drop:1 1986:1 |@word union:7 texas:7 petroleum:1 say:9 worldwide:1 prove:1 reserve:2 fall:1 511:1 mln:9 barrel:5 oil:7 equivalent:2 end:1 1986:1 555:1 report:2 1985:3 newly:1 release:1 annual:1 replace:1 71:1 pct:1 production:3 56:1 last:3 year:4 take:1 account:1 sale:4 27:1 u:1 reserves:1 nation:1 large:1 independent:1 gas:3 producer:1 base:2 revenue:1 privately:1 hold:1 company:5 kohlberg:1 kravis:1 roberts:1 co:1 ally:1 signal:1 inc:1 ald:1 houston:1 lose:1 57:1 5:1 dlrs:9 1:1 26:1 billion:2 compare:1 profit:1 165:1 2:2 04:1 receive:1 average:1 13:1 35:1 per:2 international:1 99:1 mcf:1 foreign:1 natural:1 majority:1 total:1 energy:1 united:2 kingdom:1 indonesia:1 pakistan:1 states:1 complete:1 evaluation:1 work:1 find:1 alaska:1 colville:1 delta:1 area:1 although:1 significant:1 confirm:1 development:1 discovery:1 economical:1 without:1 substantially:1 high:1 price:1 plan:1 spend:2 42:1 next:1 two:1 develop:1 eugene:1 island:1 block:1 371:1 gulf:1 mexico:1 1987:1 budget:2 178:1 capital:1 spending:1 less:1 half:1 amount:1 199:1 also:1 would:1 seek:1 acquisition:1 property:1 well:1 petrochemical:1 related:1 business:1
UNION TEXAS OIL RESERVES DROPPED IN 1986 Union Texas Petroleum said its worldwide proved reserves fell to 511 mln barrels of oil equivalent at the end of 1986 from 555 mln barrels reported in 1985. In its newly released annual report, Union Texas said it replaced about 71 pct of its production of 56 mln barrels of oil equivalent last year after taking into account the sale of 27 mln barrels of U.S. reserves. Union Texas, the nation's largest independent oil and gas producer based on revenues, is a privately-held company owned by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Co and Allied-Signal Inc <ALD>. The Houston-based company said it lost 57.5 mln dlrs on 1.26 billion dlrs in sales last year, compared to profits of 165 mln dlrs on 2.04 billion dlrs in sales in 1985. Union Texas said it received an average of 13.35 dlrs per barrel for its international oil production and 2.99 dlrs per mcf for its foreign natural gas sales. The majority of the company's total energy production is in the United Kingdom, Indonesia and Pakistan. In the United States, Union Texas said it completed evaluation work on its oil find in Alaska's Colville Delta area. 'Although significant oil reserves were confirmed, development of this discovery will not be economical without substantially higher prices,' the company said. Union Texas said it planned to spend about 42 mln dlrs over the next two years to develop its Eugene Island Block 371 in the Gulf of Mexico. In 1987, the company said it budgeted 178 mln dlrs for capital spending, less than half of the amount spent in 1985 and down from 199 mln dlrs budgeted last year. Union Texas also said it would seek acquisitions of oil and gas properties as well as petrochemical-related businesses.
test/15239
test/15239 |@title ual:3 may:1 respond:1 pilot:1 today:1 |@word inc:1 may:2 response:1 afternoon:1 pilot:5 union:3 proposal:4 buy:3 united:2 airlines:1 unit:1 ual:9 spokesman:2 say:8 obviously:1 lot:1 movement:1 stock:7 need:1 get:2 clarification:1 add:2 50:2 chance:1 statement:1 would:1 release:1 today:3 earlier:1 week:2 offer:1 airline:4 2:4 3:3 billion:2 dlrs:3 assume:1 exist:1 debt:1 takeover:2 speculation:3 drive:1 several:1 last:1 month:1 new:3 york:1 real:1 estate:1 developer:2 donald:1 trump:2 hold:2 position:2 also:1 discussion:1 chairman:1 indicate:1 talk:1 take:2 investment:1 reveal:1 plan:1 rumor:1 circulate:1 coniston:1 partner:1 jump:1 five:1 70:1 4:1 volume:1 mln:1 share:2 consider:1 think:1 realistic:1 exptect:1 could:1 put:1 interesting:2 option:1 front:1 management:1 timothy:1 pettee:2 bear:1 stearns:1 co:1 analyst:2 make:1 vulnerable:1 attack:1 diversify:1 away:1 core:1 hertz:1 rental:1 car:1 westin:1 hilton:1 international:1 hotel:1 strategy:3 become:1 travel:1 service:1 company:3 leave:1 slump:1 concern:1 focusse:1 enough:1 attention:2 stand:1 firm:1 emphasize:1 focus:1 change:1 name:1 allegis:1 one:1 escalate:1 wall:1 street:1 busy:1 calculate:1 break:1 value:2 well:1 excess:1 100:1 per:1 trader:1 describe:1 buying:1 widespread:1 indicative:1 big:1 institution:1 believe:1 play:1 market:1 source:1 although:1 attract:1 act:1 catalyst:1 kick:1 round:1 perhaps:1 throw:1 hand:1 another:1 buyer:1 first:1 domino:2 investor:1 considerable:1 stake:1 second:1 type:1 attitude:1 precursor:1 deal:1 past:1 something:1 everybody:1
UAL <UAL> MAY RESPOND TO PILOTS TODAY UAL Inc may have a response this afternoon to the pilots union proposal to buy its United Airlines unit, a UAL spokesman said. 'Obviously, we have a lot of movement in our stock, and we need to get a clarification out,' the spokesman said, adding that there was a '50-50' chance a statement would be released today. The pilots earlier this week offered to buy the airline for 2.3 billion dlrs, and assume 2.2 billion dlrs of existing debt. Takeover speculation has driven UAL's stock for several weeks. UAL last month said New York Real estate developer Donald Trump held a position in its stock, and that he also held discussions with its chairman. The developer indicated in those talks that he took the position as an investment, but he revealed no other plans. Today, rumors circulated that Coniston Partners were buying UAL stock. UAL jumped five to 70-3/4 on volume of more than 3.2 mln shares. 'United has got to consider this proposal. I think the pilot's proposal is realistic. I don't exptect them to take it, but it could put some interesting options in front of UAL management,' said Timothy Pettee, Bear Stearns and co analyst. Analysts have said UAL made itself vulnerable to attack when it diversified away from its core airline. It added Hertz rental cars, Westin and Hilton International hotels in a strategy to become a travel service company. The strategy left its stock in a slump and its pilots union concerned that the company was not focussing enough attention on its airline. UAL has stood firm on its strategy. It is emphasizing its new focus by changing its name to Allegis, as of May one. But takeover speculation has escalated, and Wall Street has been busy calculating break up values well in excess of 100 dlrs per share. Traders today described the buying in UAL as widespread, indicative to them that big institutions believe the stock is in play. Market sources have said that although Trump attracted attention to the stock, the pilots proposal acted as a catalyst, kicking off a new round of speculation and perhaps throwing the company into the hands of another buyer. 'The first domino is you have an investor with a considerable stake. the second domino is the union. That type of attitude has been a precursor to airline deals in the past,' said Pettee. 'What's interesting is the values are there. There's something for everybody,' he said.
test/15240
test/15240 |@title hartmarx:1 hmx:1 target:1 earning:1 growth:1 |@word hartmarx:4 corp:1 follow:1 year:5 restructuring:1 continue:2 target:1 record:1 earning:4 fiscal:2 1987:2 chairman:1 john:1 meinert:4 tell:2 annual:1 meeting:1 reiterate:1 early:1 comment:1 remainder:1 must:1 double:1 1986:3 level:1 meet:1 goal:1 end:1 november:1 30:1 report:1 24:1 8:1 mln:2 dlrs:4 1:1 20:1 share:3 prior:1 42:1 7:1 2:1 25:1 110:1 old:1 apparel:2 manufacturer:1 recently:1 post:1 first:1 quarter:1 54:1 ct:2 40:1 ago:1 shareholder:1 plan:1 sell:1 division:1 add:1 financial:1 capacity:1 take:1 advantage:1 acquisition:1 say:2 company:2 open:1 five:1 new:1 10:1 redesign:1 kuppenheimer:1 direct:1 consumer:1 store:2 atlanta:1 detroit:1 st:1 louis:1 washington:1 c:1 san:1 francisco:1 woman:1 grow:1 drawing:1 board:1 briar:1 concept:1 feature:1 tie:1 shirt:1 tailor:1 clothing:1
HARTMARX <HMX> TARGETS EARNINGS GROWTH Hartmarx Corp, following a year of restructuring, continues to target record earnings for fiscal 1987, Chairman John Meinert told the annual meeting. Meinert reiterated an earlier comment that earnings for the remainder of the year must double the 1986 level to meet that goal. In fiscal 1986, ended November 30, 1986, Hartmarx reported earnings of 24.8 mln dlrs, or 1.20 dlrs a share, down from the prior year's 42.7 mln dlrs, or 2.25 dlrs a share. The 110-year-old apparel manufacturer recently posted first-quarter earnings of 54 cts a share, up from 40 cts a year ago. Meinert told shareholders Hartmarx has no plans to sell any of its divisions. He added, 'We have the financial capacity to take advantage of acquisitions.' In 1987, Meinert said the company will open five new and 10 redesigned Kuppenheimer direct-to-consumer stores in Atlanta, Detroit, St. Louis, Washington, D.C. and San Francisco. He said the company's women's apparel continues to grow, and Hartmarx has on the drawing board a Briar concept store which will feature ties, shirts and some tailored clothing.
test/15242
test/15242 |@title fed:1 heller:2 see:2 return:2 slow:2 money:2 supply:2 growth:2 feed:1 |@word
FED'S HELLER SEES RETURN TO SLOWER MONEY SUPPLY GROWTH FED'S HELLER SEES RETURN TO SLOWER MONEY SUPPLY GROWTH
test/15243
test/15243 |@title general:2 electric:2 co:2 1st:2 qtr:2 shr:2 1:4 37:2 dlrs:4 vs:2 18:2 |@word
GENERAL ELECTRIC CO 1ST QTR SHR 1.37 DLRS VS 1.18 DLRS GENERAL ELECTRIC CO 1ST QTR SHR 1.37 DLRS VS 1.18 DLRS
test/15244
test/15244 |@title ghana:1 buy:1 crude:1 oil:1 iran:1 |@word ghana:1 import:1 15:1 000:1 tonne:1 crude:1 oil:3 annually:1 iran:2 agreement:2 reach:2 tehran:1 today:1 iranian:2 news:1 agency:2 irna:2 report:1 receive:1 london:1 say:2 accord:1 minister:2 gholamreza:1 aqazadeh:1 visit:1 ghanaian:1 delegation:1 head:1 foreign:1 obed:1 asamoah:1 also:1 provide:1 technical:1 scientific:1 assistance:1 manpower:1 training:1 exploitation:1 production:1 refining:1
GHANA TO BUY CRUDE OIL FROM IRAN Ghana will import 15,000 tonnes of crude oil annually from Iran under an agreement reached in Tehran today, the Iranian news agency IRNA reported. The agency, received in London, said the accord was reached between Iranian Oil Minister Gholamreza Aqazadeh and a visiting Ghanaian delegation headed by Foreign Minister Obed Asamoah. IRNA said that under the agreement, Iran will also provide technical and scientific assistance in manpower training and oil exploitation, production and refining.
test/15246
test/15246 |@title fed:1 heller:1 say:1 monetary:1 growth:1 slow:1 |@word robert:1 heller:7 member:1 federal:2 reserve:2 board:1 say:12 expect:1 modest:2 level:2 growth:3 money:2 supply:2 year:2 view:1 would:6 logical:1 also:2 desireable:1 development:1 speech:1 prepare:1 delivery:1 economic:2 forum:1 chapman:1 college:1 orange:1 calif:1 text:1 release:1 washington:1 effect:1 low:1 inflation:3 financial:1 deregulation:1 monetary:4 aggregate:2 largely:1 finish:1 consequently:1 may:3 return:2 note:1 slow:1 mid:1 january:1 surprised:1 grow:1 rather:2 slowly:1 balance:1 well:2 add:1 danger:1 renew:1 price:4 pricing:1 behavior:2 american:2 producer:3 response:2 increase:1 foreign:2 competitor:1 crucial:1 future:1 widespread:1 domestic:1 rise:2 import:1 generalize:1 inflationary:1 force:1 emanate:1 trade:2 sector:1 gain:1 market:2 share:1 u:2 stagflation:1 late:1 1970:1 result:1 pattern:1 warn:1 discipline:2 conduct:1 policy:1 government:1 exercise:1 fiscal:1 cut:1 deficit:1 spend:1 restraint:1 new:2 taxis:2 imposition:1 tend:1 rekindle:1 certainly:1 make:1 competitive:1 international:1 economy:1 expand:1 nearly:1 three:1 pct:1 1987:1 aid:1 high:1 export:1 europe:1 canada:2 free:1 agreement:1 currently:1 negotiate:1 exceedingly:1 helpful:1 allow:1 compete:1 effectively:1 country:1
FED'S HELLER SAYS MONETARY GROWTH TO BE SLOWER Robert Heller, a member of the Federal Reserve Board, said he expects 'more modest levels' of growth in the money supply this year. 'In my view, this would not only be a logical, but also a most desireable development,' he said in a speech prepared for delivery to an economic forum at Chapman College in Orange, Calif. A text was released in Washington. He said the effect of lower inflation and financial deregulation on monetary aggregates was now largely finished. 'Consequently, monetary growth may return to more modest levels,' Heller said. He noted growth in the money supply slowed after mid-January. 'I would not be surprised at all if the monetary aggregates were to grow rather slowly during the balance of the year as well,' he added. Heller said there was a danger of renewed price inflation. 'The pricing behavior of American producers in response to price increases of their foreign competitors will be crucial for our economic future,' he said. Widespread domestic price rises in response to rising import prices would 'generalize the inflationary forces emanating from the foreign trade sector' and might not gain more market share for U.S. producers. 'A return to the stagflation of the late 1970s may well be the result of such a behavior pattern,' Heller warned. He said 'we at the Federal Reserve will have to be disciplined in our conduct of monetary policy.' Heller said said the government should also exercise fiscal discipline and cut the deficit by spending restraint rather than new taxes. 'The imposition of new taxes would tend to rekindle inflation and certainly would not make us more competitive in international markets,' Heller said. He said the U.S. economy should expand by nearly three pct during 1987, aided by higher exports to Europe and Canada. A free trade agreement currently being negotiated with Canada 'would be exceedingly helpful in allowing American producers to compete more effectively in that country,' Heller said.
test/15247
test/15247 |@title general:1 electric:1 co:1 ge:1 1st:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 1:2 37:1 dlrs:2 vs:3 18:1 net:1 624:1 mln:2 537:1 sale:1 8:1 32:1 billion:2 5:1 88:1 note:1 prior:1 year:1 include:1 result:1 rca:1 corp:1
GENERAL ELECTRIC CO <GE> 1ST QTR NET Shr 1.37 dlrs vs 1.18 dlrs Net 624 mln vs 537 mln Sales 8.32 billion vs 5.88 billion NOTE: Prior year does not include results of RCA Corp.
test/15250
test/15250 |@title energy:1 development:1 edp:1 year:1 loss:1 |@word energy:2 development:2 partners:1 ltd:1 say:4 operating:1 loss:2 year:2 end:1 december:2 31:2 2:1 4:2 mln:6 dlrs:4 40:1 ct:1 per:2 share:2 41:1 5:1 dlr:1 non:1 cash:1 writeoff:1 oil:2 gas:2 property:1 take:1 first:1 quarter:1 result:1 net:1 43:1 9:1 7:2 21:1 partner:1 limited:1 partnership:1 begin:1 operate:1 september:1 1985:1 full:1 revenue:1 total:2 23:1 company:1 also:1 proved:1 reserve:1 8:1 barrel:1 88:1 cubic:1 foot:1 natural:1
ENERGY DEVELOPMENT <EDP> HAD YEAR LOSS Energy Development Partners Ltd said it had an operating loss for the year ended December 31 of 2.4 mln dlrs, or 40 cts per share. But it said a 41.5 mln dlr non-cash writeoff of oil and gas properties taken in the first quarter resulted in a net loss of 43.9 mln dlrs, or 7.21 dlrs per share. Energy Development Partners, is a limited partnership which began operating in September 1985. Full year revenues totaled 23.7 mln dlrs, the company also said. It said proved reserves at December 31 totaled 4.8 mln barrels of oil and 88 mln cubic feet of natural gas.
test/15253
test/15253 |@title industrial:1 nation:1 reconvene:1 talk:1 |@word financial:1 minister:5 central:2 banker:2 lead:2 industrial:1 nation:1 reconvene:1 afternoon:1 canadian:1 finance:3 michael:1 wilson:2 say:2 enter:1 meeting:3 would:2 review:1 paris:1 agreement:1 ask:1 satisfied:1 west:2 german:1 japanese:2 stimulus:1 reply:1 could:1 little:1 french:1 edouard:1 balladur:1 meanwhile:1 confirm:1 communique:1 end:2 britain:1 france:1 canada:1 germany:1 see:1 reuter:1 correspondent:1 return:1 treasury:1 build:1 official:2 bundesbank:1 president:1 karl:1 otto:1 poehl:1 appear:1 leave:1 building:2 early:1 group:2 five:1 talk:1 break:1 around:1 2:1 p:1 local:1 time:1 1800:1 gmt:1 sign:1 however:1 italian:2 delegation:2 whose:1 position:1 throw:1 question:1 morning:1 resignation:1 christian:1 democratic:1 wing:1 italy:1 socialist:1 government:1 european:1 monetary:1 later:1 inside:1 mean:1 full:1 blow:1 seven:1 progress:1
INDUSTRIAL NATIONS RECONVENE FOR TALKS Financial ministers and central bankers of leading industrial nations reconvened here this afternoon. Canadian Finance Minister Michael Wilson said on entering the meeting the ministers would review the Paris agreement. Asked if he was satisfied with West German and Japanese stimulus, Wilson replied, 'They could do a little more.' French Finance Minister Edouard Balladur, meanwhile, confirmed there would be a communique at the end of the meeting. Finance ministers and central bankers of Britain, FRance, Canada and West Germany were seen by Reuter correspondents returning to a Treasury building. Japanese officials and Bundesbank President Karl Otto Poehl did not appear to have left the building at the end of earlier Group of Five talks which broke up around 2 p.m. local time (1800 gmt). There was no sign, however, of the Italian delegation whose position was thrown into question this morning by the resignation of the Christian Democratic wing of Italy's Socialist-led government. European monetary officials said later that the Italian delegation was inside the building. This meant that a full blown meeting of the Group of Seven was in progress.
test/15254
test/15254 |@title u:1 meat:1 poultry:1 inspection:1 call:1 faulty:1 |@word u:3 meat:7 poultry:5 inspection:6 program:5 incapable:1 protect:1 consumer:5 contaminated:1 product:2 group:1 represent:1 inspector:3 charge:1 whole:1 trend:1 last:1 10:1 year:3 corrupt:1 degrade:1 system:2 today:2 public:2 constant:1 risk:2 contaminate:2 adulterate:1 kenneth:2 blaylock:2 president:2 american:2 federation:1 government:3 employee:2 tell:3 house:2 agriculture:3 subcommittee:3 little:1 reason:1 feel:1 confident:2 safety:2 offer:1 say:11 rodney:1 leonard:2 executive:2 director:1 community:1 nutrition:1 institute:1 company:2 management:1 less:1 concerned:1 health:2 raise:1 plant:3 output:1 profit:1 hearing:2 livestock:1 dairy:1 morrison:2 staff:1 associate:1 accountability:1 project:1 consistently:1 disclose:1 violation:1 federal:1 law:2 demonstrate:1 serious:1 breakdown:1 entire:1 chicken:2 fat:1 flavor:1 intestine:1 drag:1 water:1 trough:1 use:2 flush:1 away:1 condemned:1 fecal:1 material:1 human:1 spit:1 chew:1 gum:1 paper:1 towel:1 blow:1 nose:1 donald:1 houston:3 administrator:1 department:1 food:2 service:1 fsis:3 defend:1 call:1 one:1 respected:1 world:1 inspect:1 estimate:1 127:1 mln:1 head:1 cattle:1 4:1 5:1 billion:1 turkey:1 every:1 keep:1 pace:1 change:1 concede:1 danger:1 chemical:1 residue:1 supply:2 increase:1 also:1 although:1 bacterium:1 salmonella:3 eventually:1 could:1 eradicate:1 would:3 take:1 time:1 much:2 money:1 contain:1 grow:1 problem:1 extreme:1 case:3 cause:1 death:2 find:2 approximately:1 37:1 pct:3 broiler:1 12:1 raw:2 pork:1 three:1 five:1 beef:1 number:1 report:1 double:1 past:1 20:1 40:1 000:1 annually:1 certainly:1 really:1 effective:1 mean:1 turn:1 disease:1 around:1 rep:1 james:1 olin:1 va:1 national:2 research:1 council:1 recommend:1 1985:1 intensify:1 effort:1 develop:1 rapid:1 diagnostic:1 procedure:2 detect:1 microoganism:1 industry:1 control:1 cost:1 hopefully:1 overreact:1 instal:1 unnecessarily:1 complicated:1 may:1 become:1 obstacle:1 real:1 goal:1 provide:1 increasingly:1 safe:1 nutritious:1 economical:1 stanley:1 emerle:1 vice:1 association:1 purveyor:1 speak:1 behalf:1 new:1 allow:1 elimination:1 usda:1 function:1 certain:1 void:1 letter:1 spirit:1 must:1 repeal:1 see:1 rise:1 fraud:1 epidemic:1 illness:1 prevention:1 legal:1 recourse:1 chairman:1 charles:1 stenholm:1 tex:1 panel:1 hold:1 june:1 2:1
U.S. MEAT, POULTRY INSPECTION CALLED FAULTY The U.S. meat and poultry inspection programs are incapable of protecting consumers from contaminated products, groups representing inspectors and consumers charged. 'The whole trend of inspection for the last 10 years has been to corrupt and to degrade the system where today the public is at constant risk to contaminated and adulterated meat,' Kenneth Blaylock, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, told a House Agriculture subcommittee. 'The American consumer has little reason to feel confident about the safety of meat and poultry being offered to him today,' said Rodney Leonard, executive director of the Community Nutrition Institute. 'Company management is less concerned about the risk to health than about raising plant output and company profits,' Leonard told a hearing of the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy and Poultry. Kenneth Morrison, staff associate at the Government Accountability Project, said inspectors consistently disclose violations of federal law, demonstrating a 'serious breakdown in the entire inspection system.' Morrison told of chicken fat for flavoring being contaminated by 'intestines dragging in a water trough used to flush away the condemned product, fecal material, human spit, chewing gum and paper towels used by plant employees to blow their noses.' Donald Houston, administrator of the U.S. Agriculture Department's Food Safety and Inspection Service, FSIS, defended the government's program, calling it 'one of the most respected public health programs in the world.' FSIS inspects an estimated 127 mln head of cattle and 4.5 billion chicken and turkeys every year. Houston said inspection programs have kept pace with change, but conceded that the danger of chemical residues in the meat and poultry supply has increased. He also said that, although he was confident the bacterium salmonella eventually could be eradicated, it would take time and much money to contain the growing problem. Salmonella, which in extreme cases can cause death, is found in approximately 37 pct of U.S. broilers, 12 pct of raw pork and three to five pct of raw beef, Houston said. The number of reported cases has doubled over the past 20 years, he said, to 40,000 cases annually. 'We certainly really have not found an effective means of turning this disease around,' said Rep. James Olin (D-Va.) The National Research Council recommended in 1985 that FSIS intensify efforts to develop rapid diagnostic procedures for detecting microoganisms. But the meat and poultry industries have said such controls would cost too much. 'Hopefully we will not overreact by installing unnecessarily complicated procedures that may become obstacles to the real goal of providing an increasingly safer, more nutritious and economical meat supply for consumers,' Stanley Emerling, executive vice president of the National Association of Meat Purveyors, said. Blaylock, speaking on behalf of food inspectors, said a new program allowing elimination of USDA inspection functions at certain plants 'voids the law in letter and spirit, and must be repealed or we will see rising consumer fraud and an epidemic of death and illness for which there will be no prevention nor legal recourse.' Subcommittee Chairman Charles Stenholm (D-Tex.) said the panel would hold a hearing on salmonella June 2.
test/15255
test/15255 |@title chrysler:1 c:1 renault:1 delay:1 motors:1 amo:1 pact:1 |@word chrysler:10 corp:2 regie:1 natiionale:1 des:1 usines:1 renault:5 say:9 agree:1 extend:2 two:3 week:1 period:1 reach:3 definitive:2 agreement:7 propose:1 1:1 5:1 billion:1 dlr:1 takeover:1 american:2 motors:1 letter:5 intent:3 sign:1 march:2 nine:3 set:1 april:5 target:1 date:3 complete:2 negotiation:1 however:1 also:2 allow:1 room:1 extension:1 23:2 could:3 company:5 plan:1 work:2 give:1 complex:2 nature:1 deal:2 need:2 additional:1 time:2 expect:1 ask:1 event:1 prior:1 9:1 1987:1 discover:1 unforeseen:1 problem:2 course:1 due:1 diligence:1 investigation:1 refer:1 motor:1 spokeswoman:2 would:3 whether:1 crop:1 talk:3 stick:1 statement:1 definition:1 delay:2 previous:1 terminate:1 amendend:1 write:1 still:1 toward:1 another:1 official:1 part:1 tell:1 trouble:1 glitch:1 analyst:2 downplay:1 significance:1 visualize:1 want:1 donaldson:1 lufkin:1 jenrette:1 richard:1 henderson:1
CHRYSLER <C> RENAULT DELAY AM MOTORS <AMO> PACT Chrysler Corp and Regie Natiionale des Usines Renault said they agreed to extend by up to two weeks the period for reaching definitive agreement on Chrysler's proposed 1.5 billion dlr takeover of American Motors Corp. The letter of intent signed by Chrysler and Renault on March nine set April nine as the target date for completing negotiations. However, the letter also allowed room for an extension of that date to April 23 if an agreement could not be reached. The two companies said they 'now plan to complete work by April 23.' Chrysler and Renault said, 'Given the complex nature of the deal, the need for additional time was to be expected.' The March letter of intent between the two companies says that Chrysler could ask Renault to extend the agreement date 'in the event that prior to April 9, 1987, Chrysler discovers an unforeseen problem in the course of its 'due diligence' investigation of the company,' referring to American Motors. A Chrysler spokeswoman would not say whether some problem had cropped up in the talks. She stuck by the company's statement that more time was needed because the talks are complex. 'That is our definition of the delay,' she said. Under the previous agreement between Chrysler and Renault, their letter of intent would be terminated on April nine or when an agreement was reached. But the letter could be amendend by a written agreement by both companies. The Chrysler spokeswoman said, 'We are still working toward a definitive agreement.' Said another Chrysler official who is not part of the talks but who would be told if the deal were in trouble: 'There are no glitches.' Analysts also downplayed the significance of the delay. 'I can't visualize where they wouldn't want it to be done,' said Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette analyst Richard Henderson.
test/15258
test/15258 |@title rite:1 aid:1 corp:1 rad:1 sets:1 dividend:1 |@word qtly:1 div:1 16:2 1:2 2:2 ct:2 vs:1 pay:1 april:2 27:1 record:1 20:1
RITE AID CORP <RAD> SETS DIVIDEND Qtly div 16-1/2 cts vs 16-1/2 cts Pay April 27 Record April 20
test/15259
test/15259 |@title airsensors:1 inc:1 arsn:1 3rd:1 qtr:1 jan:1 31:1 loss:1 |@word shr:2 loss:8 five:1 ct:4 vs:6 six:1 net:2 696:1 777:1 598:1 095:1 sale:2 472:1 812:1 41:1 454:1 nine:1 mth:1 15:1 17:1 2:1 194:1 482:1 1:1 751:1 884:2 800:1 336:1 151:1
AIRSENSORS INC <ARSN> 3RD QTR JAN 31 LOSS Shr loss five cts vs loss six cts Net loss 696,777 vs loss 598,095 Sales 472,812 vs 41,454 Nine mths Shr loss 15 cts vs loss 17 cts Net loss 2,194,482 vs loss 1,751,884 Sales 800,336 vs 151,884
test/15262
test/15262 |@title canada:2 plan:2 monitor:2 steel:2 import:2 export:2 trade:2 minister:2 say:2 |@word
CANADA PLANS TO MONITOR STEEL IMPORTS, EXPORTS, TRADE MINISTER SAYS CANADA PLANS TO MONITOR STEEL IMPORTS, EXPORTS, TRADE MINISTER SAYS
test/15263
test/15263 |@title general:1 electric:1 ge:1 1st:1 qtr:1 help:1 rca:1 |@word general:5 electric:5 corp:2 say:4 first:6 quarter:9 result:4 significantly:1 high:3 due:1 strong:6 rca:4 acquire:1 last:3 year:9 also:2 attibute:1 continue:1 performance:1 plastics:1 major:1 appliance:1 employer:1 reinsurance:1 ge:3 record:1 net:1 earning:3 1987:3 624:1 mln:3 dlrs:5 1:2 37:1 dls:1 per:2 shr:1 16:1 pct:1 537:1 18:1 share:1 ago:3 chairman:1 john:1 welch:1 jr:1 reiterate:1 company:2 outlook:1 expect:1 double:1 digit:1 growth:1 line:1 expectation:1 cite:1 tv:1 network:1 station:1 operation:2 national:1 broadcasting:1 co:1 part:1 1986:2 one:2 reason:1 note:1 aircraft:1 engine:1 operating:2 profit:2 much:1 cause:1 increase:2 shipment:1 impact:1 strike:1 aerospace:2 revenue:3 sharply:1 mainly:2 inclusion:2 defense:1 business:1 addition:1 consumer:1 product:3 include:1 sale:1 video:1 restructuring:1 provision:1 308:1 taxis:2 implement:1 various:1 strategic:1 move:1 charge:1 add:1 time:1 gain:1 281:1 mlns:1 inventory:1 accounting:1 change:1 technical:1 ahead:1 lead:1 medical:1 system:1 volume:1 communication:1 relate:1 service:1
GENERAL ELECTRIC <GE> 1ST QTR HELPED BY RCA General Electric Corp said its first quarter results were significantly higher due to the strong results of RCA, which was acquired last year. General Electric also attibuted continued strong performances in plastics, major appliances and the Employers Reinsurance Corp for its strong quarter. GE recorded net earnings for the first quarter 1987 of 624 mln dlrs, or 1.37 dls per shr, up 16 pct from 537 mln dlrs, or 1.18 dlrs per share for the same quarter a year ago. General Electric chairman John Welch Jr reiterated the company's outlook for 1987 in which it expects double-digit GE earnings growth for the year. He said the first quarter results are in line with those expectations. General Electric cited the strong results in TV network and station operations of the National Broadcasting Co, which was not part of GE in the first quarter of 1986, as one reason for its strong earnings. It also noted that aircraft engine operating profit was much higher than a year ago, caused by a increase in shipments than the 1986 quarter, which was impacted by a strike. Aerospace revenues were sharply higher in this year's first quarter from a year ago, mainly because of the inclusion of RCA's aerospace and defense business, the company said. In addition, consumer products revenues were up from last year, mainly because of including sales of RCA video products. General Electric said restructuring provisions of 308 mln dlrs before taxes to implement various strategic moves were charged against operations in the first quarter of 1987. It added that there was a one-time gain of 281 mlns dlrs after taxes from an inventory accounting change. And technical products revenues and operating profit were ahead of last year, led by a strong increases in medical systems volume and the inclusion this year of RCA's communications and related services.
test/15264
test/15264 |@title teck:1 still:1 talk:1 b:1 c:1 copper:1 venture:1 |@word teck:5 corp:2 say:5 continue:1 talk:4 join:1 joint:2 copper:4 venture:3 highland:4 valley:4 british:1 columbia:1 hold:1 affiliates:1 cominco:8 ltd:3 clt:1 lornex:4 mining:1 know:1 negotiation:1 would:1 complete:1 vice:1 president:1 administration:1 john:1 guminski:1 reply:1 query:1 ongoing:1 long:1 time:1 decline:2 speculate:1 outcome:1 29:1 5:1 pct:7 consortium:2 lead:1 optimistic:2 soon:1 conclude:2 spokesman:1 townson:4 tell:1 reuters:1 think:1 partner:1 hopeful:1 situation:1 resolve:1 shortly:1 add:1 specify:1 may:1 end:1 22:2 agree:1 january:1 1986:2 form:1 merge:1 operation:2 share:3 equally:1 control:1 management:1 55:1 production:3 receive:1 45:1 six:1 month:1 follow:1 july:1 1:2 officially:1 start:1 total:1 ore:1 mill:1 6:1 mln:1 short:3 ton:3 grade:1 average:1 0:1 41:1 43:1 000:2 contain:1 concentrate:2 200:1 molybdenum:1 340:1 ounce:2 silver:1 800:1 gold:1 50:1 25:1 mim:1 canada:2 inc:1 metallgesellschaft:1 acquire:1 stake:1 last:1 year:1 canadian:1 pacific:1 cp:1
TECK STILL IN TALKS ON B.C. COPPER VENTURE <Teck Corp> said it was continuing talks about joining a joint copper venture at Highland Valley, British Columbia, held by affiliates Cominco Ltd <CLT> and <Lornex Mining Corp>, but did not know when negotiations would be completed. Teck vice-president of administration John Guminski said in reply to a query that the talks had been 'ongoing for a long time.' He declined to speculate on the outcome. Cominco, 29.5 pct owned by a consortium led by Teck, is optimistic that the talks will soon be concluded, spokesman Don Townson told Reuters. 'I think all partners are hopeful that the situation will be resolved,' Cominco's Townson said. 'We're optimistic that they will be concluded shortly,' he added. Townson declined to specify when the talks might end. Cominco and Teck's 22 pct-owned Lornex agreed in January 1986 to form the joint venture, merging their Highland Valley copper operations. Cominco and Lornex share equally in control and management of the Highland Valley operations, while Cominco has a 55 pct share of production and Lornex receives 45 pct. For the six months following July 1, 1986, when the venture officially started production, Highland Valley had total ore milled of 22.6 mln short tons, grading an average of 0.41 pct copper, Townson said. Cominco's share of production was 43,000 short tons of copper contained in concentrate, 1,200 short tons of Molybdenum in concentrate, 340,000 ounces of silver and 800 ounces of gold, he said. A consortium, 50 pct owned by Teck and 25 pct each by MIM (Canada) Inc and Metallgesellschaft Canada Ltd, acquired its Cominco stake last year from Canadian Pacific Ltd <CP>.
test/15265
test/15265 |@title banponce:1 corp:1 bdep:1 1st:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 1:2 08:1 dlrs:1 vs:2 00:1 dlr:1 net:1 6:1 215:1 538:1 5:1 757:1 013:1
BANPONCE CORP <BDEP> 1ST QTR NET Shr 1.08 dlrs vs 1.00 dlr Net 6,215,538 vs 5,757,013
test/15270
test/15270 |@title xebec:1 xebc:1 report:1 2nd:1 qtr:1 loss:1 |@word xebec:5 corp:2 say:5 expect:2 report:2 loss:3 second:2 quarter:3 end:2 april:1 three:1 due:1 principally:1 decline:1 sale:1 international:1 business:2 machines:1 ibm:5 company:4 large:1 customer:1 also:2 revenue:3 total:2 23:2 mln:3 dlrs:2 last:1 year:1 1:1 9:2 14:1 ct:1 per:1 share:1 historically:1 account:1 50:1 pct:2 fall:1 20:1 use:1 hard:1 disk:1 drive:1 controller:1 product:2 pc:1 xt:1 phase:1 intend:1 continue:1 streamline:1 operation:1 light:1 already:1 consolidate:1 two:1 plant:1 nevada:1 plan:1 sell:1 unused:1 surplus:1 asset:1 provide:1 additional:1 liquidity:1
XEBEC <XEBC> TO REPORT 2ND QTR LOSS Xebec Corp said it expects to report a loss for its second quarter ended April three, due principally to a decline in sales to International Business Machines Corp <IBM>, the company's largest customer. Xebec also said it expects revenues to total about 23 mln dlrs. The company reported a second quarter loss last year of 1.9 mln dlrs, or 14 cts per share, on 23.9 mln in revenues. Xebec said IBM has historically accounted for about 50 pct of the company's revenues, but that total fell to 20 pct during the quarter just ended. IBM had used Xebec's hard disk drive controller products in the IBM PC/XT, a product which IBM is phasing out. Xebec said it intends to continue streamlining its operations in light of the loss of business. The company also said it has already consolidated two of its plants in Nevada and it now plans to sell unused and surplus assets to provide additional liquidity.
test/15271
test/15271 |@title ccc:1 accept:1 export:1 bid:1 wheat:1 flour:1 iraq:1 |@word commodity:2 credit:1 corporation:1 accept:1 bid:1 export:2 bonus:2 cover:1 sale:1 12:1 500:2 tonne:3 wheat:3 flour:3 iraq:2 u:1 agriculture:1 department:2 say:3 award:1 113:1 0:1 dlrs:1 per:1 pay:1 peavey:1 company:1 form:1 ccc:1 stock:1 delivery:1 may:1 15:2 june:1 1987:2 additional:1 162:1 still:1 available:1 enhancement:1 program:1 initiative:1 announce:1 january:1 7:1 usda:1
CCC ACCEPTS EXPORT BID FOR WHEAT FLOUR TO IRAQ The Commodity Credit Corporation has accepted a bid for an export bonus to cover a sale of 12,500 tonnes of wheat flour to Iraq, the U.S. AGriculture Department said. The bonus awarded was 113.0 dlrs per tonne and will be paid to Peavey Company in the form of commodities from CCC stocks. The wheat flour is for delivery May 15-June 15, 1987, the department said. An additional 162,500 tonnes of wheat flour are still available to Iraq under the Export Enhancement Program initiative announced January 7, 1987, USDA said.
test/15273
test/15273 |@title egypt:1 authorize:1 buy:1 pl:1 480:1 wheat:1 usda:1 |@word egypt:1 authorize:1 purchase:1 200:1 000:1 tonne:1 u:3 wheat:2 exist:1 pl:1 480:1 agreement:1 agriculture:1 department:2 say:2 may:1 buy:1 value:1 22:1 0:1 mln:1 dlrs:1 april:1 15:1 august:1 31:1 1987:1 ship:1 port:1 september:1 30:1
EGYPT AUTHORIZED TO BUY PL-480 WHEAT - USDA Egypt has been authorized to purchase about 200,000 tonnes of U.S. wheat under an existing PL-480 agreement, the U.S. Agriculture Department said. It may buy the wheat, valued at 22.0 mln dlrs, between April 15 and August 31, 1987, and ship it from U.S. ports by September 30, the department said.
test/15274
test/15274 |@title caterpillar:1 cat:1 reaffirm:1 first:1 quarter:1 outlook:1 |@word caterpillar:3 inc:1 remark:2 deliver:1 annual:1 meeting:1 san:1 francisco:1 reiterate:1 expectation:1 loss:1 first:1 quarter:1 say:3 result:1 would:1 hurt:1 25:1 mln:1 dlr:1 one:1 time:1 charge:1 mitsubishi:1 50:1 pct:2 affiliate:1 company:1 expect:1 profit:1 operation:1 full:1 year:1 improve:1 1986:1 prepare:1 delivery:1 shareholder:1 president:1 peter:1 donis:1 target:1 five:1 cost:2 reduction:1 1987:1 difficult:1 achieve:1 weak:1 dollar:1 limit:1 opportunity:1 obtain:1 low:1 material:1
CATERPILLAR <CAT> REAFFIRMS FIRST QUARTER OUTLOOK Caterpillar Inc, in remarks delivered at its annual meeting in San Francisco, reiterated its expectation of a loss in the first quarter. It said results would be hurt by a 25 mln dlr one-time charge by Caterpillar Mitsubishi, a 50-pct owned affiliate. The company said it expected profit from operations for the full year to improve over 1986. In remarks prepared for delivery to shareholders, President Peter Donis said Caterpillar's targeted five pct cost reduction in 1987 'will be difficult to achieve because the weaker dollar has limited opportunities to obtain lower material costs.'
test/15276
test/15276 |@title broker:1 boost:1 zondervan:1 zond:1 stake:1 7:1 1:1 pct:1 |@word investor:2 group:4 head:2 minneapolis:1 minn:1 broker:1 jeffrey:1 wendel:3 say:2 raise:1 stake:1 zondervan:3 corp:1 292:1 900:2 share:4 7:1 1:1 pct:2 total:1 outstanding:1 238:1 5:1 8:1 filing:1 securities:1 exchange:1 commission:1 buy:1 54:1 000:1 common:1 march:1 24:1 april:1 3:1 price:1 range:1 27:1 87:1 29:1 96:1 dlrs:1 act:1 cooperation:1 another:1 shareholder:1 london:1 christopher:1 moran:1 seek:1 unsuccessfully:1 last:1 year:1 take:1
BROKER BOOSTS ZONDERVAN <ZOND> STAKE TO 7.1 PCT An investor group headed by Minneapolis, Minn., broker Jeffrey Wendel said it raised its stake in Zondervan Corp to 292,900 shares, or 7.1 pct of the total outstanding, from 238,900 shares, or 5.8 pct. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Wendel group said it bought 54,000 Zondervan common shares between March 24 and April 3 at prices ranging from 27.87 to 29.96 dlrs a share. The Wendel group has acted in cooperation with another shareholder group headed by London investor Christopher Moran, who sought unsuccessfully last year to take over Zondervan.
test/15278
test/15278 |@title kiena:1 two:1 one:1 share:1 split:1 approve:1 |@word kiena:2 gold:1 mines:1 ltd:1 say:2 shareholder:1 approve:1 previously:1 report:1 propose:1 two:1 one:1 common:1 stock:1 split:2 record:1 date:1 april:1 21:1
KIENA TWO-FOR-ONE SHARE SPLIT APPROVED <Kiena Gold Mines Ltd> said shareholders approved a previously reported proposed two-for-one common stock split. Record date of the split will be April 21, Kiena said.
test/15280
test/15280 |@title hanover:1 insurance:1 hin:1 raise:1 dividend:1 |@word hanover:1 insurance:1 co:1 say:1 board:1 declare:1 quarterly:1 dividend:3 nine:1 ct:2 per:2 share:2 payable:1 may:1 15:1 holder:1 record:1 april:2 17:1 come:1 two:1 one:1 stock:1 split:2 effective:1 10:1 approve:1 shareholder:1 today:1 company:1 pay:1 14:1 pre:1 basis:1
HANOVER INSURANCE <HINS> RAISES DIVIDEND Hanover Insurance Co said its board declared a quarterly dividend of nine cts per share payable May 15 to holders of record April 17. The dividend comes after a two-for-one stock split, effective April 10, which was approved by shareholders today. The company paid a dividend of 14 cts per share on a pre-split basis.
test/15281
test/15281 |@title day:2 int:1 l:1 sell:1 unit:1 |@word day:6 international:1 corp:1 say:4 enter:1 letter:1 intent:1 sell:1 allen:1 industries:1 inc:1 unit:2 group:2 include:1 current:2 management:1 sale:1 could:1 enable:1 accelerate:1 earning:3 fiscal:2 year:2 end:2 october:2 31:2 1987:1 net:1 full:1 ball:1 park:1 analyst:1 estimate:1 16:1 mln:3 dlrs:3 19:1 richard:1 jacob:1 chairman:1 chief:1 executive:1 officer:1 report:1 3:1 1:1 39:1 ct:1 share:1 1986:1 agreement:2 subject:1 preparation:1 negotiation:1 definitive:1 ability:1 obtain:1 financing:1
DAY INT'L <DAY> TO SELL UNIT Day International Corp said it has entered into a letter of intent to sell its Allen Industries Inc unit to a group including the unit's current management. Day said the sale could enable Day to accelerate its earnings for its current fiscal year ending October 31, 1987. 'Net earnings for the full year (ending October 31) should be in the ball park of some analysts' estimates of 16 mln dlrs to 19 mln dlrs,' Richard Jacob, Day chairman and chief executive officer said. Day reported earnings of 3.1 mln dlrs, or 39 cts a share, in fiscal 1986. Day said the agreement is subject to the preparation and negotiation of a definitive agreement and the ability of the group to obtain financing.
test/15283
test/15283 |@title rite:1 aid:1 corp:1 rad:1 set:1 quarterly:1 dividend:1 |@word qtly:1 div:1 16:2 5:2 ct:2 vs:1 pay:1 april:2 27:1 record:1 20:1
RITE AID CORP <RAD> SETS QUARTERLY DIVIDEND Qtly div 16.5 cts vs 16.5 cts Pay April 27 Record April 20
test/15287
test/15287 |@title south:1 korea:1 corn:1 import:1 may:1 increase:1 usda:1 |@word south:3 korea:2 purchase:1 2:1 4:3 mln:5 tonne:5 u:5 corn:4 past:1 six:1 month:1 close:1 double:1 last:1 year:1 total:5 indicate:1 import:4 united:2 states:2 well:1 set:1 dramatic:1 jump:1 agriculture:1 department:2 say:3 world:1 production:1 trade:1 report:1 1986:1 87:1 season:2 oct:1 sept:1 estimate:1 3:4 1985:1 86:1 1:1 6:1 ite:1 appear:1 koreans:1 shift:1 back:1 light:1 competitive:1 price:1 uncertain:1 supply:1 china:1 argentina:1 africa:1
SOUTH KOREA CORN IMPORTS MAY INCREASE - USDA South Korea's purchase of about 2.4 mln tonnes of U.S. corn in the past six months -- close to double last year's total -- indicates that imports from the United States, as well as total imports are set for a dramatic jump, the U.S. Agriculture Department said. In its World Production and Trade Report, the department said total South Korea corn imports for the 1986/87 season (Oct-Sept) are estimated at 4.3 mln tonnes, with about 3.4 mln tonnes from the United States. During the 1985/86 season, imports totaled only 1.3 mln tonnes of U.S. corn out of a total of 3.6 mln tonnes. Ite appears the Koreans are shifting back to U.S. corn in light of competitive U.S. prices and uncertain supplies from China, Argentina and South Africa, it said.
test/15290
test/15290 |@title mexican:1 cattle:1 import:1 brand:1 usda:1 |@word steer:3 import:2 united:3 states:3 mexico:1 must:1 brand:2 letter:1 right:1 jaw:1 u:2 agriculture:1 department:2 say:2 world:1 production:1 trade:1 report:1 branding:1 necessary:1 improve:1 surveillance:1 bovine:1 tuberculosis:1 provide:1 permanent:1 way:1 identify:1 mexican:3 requirement:1 expect:1 affect:1 number:1 apply:1 animal:1 arrive:1 port:1 entry:1 last:1 november:1 government:1 authorize:1 export:1 quota:1 nearly:1 1:2 mln:1 head:1 live:1 cattle:1 1986:1 87:1 season:1 aug:1 july:1 go:1
MEXICAN CATTLE IMPORTS TO BE BRANDED - USDA All steers imported into the United States from Mexico must now be branded with the letter M on the right jaw, the U.S. Agriculture Department said. In its World Production and Trade Report, the department said the branding is necessary to improve surveillance for bovine tuberculosis because it provides a permanent way to identify Mexican steers. The requirement is not expected to affect the number of Mexican steers imported into the United States and the brand will be applied before the animals arrive at U.S. ports of entry. Last November, the Mexican Government authorized an export quota of nearly 1.1 mln head of live cattle for the 1986/87 season (Aug-July), most of which goes to the United States.
test/15292
test/15292 |@title vulcan:1 vul:1 see:1 first:1 quarter:1 operate:1 loss:1 |@word vulcan:2 corp:1 first:2 quarter:2 operating:2 result:1 show:1 loss:2 chairman:1 lloyd:1 miller:3 tell:3 annual:1 meeting:1 company:1 report:1 profit:1 365:1 883:1 dlrs:1 23:1 ct:1 share:2 last:1 year:1 one:1 cent:1 come:1 non:1 factor:1 spokesman:1 say:2 attribute:1 expect:1 completion:1 purchase:1 transfer:1 consolidation:1 operate:1 asset:1 sullivan:1 rubber:1 division:1 prove:1 costly:1 take:2 time:1 originally:1 anticipate:1 work:1 resolve:1 problem:1 shareholder:1 add:1 appear:1 1987:1 find:1 solution:1
VULCAN <VUL> SEES FIRST QUARTER OPERATING LOSS Vulcan Corp's first quarter operating results will show a loss, Chairman Lloyd I. Miller told told the annual meeting. The company reported a profit of 365,883 dlrs, 23 cts a share, for the first quarter last year with one cent a share coming from non-operating factors, a spokesman said. Miller attributed the expected loss to completion of the purchase transfer and consolidation of operating assets of the O'Sullivan Rubber Division, saying this was proving more costly and taking more time than originally anticipated. Vulcan is working to resolve the problems, Miller told shareholders, adding it appears it will take most of 1987 to find solutions.
test/15294
test/15294 |@title ual:3 comment:1 stock:1 rise:1 |@word inc:1 cite:1 company:1 policy:1 tell:1 new:1 york:1 stock:3 exchange:1 would:1 comment:1 unusual:1 rise:2 ual:2 parent:1 united:2 airlines:1 close:1 6:2 1:1 4:2 72:1 volume:1 3:1 9:1 mln:1 share:1 wall:1 street:1 trader:1 say:1 soar:1 response:1 propose:1 billion:1 dlr:1 buyout:1 offer:1 air:2 pilots:1 union:1 general:1 fare:1 throughout:1 industry:1
UAL <UAL> HAS NO COMMENT ON STOCK RISE UAL Inc, citing company policy, told the New York Stock Exchange it would not comment on the unusual rise in its stock. UAL, parent of United Airlines, closed up 6-1/4 at 72 on volume of 3.9 mln shares. Wall Street traders said UAL's stock soared in response to the the proposed 4.6 billion dlr buyout offer by United Air's pilots union and on a general rise in air fares throughout the industry.
test/15295
test/15295 |@title strata:1 corp:1 stata:1 year:1 dec:1 31:1 loss:1 |@word shr:1 loss:4 1:4 11:1 dlrs:2 vs:3 53:1 net:1 7:1 mln:4 8:2 revs:1 3:1 eight:1
STRATA CORP <STATA> YEAR DEC 31 LOSS Shr loss 1.11 dlrs vs loss 1.53 dlrs Net loss 7.1 mln vs loss 8.8 mln Revs 3.1 mln vs eight mln
test/15296
test/15296 |@title strata:1 stata:1 1986:1 earning:1 report:1 qualify:1 |@word strata:2 corp:1 say:2 1986:3 earning:1 report:1 contain:1 qualified:1 opinion:1 independent:1 auditor:1 owe:1 1:2 4:1 mln:4 dlrs:3 overdue:1 interest:1 lender:1 end:1 entire:1 10:1 9:1 dlr:1 principle:1 classify:1 liability:1 company:1 agreement:1 merge:1 lomak:1 petroleum:1 inc:1 lose:1 7:1 loss:1 8:2 year:1 earlier:1
STRATA <STATA> 1986 EARNINGS REPORT QUALIFIED Strata Corp said its 1986 earnings report contained a qualified opinion from its independent auditors. Strata said it owed 1.4 mln dlrs in overdue interest to its lender at the end of 1986, and the entire 10.9 mln dlr principle has been classified as a liability. The company, which has an agreement to merge with <Lomak Petroleum Inc>, lost 7.1 mln dlrs in 1986 against a loss of 8.8 mln dlrs a year earlier.
test/15299
test/15299 |@title dayton:1 hudson:1 corp:1 dh:1 vote:1 quarterly:1 payout:1 |@word qtly:1 div:1 23:2 ct:2 vs:1 prior:1 qtr:1 pay:1 10:1 june:1 record:1 20:1 may:1
DAYTON HUDSON CORP <DH> VOTES QUARTERLY PAYOUT Qtly div 23 cts vs 23 cts prior qtr Pay 10 June Record 20 May
test/15300
test/15300 |@title vulcan:1 corp:1 vul:1 regular:1 dividend:1 |@word qtly:1 div:1 20:2 ct:2 vs:1 prior:1 qtr:1 payable:1 june:1 10:1 record:1 may:1 22:1
VULCAN CORP <VUL> REGULAR DIVIDEND Qtly div 20 cts vs 20 cts in prior qtr Payable June 10 Record May 22
test/15302
test/15302 |@title nat:2 l:2 distillers:2 say:2 agree:2 sell:2 spirit:2 unit:2 545:2 mln:2 dlrs:2 american:2 brands:2 |@word
NAT'L DISTILLERS SAYS IT AGREES TO SELL SPIRITS UNIT FOR 545 MLN DLRS TO AMERICAN BRANDS NAT'L DISTILLERS SAYS IT AGREES TO SELL SPIRITS UNIT FOR 545 MLN DLRS TO AMERICAN BRANDS
test/15303
test/15303 |@title usda:1 seek:1 comment:1 grain:1 discount:1 schedule:1 |@word u:1 agriculture:1 department:2 seek:1 public:1 comment:2 question:1 adjust:2 commodity:1 credit:1 corporation:1 ccc:3 discount:4 premium:4 schedule:3 improve:1 quality:3 grain:3 accept:2 loan:1 collateral:1 price:1 support:1 program:1 base:1 factor:1 moisture:1 content:1 kernel:1 damage:1 stipulate:1 use:1 value:1 purchase:1 year:1 say:1 possible:1 producer:1 could:1 encourage:1 delivery:1 high:1 due:1 april:1 24:1 report:1 congress:1 require:1 law:1 may:1 10:1
USDA SEEKS COMMENTS ON GRAIN DISCOUNT SCHEDULE The U.S. Agriculture Department is seeking public comments on the question of adjusting the Commodity Credit Corporation's (CCC) discount and premium schedules to improve the quality of grain it accepts as loan collateral or under price support programs. The premiums and discounts schedule are based on quality factors such as moisture content and kernel damage. The schedule stipulates the premiums and discounts used for valuing grain the CCC accepts or purchases during the year. The department said it is possible that producers could be encouraged to delivery higher quality grain to CCC by adjusting the premiums and discounts. Comments are due by April 24 and a report to Congress is required by law by May 10.
test/15306
test/15306 |@title cascade:1 importer:1 unit:1 acquire:1 paris:1 company:1 |@word cascade:5 importers:1 inc:1 usa:1 international:1 europa:1 gmbh:1 west:1 germany:1 say:5 tentatively:1 acquire:1 worldwide:2 right:3 product:3 madam:1 gre:2 bernard:1 tapie:1 group:2 paris:1 agreement:2 call:1 manufacturing:1 trading:1 perfume:1 skin:1 care:1 treatment:1 cosmetic:2 also:1 include:2 exclusive:1 trade:1 duty:1 free:1 channel:1 designer:1 accessory:1 addition:1 grant:1 option:1 purchase:1 asset:1 plant:1 equipment:1 locate:1 france:1 company:1 line:1 u:1 market:1 alone:1 could:1 represent:1 20:1 mln:1 dlrs:1 revenue:1
CASCADE IMPORTERS UNIT ACQUIRES PARIS COMPANY <Cascade Importers Inc USA>'s Cascade International Europa GmbH of West Germany, said it tentatively acquired worldwide rights for the products of Madam Gre from the Bernard Tapie Group in Paris. The agreement calls for Cascade to have the rights for the manufacturing and trading of perfumes, skin care and treatment products, and cosmetics of the group, it said. Cascade said the agreement also includes the exclusive rights to trade through duty-free channels worldwide the designer Gres accessories. In addition, Cascade said it was granted an option to purchase all the assets including the plant and equipment located in France. The company said the cosmetic product line in the U.S. market alone could represent 20 mln dlrs in revenue.
test/15307
test/15307 |@title armel:1 inc:1 aml:1 4th:1 qtr:1 loss:1 |@word oper:4 shr:2 loss:8 79:1 ct:4 vs:6 2:4 32:1 dlrs:2 net:2 536:1 896:2 6:2 562:1 472:2 revs:2 13:1 8:1 mln:4 14:1 5:2 year:2 59:1 35:1 1:1 712:1 747:1 43:1 44:1 note:1 1986:1 exclude:1 charge:1 12:1 per:2 share:2 fourth:1 quarter:1 gain:1 11:1
ARMEL INC <AML> 4TH QTR LOSS Oper shr loss 79 cts vs loss 2.32 dlrs Oper net loss 2,536,896 vs loss 6,562,472 Revs 13.8 mln vs 14.5 mln Year Oper shr loss 59 cts vs loss 2.35 dlrs Oper net loss 1,712,896 vs loss 5,747,472 Revs 43.6 mln vs 44.2 mln NOTE: 1986 excludes charge of 12 cts per share in the fourth quarter and gain of 11 cts per share in the year.
test/15308
test/15308 |@title national:1 distillers:1 dr:1 sell:1 spirit:1 unit:1 |@word national:6 distillers:2 chemical:2 corp:1 say:8 sign:1 definitive:1 agreement:1 sell:3 spirit:5 division:2 545:2 mln:4 dlrs:4 james:1 beam:1 distilling:1 co:1 unit:1 american:3 brands:2 inc:2 amb:1 sale:6 make:1 company:3 previously:1 announce:1 plan:1 wine:2 business:4 last:1 month:1 128:1 heublein:1 part:1 grand:1 metropolitan:1 plc:1 purchase:1 price:1 pay:1 cash:1 distiller:1 spokeswoman:1 permit:1 focus:1 core:1 propane:1 marketing:1 proceed:1 use:1 repay:1 debt:1 corporate:1 purpose:1 separate:1 statement:1 brand:2 would:2 plus:1 assumption:1 liability:1 subject:1 compliance:1 hart:1 scott:1 rodino:1 antitrust:1 improvements:1 act:1 regulatory:1 approval:1 distil:1 580:1 include:1 gilbey:1 gin:1 vodka:1 dekuyper:1 liqueur:1 windsor:1 supreme:1 canadian:1 whisky:1
NATIONAL DISTILLERS <DR> TO SELL SPIRITS UNIT National Distillers and Chemical Corp said it signed a definitive agreement to sell its spirits division for 545 mln dlrs to James Beam Distilling Co, a unit of American Brands Inc <AMB>. The sale of the spirits division was made under the company's previously announced plan to sell its spirits and wines businesses, it said. The wine business was sold last month for 128 mln dlrs to Heublein Inc, part of Grand Metropolitan PLC, National Distillers said. The purchase price will be paid in cash, a National Distillers spokeswoman said. The sale permits National to focus on its core businesses, chemicals and propane marketing. Proceeds from the sale will be used to repay debt and for other corporate purposes, the company said. In a separate statement, American Brands said the sale would be for 545 mln dlrs plus the assumption of liabilities. The sale would be subject to compliance with the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act and other regulatory approvals, the company said. National's distilled spirits business has sales of about 580 mln dlrs, American Brands said. National's spirits brands include Gilbey's gin and vodka, DeKuyper Liqueurs and Windsor Supreme Canadian Whisky.
test/15309
test/15309 |@title management:1 science:1 msai:1 loss:1 may:1 top:1 20:1 ct:1 |@word management:1 science:1 america:1 inc:2 clarify:1 statement:1 make:1 earlier:2 today:2 say:1 loss:2 first:2 quarter:2 could:1 exceed:1 20:2 ct:2 share:2 non:1 recurring:1 expense:1 associate:1 acquisition:1 several:1 company:2 include:1 comserv:1 tell:1 meeting:1 investor:1 would:1
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE <MSAI> LOSS MAY TOP 20 CTS Management Science America Inc, clarifying statements made earlier today, said its loss for the first quarter could exceed 20 cts a share because of non-recurring expenses associated with the acquisition of several companies, including Comserv Inc. Earlier today, the company told a meeting of investors here that the first quarter loss would be 20 cts a share.
test/15310
test/15310 |@title wojnilower:1 see:1 drop:1 u:1 interest:1 rate:1 |@word federal:2 reserve:2 promote:1 low:1 interest:2 rate:4 year:3 sustain:1 world:1 economic:4 growth:5 first:2 boston:1 corp:1 manage:1 director:1 albert:1 wojnilower:4 say:6 much:1 fed:1 would:1 like:1 take:1 tough:1 line:1 inflation:1 act:1 slow:1 credit:1 without:1 subvert:1 national:2 u:2 policy:1 select:1 occasion:1 dollar:1 seem:2 steady:1 trade:1 deficit:1 respond:1 united:1 states:1 decide:1 push:1 germany:1 japan:1 harder:1 meet:1 commitment:1 part:1 move:1 report:1 justifiably:1 anticipate:1 either:1 recession:1 seriously:1 high:1 security:1 market:1 participant:1 see:1 little:1 fear:1 last:1 week:1 hiccup:1 money:1 currency:1 bond:1 stock:1 price:1 probably:2 cause:1 japanese:1 window:1 dressing:1 march:1 31:1 end:1 fiscal:1 account:1 enjoy:1 average:1 quarter:1 however:1 pick:1 reflect:1 unsustainable:1 pace:1 inventory:1 building:1 prospect:1 full:1 still:1 real:1 gross:1 product:1 2:2 1:1 pct:1
WOJNILOWER SEES DROP IN U.S. INTEREST RATES The Federal Reserve will promote lower interest rates this year to sustain world economic growth, First Boston Corp managing director Albert Wojnilower said. As much as the Fed would like to take a tough line against inflation, it cannot act to slow the growth of credit without subverting national U.S. economic policy. 'On selected occasions when the dollar seems steady, and, because the trade deficit is not responding, the United States decided to push Germany and Japan harder to meet their commitments to economic growth, the Federal Reserve will do its part by moving rates down,' Wojnilower said in a report. 'Justifiably not anticipating either a recession or seriously higher interest rates, securities market participants have seen little to fear,' Wojnilower said. He said last week's 'hiccup' in money and currency rates and bond and stock prices was probably caused by Japanese window dressing for March 31 end-of-fiscal-year accounts. Wojnilower said the U.S. probably enjoyed above-average economic growth in the first quarter. However, the pick-up seems to reflect an unsustainable pace of inventory building and the prospect for the full year is still for real gross national product growth of about 2-1/2 pct, he said.
test/15311
test/15311 |@title raytech:1 ray:1 buy:1 west:1 german:1 company:1 |@word raytech:1 corp:1 say:1 acquire:1 raybestos:2 industrie:1 produkte:1 gmbh:1 7:1 5:1 mln:1 dlrs:1 manufacture:1 facility:1 radevormwald:1 west:1 germany:1 produce:1 friction:1 material:1 use:1 clutch:1 brake:1 application:1
RAYTECH <RAY> BUYS WEST GERMAN COMPANY Raytech Corp said it acquired <Raybestos Industrie-Produkte GmBH> for 7.5 mln dlrs. Raybestos, with manufacturing facilities in Radevormwald, West Germany, produces friction materials for use in clutch and braking applications.
test/15312
test/15312 |@title intercare:1 care:1 post:1 4th:1 qtr:1 loss:1 |@word intercare:3 inc:2 say:4 expect:1 report:1 substantial:1 loss:1 fourth:1 quarter:1 end:1 january:1 31:1 writeoff:1 expense:2 associate:2 recently:1 terminate:1 debt:1 equity:1 offer:1 company:2 also:3 write:1 include:1 acquisition:1 u:1 medical:2 enterprises:1 restructuring:1 certain:1 partnership:1 increase:1 reserve:1 account:1 receivable:1 executive:1 immediately:1 available:1 provide:1 additional:2 detail:1 implement:1 workforce:1 reduction:1 close:1 two:1 center:1 consider:1 closing:1 means:1 reduce:1 working:1 capital:1 deficit:1
INTERCARE <CARE> TO POST 4TH QTR LOSS Intercare Inc said it expects to report a substantial loss for its fourth quarter ended January 31 because of a writeoff of expenses associated with its recently terminated debt and equity offering. The company also said the write off includes expenses associated with the acquisition of U.S. Medical Enterprises Inc, and with the restructuring of certain partnerships. Intercare also said it increased its reserve against accounts receivable. Executives at the company were not immediately available to provide additional details. Intercare also said it has implemented a workforce reduction, closed two medical centers and is considering additional closings as a means of reducing a working capital deficit.
test/15313
test/15313 |@title canada:1 monitor:1 steel:1 import:1 export:1 |@word canada:3 plan:1 monitor:1 steel:7 shipment:3 flow:1 country:3 attempt:1 appease:1 concern:1 u:8 high:1 level:2 canadian:5 export:3 trade:2 minister:1 pat:1 carney:4 say:4 help:1 maintain:1 open:1 access:1 market:5 government:1 take:1 action:1 ensure:1 accurate:1 datum:1 import:3 use:1 backdoor:1 offshore:1 supplier:1 also:1 company:1 ask:1 exercise:1 prudence:1 consider:1 establish:1 joint:1 commission:1 study:1 grow:2 problem:1 tell:1 house:1 common:1 soon:1 announce:1 amendment:1 permit:1 act:1 set:1 monitoring:1 program:1 rise:2 5:1 7:1 pct:2 cent:1 recent:1 month:1 almost:1 double:1 two:1 year:1 ago:1 official:1 increase:1 come:1 time:1 anger:1 several:1 face:1 decline:1 domestic:1 industry:1 lawmaker:1 propose:1 share:1 american:1 limit:1 2:1 4:1
CANADA TO MONITOR STEEL IMPORTS, EXPORTS Canada plans to monitor steel shipments flowing in and out of the country in an attempt to appease concerns in the U.S. over the high level of Canadian steel exports, Trade Minister Pat Carney said. 'To help maintain our open access to the U.S. steel market, the government is taking further action to ensure we have more accurate data on exports and imports and that Canada is not used as a backdoor to the U.S. market by offshore suppliers,' Carney said. Carney also said Canadian companies were being asked to exercise prudence in the U.S. market and both countries were considering establishing a joint commission to study the growing steel problem. Carney told the House of Commons she will soon announce an amendment to the Exports and Imports Permits Act to set up the monitoring program. Canadian steel shipments to the U.S. have risen to 5.7 pct cent of the U.S. market in recent months, almost double the level just two years ago, Canadian trade officials said. The increase in Canadian shipments comes at a time of growing anger in the U.S. over rising steel imports from several countries in the face of a decline in the domestic steel industry. Some U.S. lawmakers have proposed Canada's share of the American market be limited to 2.4 pct.
test/15314
test/15314 |@title united:1 tech:1 utx:1 see:1 earning:1 impact:1 |@word united:4 technologies:3 corp:2 say:2 decision:2 international:2 consortium:1 develop:1 new:1 engine:2 would:1 impact:2 1987:3 1988:2 earning:3 aero:2 engines:2 iae:4 30:1 pct:1 pratt:1 whitney:1 division:1 decide:1 launch:2 superfan:2 version:1 v2500:1 tell:2 analyst:2 full:1 development:1 program:1 certification:1 1991:1 short:2 term:2 spokesman:2 reuters:1 refer:1 decline:1 elaborate:1 owner:1 rolls:1 royce:1 plc:1 japanese:1 fiat:1 spa:1 mtu:1 west:1 germany:1 estimate:1 technology:1 earn:1 3:1 75:1 dlrs:2 4:1 50:1 share:2 report:1 36:1 ct:1 1986:1 include:1 two:1 large:1 writeoff:1
UNITED TECH <UTX> SEES NO EARNINGS IMPACT United Technologies Corp said the decision by an international consortium not to develop a new engine would have no impact on 1987 or 1988 earnings. <International Aero Engines>, IAE, 30 pct owned by United Technologies' Pratt and Whitney division, has decided not to launch a superfan version of its V2500 engine. 'We've told analysts that IAE's decision not to launch a full development program of the IAE superfan for certification in 1991 will have no short term impact on earnings,' a United Technologies spokesman told Reuters. Short term refers to 1987 and 1988, the spokesman said. He declined to elaborate. IAE's other owners are Rolls Royce PLC, <Japanese Aero Engines Corp>, Fiat SPA and <MTU> of West Germany. Analysts are estimating United Technologies will earn 3.75 dlrs to 4.50 dlrs a share in 1987. It reported earnings of 36 cts a share in 1986, which included two large writeoffs.
test/15315
test/15315 |@title stewart:1 stevenson:1 ssss:1 4th:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:2 profit:5 72:2 ct:2 vs:6 14:1 net:2 3:1 309:1 000:3 609:1 revs:2 mln:5 65:1 year:1 nil:1 loss:2 4:1 13:1 dlrs:1 1:1 19:1 249:1 269:1 note:1 full:1 name:1 stewart:1 stevenson:1 services:1 inc:1
STEWART AND STEVENSON <SSSS> 4TH QTR NET Shr profit 72 cts vs profit 14 cts Net profit 3,309,000 vs profit 609,000 Revs 72 mln vs 65 mln Year Shr nil vs loss 4.13 dlrs Net profit 1,000 vs loss 19 mln Revs 249 mln vs 269 mln NOTE: Full name Stewart and Stevenson Services Inc.
test/15321
test/15321 |@title westamerica:1 bancorp:1 wab:1 1st:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 98:1 ct:2 vs:5 63:1 net:1 2:1 602:1 000:2 1:5 571:1 loan:1 834:1 8:1 mln:3 729:1 0:1 deposit:1 04:1 billion:3 942:1 asset:1 15:1 02:1
WESTAMERICA BANCORP <WAB> 1ST QTR NET Shr 98 cts vs 63 cts Net 2,602,000 vs 1,571,000 Loans 834.8 mln vs 729.0 mln Deposits 1.04 billion vs 942.1 mln Assets 1.15 billion vs 1.02 billion
test/15322
test/15322 |@title u:1 senate:1 lift:1 ban:1 natural:1 gas:1 |@word senate:2 unanimously:1 approve:1 legislation:2 lift:1 ban:1 new:3 construction:1 natural:4 gas:7 fire:1 power:1 plant:2 large:1 industrial:2 burn:2 bill:2 sponsor:1 energy:1 committee:1 chairman:1 bennett:1 johnston:2 also:1 repeal:1 mandatory:1 incremental:1 pricing:1 design:2 protect:1 residential:1 consumer:1 major:1 price:4 increase:1 force:1 user:1 pay:1 high:2 market:2 open:1 lousiana:1 democrat:1 say:2 restriction:1 enact:1 1978:1 response:1 shortage:1 prediction:1 oil:1 severely:1 depressed:1 compromise:1 coal:2 producer:1 require:1 baseload:1 electric:1 powerplant:1 accomodate:1 modification:1 necessary:1 another:1 alternate:1 fuel:1
U.S.SENATE LIFTS SOME BANS ON NATURAL GAS The Senate unanimously approved legislation to lift a ban on new construction of natural gas-fired power plants and other large industrial gas-burning plants. The bill, sponsored by Senate Energy Committee chairman Bennett Johnston, also repeals mandatory incremental pricing of natural gas which was designed to protect residential consumers from major price increases by forcing some industrial users to pay higher than market prices. 'This legislation will open up new natural gas markets,' the Lousiana Democrat said. The gas restrictions were enacted in 1978 in response to a shortage of natural gas and predictions of higher prices. 'Now both oil and gas prices are severely depressed,' Johnston said. In a compromise with coal producers, the bill requires new baseload electric powerplants be designed to accomodate modifications necessary to burning coal or another alternate fuel.
test/15324
test/15324 |@title southeast:1 bancorp:1 stb:1 act:1 brazilian:1 debt:1 |@word follow:1 lead:1 major:1 bank:1 southeast:1 banking:1 corp:2 tell:1 securities:1 exchange:1 commission:1 would:3 place:1 54:1 2:2 mln:2 dlrs:3 medium:1 long:1 term:1 brazilian:2 debt:2 non:1 accrual:1 cash:1 status:1 base:1 current:1 interest:1 rate:1 estimate:1 filing:1 move:1 reduce:1 net:1 income:1 800:1 000:2 first:1 quarter:1 3:1 1987:1 company:1 also:2 say:2 believe:1 situation:1 material:1 adverse:1 effect:1 issue:1 1:1 080:1 common:1 share:1 connection:1 acquisition:1 popular:1 bancshares:1
SOUTHEAST BANCORP <STB> ACTS ON BRAZILIAN DEBT Following the lead of other major banks, Southeast Banking Corp told the Securities and Exchange Commission it would place 54.2 mln dlrs of medium- and long-term Brazilian debt on non-accrual or cash status. Based on current interest rates, it estimated in a filing that the move will reduce net income by about 800,000 dlrs in the first quarter and 3.2 mln dlrs for all of 1987. The company also said it did not believe the Brazilian debt situation would have a 'material adverse' effect on it. It also said it would issue 1,080,000 common shares in connection with its acquisition of Popular Bancshares Corp.
test/15325
test/15325 |@title williams:1 wmb:1 see:1 flat:1 pipeline:1 volume:1 1987:1 |@word williams:9 cos:1 say:7 expect:3 oil:1 fertilizer:1 transportation:1 volume:1 flat:1 1987:3 operate:1 profit:2 pipeline:5 unit:4 improve:1 49:1 4:1 mln:7 dlrs:9 earn:2 last:3 year:5 seven:1 dlr:1 special:1 charge:2 incur:1 co:4 take:2 earning:2 1986:2 removal:1 500:1 mile:2 old:1 service:1 casualty:1 loss:2 companywide:1 net:1 134:1 total:2 revenue:1 1:1 85:1 billion:4 decline:3 32:1 sale:4 2:4 46:1 1985:1 annual:2 report:2 northwest:1 corp:1 natural:4 gas:6 cost:1 among:1 low:2 nation:1 average:1 04:1 07:1 per:1 mcf:1 respectively:1 reserve:1 10:1 010:1 cubic:2 foot:2 11:1 334:1 previous:1 company:2 less:1 pay:1 exposure:1 major:1 show:1 improvement:1 operating:2 result:1 change:1 tariff:1 federal:1 tax:1 rate:1 marketing:2 business:2 somewhat:1 competition:1 region:1 26:1 0:1 285:1 6:1 also:1 substantial:1 debt:1 equity:1 ratio:1 250:1 receive:1 cash:1 agrico:1 chemical:1 proceed:1 leaseback:1 telecommunications:2 000:1 fiber:1 optic:1 system:1 long:1 distance:1 use:1 profitable:1 late:1 1988:1
WILLIAMS <WMB> SEES FLAT PIPELINE VOLUMES IN 1987 Williams Cos said it expected oil and fertilizer transportation volumes to be flat in 1987 but said operating profits from the pipeline unit should improve from 49.4 mln dlrs earned last year when a seven mln dlr special charge was incurred. Williams Pipeline Co took the charge against earnings in 1986 for the removal of more than 500 miles of old pipeline from service and for casualty losses. Companywide, Williams had a net loss of 134 mln dlrs on total revenues of 1.85 billion dlrs, a decline from profits of 32 mln dlrs on sales of 2.46 billion in 1985. In its annual report, Williams said its Northwest Pipeline Corp and Williams Natural Gas Co had natural gas costs that are among the lowest in the nation, averaging 2.04 dlrs and 2.07 dlrs per mcf, respectively, last year. Total natural gas reserves for both units declined to 10,010 billion cubic feet in 1986 from 11,334 billion cubic feet the previous year. The company said its Williams Natural Gas unit, which has less take-or-pay exposure than most major pipelines, should show improvement in its 1987 operating results because of changes tariff and federal tax rates. The company's gas marketing business is expected to have somewhat lower earnings in 1987 because of competition in its operating region, the annual report said. The gas marketing unit earned 26.0 mln dlrs on sales of 285.6 mln dlrs last year. Williams also said it expected a substantial decline in its debt to equity ratio this year because of more than 250 mln dlrs received in cash from the sale of Agrico Chemical Co and proceeds from the sale and leaseback of Williams Telecommunications Co. The telecommunications business, a 2,000-mile fiber optic system for long distance use, will not be profitable until late 1988, Williams said.
test/15326
test/15326 |@title super:1 valu:1 stores:1 inc:1 svu:1 4th:1 qtr:1 feb:1 28:1 net:1 |@word shr:2 38:1 ct:2 vs:8 25:1 net:3 28:1 339:1 000:10 18:1 650:1 sale:2 2:1 27:1 billion:4 1:3 97:1 avg:2 shrs:2 74:4 485:1 270:1 year:2 20:1 dlrs:4 23:1 89:1 301:1 91:2 247:1 9:1 07:1 7:1 387:1 184:1 note:1 1986:3 period:1 end:1 february:1 22:1 earning:1 include:1 loss:1 unconsolidated:1 subsidiary:1 162:1 quarter:1 702:1
SUPER VALU STORES INC <SVU> 4TH QTR FEB 28 NET Shr 38 cts vs 25 cts Net 28,339,000 vs 18,650,000 Sales 2.27 billion vs 1.97 billion Avg shrs 74,485,000 vs 74,270,000 Year Shr 1.20 dlrs vs 1.23 dlrs Net 89,301,000 vs 91,247,000 Sales 9.07 billion vs 7.91 billion Avg shrs 74,387,000 vs 74,184,000 NOTE: 1986 period ended February 22, 1986 1986 earnings include net loss of unconsolidated subsidiary of 162,000 dlrs in the quarter and 702,000 dlrs for the year
test/15327
test/15327 |@title parker:1 drilling:1 co:1 pkd:1 2nd:1 qtr:1 feb:1 28:1 loss:1 |@word shr:2 loss:8 70:1 ct:2 vs:6 57:1 net:2 20:1 616:1 000:4 16:1 854:1 revs:2 23:1 1:4 mln:4 60:1 six:1 mth:1 38:1 dlrs:2 02:1 40:1 780:1 29:1 996:1 61:1 0:1 114:1 9:1
PARKER DRILLING CO <PKD> 2ND QTR FEB 28 LOSS Shr loss 70 cts vs loss 57 cts Net loss 20,616,000 vs loss 16,854,000 Revs 23.1 mln vs 60.1 mln Six mths Shr loss 1.38 dlrs vs loss 1.02 dlrs Net loss 40,780,000 vs loss 29,996,000 Revs 61.0 mln vs 114.9 mln
test/15329
test/15329 |@title coffee:1 could:1 drop:1 70:1 80:1 ct:1 cardenas:1 say:1 |@word international:1 coffee:2 price:1 could:1 drop:1 70:1 80:1 cent:2 lb:2 next:1 october:1 agreement:1 reach:1 support:1 market:2 jorge:1 cardenas:1 manager:1 colombia:1 national:1 growers:1 federation:1 say:2 speak:1 forum:1 industrialist:1 one:1 reason:1 already:1 saturate:1 producer:1 excess:1 production:1 stockpile:1 39:1 mln:1 60:1 kg:1 bag:1 1987:1 today:1 may:1 future:1 new:1 york:1 settle:1 107:1 90:1
COFFEE COULD DROP TO 70/80 CTS, CARDENAS SAYS International coffee prices could drop to between 70 and 80 cents a lb by next October if no agreement is reached to support the market, Jorge Cardenas, manager of Colombia's National Coffee Growers' Federation said. Speaking at a forum for industrialists, he said one of the reasons was that the market was already saturated and that producers will have excess production and stockpiles of 39 mln (60-kg) bags in 1987. Today, May futures in New York settled at 107.90 cents a lb.
test/15335
test/15335 |@title hbo:2 hboc:1 urge:1 shareholder:1 andover:1 |@word co:1 say:3 send:2 letter:1 strongly:1 urge:1 shareholder:1 sign:1 proxy:2 card:1 andover:3 group:2 march:1 30:2 two:1 man:1 general:1 partnership:1 seven:1 pct:1 hbo:3 stock:1 file:1 preliminary:1 material:1 securities:1 exchange:1 commission:1 seek:1 nominate:1 alternative:1 slate:1 director:1 company:4 april:1 annual:1 meeting:1 express:1 interest:1 acquire:1 september:1 1986:3 never:1 receive:1 offer:1 addition:1 financial:1 condition:1 improve:1 rapidly:1 result:1 significant:2 restructuring:1 implement:1 expect:1 report:2 net:1 income:1 40:1 ct:2 per:2 share:2 1987:1 increase:1 1988:1 year:1 end:1 december:1 loss:1 3:1 6:1 mln:1 dlrs:1 16:1
HBO <HBOC> URGES SHAREHOLDERS AGAINST ANDOVER HBO and Co said it sent a letter of strongly urging shareholders not to sign any proxy cards sent by Andover Group. ON March 30, Andover Group, a two-man general partnership which owns about seven pct of HBO's stock, filed preliminary proxy materials with the Securities and Exchange Commission seeking to nominate an alternative slate of directors at the company's April 30 annual meeting. Andover had expressed an interest to acquire the company in September 1986 but HBO has never received an offer from them, it said. In addition, HBO said its financial condition is improving rapidly as the result of a significant restructuring implemented in 1986. It expects the company to report net income of about 40 cts per share in 1987 and a very significant increase in 1988. For the year ended December 1986, the company reported a loss of 3.6 mln dlrs, or 16 cts per share.
test/15336
test/15336 |@title cfcf:1 inc:1 six:1 mth:1 feb:1 28:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 51:1 ct:2 vs:3 56:1 net:1 5:1 645:1 000:2 6:1 153:1 revs:1 45:2 9:1 mln:2 3:1
(CFCF INC) SIX MTHS FEB 28 NET Shr 51 cts vs 56 cts Net 5,645,000 vs 6,153,000 Revs 45.9 mln vs 45.3 mln
test/15337
test/15337 |@title uap:2 make:1 acquisition:1 |@word inc:1 say:2 acquire:1 slater:1 auto:1 electric:1 ltd:2 two:1 ontario:1 store:1 united:1 diesel:1 engine:1 parts:1 dartmouth:1 nova:1 scotia:1 undisclosed:1 term:1 transaction:1 together:1 acquisition:1 earlier:1 year:1 increase:1 annual:1 sale:1 4:1 5:1 mln:1 dlrs:1
UAP MAKES ACQUISITIONS <UAP Inc> said it has acquired Slater Auto Electric Ltd, with two Ontario stores, and United Diesel Engine Parts Ltd, of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, for undisclosed terms. It said the transactions, together with acquisitions earlier this year, will increase its annual sales by about 4.5 mln dlrs.
test/15339
test/15339 |@title eia:2 say:2 distillate:2 stock:2 unchanged:2 gasoline:2 200:2 000:2 crude:2 6:2 3:2 mln:2 |@word
EIA SAYS DISTILLATE STOCKS UNCHANGED, GASOLINE OFF 200,000, CRUDE UP 6.3 MLN EIA SAYS DISTILLATE STOCKS UNCHANGED, GASOLINE OFF 200,000, CRUDE UP 6.3 MLN
test/15341
test/15341 |@title usda:1 discuss:1 pl:1 480:1 agreement:1 morocco:1 |@word u:2 agriculture:2 department:3 currently:1 discuss:1 amendment:2 pl:1 480:1 agreement:3 sign:2 morocco:1 january:3 22:1 mix:1 commodity:2 determine:1 official:2 say:1 note:1 provide:2 supply:1 55:2 000:3 tonne:3 vegetable:1 oil:1 corn:1 126:1 wheat:1 delivery:1 current:1 fiscal:1 year:1 end:1 september:1 30:1 purchase:1 authorization:1 announce:1
USDA DISCUSSING PL 480 AGREEMENT WITH MOROCCO The U.S. Agriculture Department is currently discussing an amendment to a PL 480 agreement signed with Morocco on January 22, but the mix of commodities under the amendment has not been determined, a U.S. Agriculture Department official said. The official noted the agreement signed in January provided for the supply of about 55,000 tonnes of vegetable oil, 55,000 tonnes of corn and 126,000 tonnes of wheat, all for delivery during the current fiscal year, ending this September 30. No purchase authorizations for the commodities provided in the January agreement have been announced by the department.
test/15344
test/15344 |@title eia:1 say:1 distillate:1 stock:1 unchanged:1 week:1 |@word distillate:1 fuel:2 stock:6 hold:1 primary:1 storage:1 unchanged:1 week:2 end:1 april:1 three:1 106:1 9:2 mln:8 barrel:8 energy:2 information:1 administration:1 eia:2 say:4 weekly:1 petroleum:2 status:1 report:1 department:1 agency:1 gasoline:1 200:1 000:2 248:1 1:6 refinery:1 crude:3 oil:2 rise:3 6:1 3:1 335:1 8:1 residual:1 fall:1 100:1 38:1 strategic:1 reserve:1 spr:2 520:1 0:1 total:1 refine:1 product:1 4:1 561:1
EIA SAYS DISTILLATE STOCKS UNCHANGED IN WEEK Distillate fuel stocks held in primary storage were unchanged in the week ended April three at 106.9 mln barrels, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said. In its weekly petroleum status report, the Department of Energy agency said gasoline stocks were off 200,000 barrels in the week to 248.1 mln barrels and refinery crude oil stocks rose 6.3 mln barrels to 335.8 mln. The EIA said residual fuel stocks fell 100,000 barrels to 38.1 mln barrels and crude oil stocks in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) rose 1.1 mln barrels to 520.0 mln. The total of all crude, refined product and SPR stocks rose 9.4 mln barrels to 1,561.1, it said.
test/15345
test/15345 |@title hawkeye:1 hwkb:1 1986:1 annual:1 report:1 qualify:1 |@word hawkeye:9 bancorp:1 1986:3 annual:3 financial:2 result:1 qualify:1 auditor:2 accord:1 report:4 condition:2 may:1 indicate:1 company:3 unable:1 continue:1 go:2 concern:2 deloitte:1 haskins:1 sells:1 say:5 shareholder:1 loss:2 almost:1 59:1 mln:3 dlrs:4 cite:1 increase:1 loan:1 provision:2 34:1 7:1 restructure:1 cost:1 27:1 however:2 asset:1 1:1 09:1 billion:1 year:1 end:1 expect:1 sufficient:1 cash:1 meet:2 obligation:1 next:1 12:1 month:1 period:1 last:1 july:1 bank:3 hold:1 reach:1 debt:2 restructuring:3 agreement:2 identife:1 17:1 subsidiary:1 five:1 non:1 operation:2 disposition:1 improve:1 assure:1 able:3 survive:1 survival:1 depend:1 ability:2 comply:1 regulatory:1 return:1 profitable:1 assurance:1 requirement:1 believe:1
HAWKEYE <HWKB> 1986 ANNUAL REPORT QUALIFIED Hawkeye Bancorp's 1986 annual financial results were qualified by its auditors, according to the annual report. '...there are conditions which may indicate that the company will be unable to continue as a going concern,' auditors Deloitte Haskins and Sells said in Hawkeye's annual report to shareholders. Hawkeye reported a 1986 loss of almost 59 mln dlrs, citing an increase in its loan loss provision to 34.7 mln dlrs and restructuring costs of 27 mln dlrs. However, Hawkeye, with assets of 1.09 billion dlrs at 1986 year end, said it expects 'to have sufficient cash to meet its obligations for the next 12-month period.' Last July the bank holding company reached a debt restructuring agreement which identifed 17 bank subsidiaries and five non-bank operations for disposition. 'The restructuring has improved Hawkeye's financial condition, but it does not assure that Hawkeye will be able to survive as a going concern,' the report said. Hawkeye's survival will depend on its ability to comply with provisions of the debt restructuring and regulatory agreements and on its ability to return to profitable operations, it said. There can be no assurance that Hawkeye will be able to meet these requirements. However, the company 'believes it will be able to do so,' Hawkeye said.
test/15348
test/15348 |@title washington:1 bancorporation:1 1st:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 33:1 ct:2 vs:5 37:1 net:1 2:2 051:1 000:1 1:7 8:1 mln:2 asset:1 7:1 billion:5 5:1 deposit:1 4:1 loan:1 900:1 note:1 year:1 ago:1 result:1 restate:1 reflect:1 merger:1 colson:1 inc:1
<WASHINGTON BANCORPORATION> 1ST QTR NET Shr 33 cts vs 37 cts Net 2,051,000 vs 1.8 mln Assets 1.7 billion vs 1.5 billion Deposits 1.4 billion vs 1.2 billion Loans 1.1 billion vs 900 mln Note: Year-ago results restated to reflect merger with Colson Inc.
test/15349
test/15349 |@title dome:1 dmp:1 plan:1 may:1 force:1 sale:1 encor:1 stake:1 |@word dome:11 petroleum:2 ltd:1 proposal:1 restructure:1 debt:8 6:1 10:1 billion:1 canadian:2 dlrs:3 include:1 provision:1 may:2 force:1 company:4 sell:2 42:2 pct:1 stake:1 encor:5 energy:1 corp:1 inc:1 say:8 u:1 securities:1 exchange:1 commission:1 filing:5 plan:5 propose:4 make:1 payment:1 five:2 year:3 income:1 debenture:1 lender:2 whose:1 secure:1 share:4 certain:1 circumstance:1 require:1 dispose:1 pledge:1 5:1 mln:3 security:1 part:1 imperial:1 bank:2 commerce:2 estimate:1 last:1 947:1 analyst:1 press:1 stock:1 pay:1 market:1 value:1 313:1 march:1 17:1 1987:2 previously:1 report:1 seek:1 approval:1 principle:1 restructuring:3 sign:1 letter:1 understanding:1 early:1 april:1 implementation:2 effective:1 july:1 1:1 reiterate:1 sec:1 existence:1 go:1 concern:1 dependent:1 continue:1 interim:1 due:1 expire:1 june:1 30:1 win:1 agreement:1 believe:1 negotiation:2 realistic:1 achievable:1 however:1 final:1 outcome:1 predict:1 time:1
DOME <DMP> PLAN MAY FORCE SALE OF ENCOR STAKE Dome Petroleum Ltd's proposal to restructure debt of more than 6.10 billion Canadian dlrs includes provisions that may force the company to sell its 42 pct stake in <Encor Energy Corp Inc>, Dome said in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing. Dome said in the filing that its debt plan proposes making payments under a five year income debenture to the lender whose debt is secured by Dome's Encor shares. After the five years are up, 'under certain circumstances the shares of Encor may be required to be disposed,' the company said. Dome has pledged its 42.5 mln Encor shares as security for part of its debt to <Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce>, estimated last year at 947 mln dlrs. Analysts have said Commerce Bank was pressing Dome to sell the stock to pay down its debt. Dome's Encor shares had a market value of 313 mln dlrs on March 17, 1987, the company's filing said. As previously reported, Dome is seeking approval in principle for the debt restructuring plan. Dome said in the filing it proposed lenders sign a letter of understanding in early April, with implementation to be effective July 1, 1987. Dome Petroleum reiterated in the SEC filing that its existence as a going concern is dependent on continuing the interim debt plan, due to expire on June 30, and winning agreement for its proposed restructuring plan. 'The company believes that the negotiation and implementation of the proposed debt restructuring plan is realistic and achievable,' Dome said. 'However, the final outcome of the negotiations cannot be predicted at this time,' it said.
test/15351
test/15351 |@title recent:1 u:2 oil:1 demand:1 2:1 6:1 pct:1 year:1 ago:1 |@word oil:1 demand:7 measure:1 product:1 supply:1 fall:3 2:3 6:6 pct:9 four:1 week:1 end:1 april:1 three:1 15:3 73:1 mln:18 barrel:1 per:1 day:1 bpd:9 16:3 period:2 year:6 ago:2 energy:2 information:1 administration:1 eia:3 say:5 weekly:1 petroleum:1 status:1 report:1 department:1 agency:1 distillate:2 7:2 9:4 90:1 3:8 early:1 gasoline:2 average:2 76:1 1:6 98:1 last:1 residual:2 fuel:2 39:1 far:1 20:1 28:1 1986:1 63:1 0:1 65:1 4:1 35:1 42:1 date:1 domestic:1 crude:2 output:1 estimate:1 8:1 40:1 09:1 gross:1 import:1 92:1 27:1 08:1
RECENT U.S. OIL DEMAND OFF 2.6 PCT FROM YEAR AGO U.S. oil demand as measured by products supplied fell 2.6 pct in the four weeks ended April three to 15.73 mln barrels per day (bpd) from 16.16 mln in the same period a year ago, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said. In its weekly petroleum status report, the Energy Department agency said distillate demand was off 7.9 pct in the period to 2.90 mln bpd from 3.15 mln a year earlier. Gasoline demand averaged 6.76 mln bpd, off 3.1 pct from 6.98 mln last year, while residual fuel demand was 1.15 mln bpd, off 16.9 pct from 1.39 mln, the EIA said. So far this year, distillate demand fell 2.3 pct to 3.20 mln bpd from 3.28 mln in 1986, gasoline demand was 6.63 mln bpd, off 0.3 pct from 6.65 mln, and residual fuel demand fell 4.9 pct to 1.35 mln bpd from 1.42 mln, the EIA said. Year-to-date domestic crude output was estimated at 8.40 mln bpd, off 7.6 pct from 9.09 mln a year ago, while gross crude imports averaged 3.92 mln bpd, up 27.1 pct from 3.08 mln, it said.
test/15352
test/15352 |@title deficit:2 cut:1 see:1 unable:1 cure:1 trade:1 |@word financial:2 analyst:3 say:11 pleased:1 congressional:1 move:1 trim:1 next:4 year:9 federal:10 budget:14 deficit:19 believe:1 action:2 little:3 help:4 improve:1 u:5 trade:6 buoy:1 economy:5 house:3 representatives:1 expect:1 vote:1 tomorrow:1 approve:2 trillion:1 dollar:8 blueprint:1 come:1 fiscal:1 reduce:3 38:3 billion:13 dlrs:12 similarly:1 senate:4 committee:4 plan:3 would:7 cut:8 red:2 ink:2 37:2 term:1 infinitesimal:1 magnitude:1 impact:1 stanley:1 collander:4 touche:2 ross:2 policy:2 best:1 small:1 positive:1 effect:1 interview:1 reserve:2 board:2 chairman:1 paul:1 volcker:6 repeatedly:1 tell:2 congress:4 go:3 long:1 way:2 massive:1 also:3 ease:1 downward:1 pressure:2 value:5 government:3 attempt:1 remedy:1 imbalance:1 drive:2 warn:1 fall:2 fraught:1 danger:2 decline:2 could:2 refuel:1 inflation:1 import:1 good:1 become:3 expensive:1 chase:1 away:1 foreign:2 capital:2 need:3 finance:1 addition:1 february:1 official:2 meet:1 major:1 industrialize:1 nation:1 paris:1 agree:3 drop:2 enough:3 world:2 exchange:2 rate:1 stabilize:2 around:1 current:2 level:3 part:1 agreement:1 japan:1 west:1 germany:1 take:1 step:1 stimulate:1 united:2 states:2 alternative:1 deal:2 recently:1 consumption:1 particularly:1 spending:3 everything:1 else:1 counterproductive:1 recent:1 testimony:1 banking:1 prefer:1 tighten:2 purse:1 string:1 fed:2 credit:1 supply:1 fight:1 inflationary:1 assure:1 continue:1 flow:1 feed:1 tightening:1 choke:1 modest:1 economic:1 expansion:1 threaten:1 recession:1 kemper:1 services:1 economist:1 john:1 silvia:2 stress:1 reduction:5 well:1 none:1 size:1 consideration:1 give:1 flexibility:2 steer:1 keep:1 plunge:1 market:1 doubt:1 objective:1 perserve:1 conduct:1 monetary:1 answer:1 reuters:1 one:2 vexing:1 persistent:1 problem:1 1986:2 169:1 8:1 yet:1 indication:1 figure:1 low:1 though:1 administration:1 predict:1 20:1 30:1 end:2 past:1 joke:1 never:1 lose:1 sleep:1 worry:1 whether:1 much:1 fat:1 hand:1 make:1 clear:1 attach:1 gradually:1 ceiling:2 set:3 1991:1 period:1 last:1 gramm:1 rudman:1 balance:1 law:2 new:2 108:1 concede:1 short:2 goal:2 25:1 political:1 reason:1 35:1 40:1 get:1 present:1 time:1 something:1 extraordinary:1 remarkable:1 difficult:1 real:1 panel:1 extent:1 minimum:1 acceptable:1 explain:1 anything:1 less:1 look:1 like:1 failure:1 wall:1 street:1 debate:1 floor:1 lower:1 estimate:1 171:1 dlr:1 begin:1 october:1 133:1 defense:1 domestic:1 program:1 anticipate:1 call:1 nearly:1 134:1 18:1 5:1 taxis:1 amount:1
DEFICIT CUTS SEEN UNABLE TO CURE TRADE DEFICIT Financial analysts say they are pleased with congressional moves to trim next year's federal budget deficit but believe the actions will do little to help improve the U.S. trade deficit or buoy the economy. The House of Representatives is expected to vote tomorrow to approve a trillion-dollar budget blueprint for the coming fiscal year that reduces the deficit by 38 billion dlrs. Similarly, the Senate Budget Committee has approved a plan that would cut federal red ink by about 37 billion dlrs next year. 'In terms of the economy, 37-38 billion dlrs is infinitesimal, so cuts of this magnitude will have little impact on the economy and the trade deficit,' said Stanley Collander, a Touche Ross federal budget policy analyst. 'At best, it will have a small positive effect,' Collander said in an interview. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker has repeatedly told Congress that cutting federal red ink would go a long way to help reduce the massive trade deficit and also help ease some of the downward pressure on the value of the dollar. The U.S. government has attempted to remedy the trade imbalance by driving down the value of the dollar. But Volcker has warned that a further fall in the dollar's value is fraught with danger. Such a decline, he has said, could refuel inflation as imported goods become more expensive and chase away foreign capital needed to finance the federal budget deficit. In addition, in February, U.S. officials meeting with other major industrialized nations in Paris agreed that the value of the dollar had dropped enough and that world exchange rates should be stabilized at around current levels. As part of that agreement, Japan and West Germany agreed to take steps to stimulate their economies and the United States agreed to cut its budget deficit. The alternative to driving down the dollar any further as a way to deal with the trade deficit, Volcker said recently, is to reduce U.S. consumption, particularly federal spending. 'If you don't deal with the budget deficit, everything else you do is going to be counterproductive,' Volcker said in recent testimony before the Senate Banking Committee. Volcker also said he would prefer to further tighten the government's purse strings than have the Fed tighten the credit supply if action was needed to fight inflationary pressures or to assure the continued flow of foreign capital into the United States. Analysts say that Fed tightening now could choke off the current modest economic expansion and threaten a recession. Kemper Financial Services economist John Silvia stressed that any deficit reduction was better than none. But he said the size of the cuts under consideration were not enough to give the Federal Reserve Board the flexibility it needs to steer the economy or to keep the value of the dollar from plunging further in world exchange markets. 'There's no doubt that some deficit reduction helps, but if your objective is to stabilize the dollar and perserve the Fed's flexibility to conduct monetary policy, then the answer is, it's not enough,' Silvia told Reuters. The U.S. trade deficit has become one of the government's most vexing and persistent problems. The 1986 deficit was 169.8 billion dlrs and there is as yet little indication that this year's figure will be any lower, though administration officials have predicted it will drop by about 20 to 30 billion dlrs by year's end. In the past, Volcker has joked that he never lost sleep worrying whether Congress would cut too much fat from the federal budget. On the other hand, he also has made it clear he is not attached to the gradually declining deficit ceilings set for the 1986-1991 period by last year's Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law. While the new law set a ceiling of 108 billion dlrs for next year's federal deficit, both the House and Senate Budget Committees have conceded that their budget plans would fall short of the deficit reduction goal by about 25 billion dlrs. 'For political reasons, 35 to 40 billion dlrs is about the most you're going to get' out of Congress at the present time, said Touche Ross's Collander. 'To do something more than that would be extraordinary, remarkable and very, very difficult.' Collander said the real danger for Congress was to end up short of the deficit reduction goal set by its Budget panels. 'To an extent, this has become the minimum acceptable reduction level,' he explained. 'Anything less than that will now look like a failure to Wall Street.' The budget plan now under debate on the House floor would lower an estimated 171 billion dlr deficit for the year beginning on October one to about 133 billion dlrs by cutting defense and domestic programs by 38 billion dlrs from their anticipated spending levels for next year. The Senate Budget Committee has called for a deficit of nearly 134 billion dlrs with about 18.5 billion dlrs in new taxes and about the same amount in spending cuts.
test/15354
test/15354 |@title stewart:1 stevenson:1 services:1 ssss:1 4th:1 qtr:1 |@word 4th:1 qtr:1 end:1 jan:1 31:1 shr:2 profit:5 72:2 ct:2 vs:6 14:1 net:2 3:1 309:1 000:3 609:1 revs:2 mln:5 65:1 year:1 nil:1 loss:2 4:1 13:1 dlrs:1 1:2 19:1 245:1 269:1
STEWART AND STEVENSON SERVICES <SSSS> 4TH QTR 4th qtr ended Jan 31. Shr profit 72 cts vs profit 14 cts Net profit 3,309,000 vs 609,000 Revs 72 mln vs 65 mln Year Shr profit nil vs loss 4.13 dlrs Net profit 1,000 vs loss 19 mln Revs 245 mln vs 269.1 mln
test/15356
test/15356 |@title westamerica:1 bancorporation:1 wsam:1 1st:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 98:1 ct:2 vs:6 63:2 net:1 2:1 602:1 000:2 1:5 571:1 asset:2 15:1 billion:3 02:1 deposit:1 04:1 942:1 mln:3 loan:1 834:1 8:1 729:1 0:3 return:1 avg:1 92:1 pct:2
WESTAMERICA BANCORPORATION <WSAM> 1ST QTR NET Shr 98 cts vs 63 cts Net 2,602,000 vs 1,571,000 Assets 1.15 billion vs 1.02 billion Deposits 1.04 billion vs 942.1 mln Loans 834.8 mln vs 729.0 mln Return on avg assets 0.92 pct vs 0.63 pct
test/15357
test/15357 |@title colombia:1 coffee:1 registration:1 remain:1 open:1 |@word colombia:3 coffee:2 export:1 registration:4 remain:1 open:2 plan:1 close:3 since:1 new:2 marketing:1 policy:2 mean:1 unlimited:2 amount:3 register:4 gilberto:1 arango:3 president:1 private:2 exporters:1 association:1 say:4 philosophy:1 nobody:1 far:1 may:2 would:3 tell:2 reuter:1 march:1 13:1 april:2 without:1 give:1 breakdown:1 exporter:1 1:1 322:1 804:1 bag:4 calendar:1 year:2 6:1 roughly:1 440:1 000:2 per:2 month:2 slightly:1 low:1 average:1 recent:1 estimate:1 national:1 grower:1 federation:1 meaning:1 total:1 900:1 sell:1 change:1 could:1 happen:1 volume:1 date:1 june:1 shipment:1 etc:1
COLOMBIA COFFEE REGISTRATIONS REMAIN OPEN Colombia's coffee export registrations remain open and there are no plans to close them since a new marketing policy means an unlimited amount can be registered, Gilberto Arango, president of the private exporters' association said. 'The philosophy of the new policy is not to close registrations. Nobody so far said may would be closed,' he told Reuters. On March 13, Colombia opened registrations for April and May for an unlimited amount. Without giving breakdowns, Arango said private exporters had registered 1,322,804 bags this calendar year up to April 6, or roughly 440,000 bags per month, slightly lower than the average in recent years. He estimated the amount of bags registered by the national coffee growers' federation at about the same, meaning a total of about 900,000 bags registered and sold per month by Colombia. 'The only change that could happen is, because of the volume, we would be told that from such a date, registrations would be for June shipment, etc' Arango said.
test/15359
test/15359 |@title gateway:1 bancorp:1 inc:1 gban:1 1st:1 qtr:1 net:1 |@word shr:1 32:1 ct:2 vs:3 34:1 net:1 902:1 178:1 662:1 647:1 deposit:1 174:1 7:1 mln:2 134:1 4:1 note:1 per:1 share:1 amount:1 adjust:1 reflect:1 10:1 one:1 stock:1 split:1 effective:1 sept:1 16:1 1986:1
GATEWAY BANCORP INC <GBAN> 1ST QTR NET Shr 32 cts vs 34 cts Net 902,178 vs 662,647 Deposits 174.7 mln vs 134.4 mln NOTE: Per share amounts adjusted to reflect 10-for-one stock split effective Sept 16, 1986.
test/15363
test/15363 |@title american:1 brands:1 amb:1 acquisition:1 see:1 |@word american:4 brands:1 inc:2 545:1 mln:1 dlrs:2 acquisition:6 national:2 distiller:1 chemical:1 corp:1 liquor:1 business:4 expect:1 one:2 series:1 tobacco:6 company:3 analyst:2 say:7 frustrated:1 inability:1 get:1 chesebrough:2 look:1 surprise:1 come:2 another:2 allan:1 kaplan:1 merrill:1 lynch:1 co:1 brand:3 fail:1 late:1 last:1 year:1 2:1 9:1 billion:1 bid:1 ponds:1 unilever:1 n:1 v:1 agree:1 buy:1 since:1 wall:1 street:1 speculate:1 would:1 find:1 candidate:1 help:1 reduce:1 earning:2 exposure:1 typical:1 george:1 thompson:2 prudential:1 bache:1 security:1 go:1 make:3 still:1 significant:1 part:1 position:1 little:1 less:1 favorable:1 philip:1 morris:1 rj:1 reynold:1 cash:1 flow:1 low:1 growth:1 require:1 great:1 amount:1 capital:1 expenditure:1 therefore:1 use:1 fund:1 distillers:1 spirit:2 gilbey:1 gin:1 vodka:1 old:2 grandad:1 crow:1 whiskey:1 quite:1 type:1 envision:1 distilled:1 steady:1 gradual:1 decline:1 sometime:1 reuter:1
MORE AMERICAN BRANDS <AMB> ACQUISITIONS SEEN American Brands Inc's 545 mln dlrs acquisition of National Distillers and Chemical Corp's liquor business is expected to be one of a series of acquisitions by the tobacco company, analysts said. 'They were very frustrated with their inability to get Chesebrough. They said they were looking for an acquisition. It doesn't surprise me that they came up with another one,' said Allan Kaplan of Merrill Lynch and Co. American Brands failed late last year in its 2.9 billion dlrs bid for Chesebrough-Ponds Inc when Unilever N.V. agreed to buy the company. But since then, Wall Street has been speculating that American Brands would find another candidate to help reduce its earnings exposure to tobacco. 'This is just typical,' said George Thompson of Prudential-Bache securities. 'There's going to be more to come here. American Brands had to make an acquisition because tobacco is still a significant part of earnings. Their position is a little less favorable than Philip Morris and RJ Reynolds,' he said. cash flow from its low growth tobacco, but the tobacco business does require great amounts of capital expenditures. It can therefore use its funds to make acquisitions. Analysts said the National Distillers' spirits company, which makes Gilbey's gin and vodka, Old Grandad and Old Crow whiskey, is not quite the type of acquisition they envisioned. 'The distilled spirits business has been in a steady gradual decline for sometime, as has the tobacco business,' said Thompson. REUTER...
test/15364
test/15364 |@title bundesbank:1 call:1 central:1 bank:1 cooperation:1 |@word bundesbank:2 board:1 member:1 claus:1 koehler:9 call:1 central:6 bank:6 major:1 industrialise:1 nation:1 cooperate:2 closely:1 exchange:8 interest:5 rate:12 policy:4 lecture:1 university:1 surrey:1 pre:1 release:1 say:10 alternative:1 cooperation:1 protectionism:1 control:1 capital:1 movement:1 sufficient:1 experience:1 market:8 transaction:4 steer:1 want:1 add:1 west:2 german:1 growth:4 forecast:1 would:6 revise:1 downward:1 recent:1 dollar:6 drop:2 1:1 80:1 mark:2 two:1 start:1 1987:1 foreign:2 part:1 company:1 good:1 service:1 investment:2 scale:1 speculative:2 determine:1 trend:1 inflow:2 could:2 cause:1 monetary:5 aggregate:1 grow:1 reverse:1 rise:4 money:3 stock:2 lower:1 allow:1 fund:2 drain:1 word:1 measure:2 require:1 different:1 sometimes:1 diametrically:1 oppose:1 need:1 increase:1 result:1 mount:1 economic:3 activity:1 fall:3 one:1 means:1 reduce:1 massive:1 u:7 current:5 account:5 deficit:3 attempt:1 keep:2 depreciation:2 go:2 talk:1 pose:1 problem:5 sharp:2 lead:2 immediate:1 steep:1 cost:2 import:4 european:1 volume:1 effect:2 europe:2 take:1 time:1 make:1 feel:1 compare:1 price:2 hence:1 may:2 well:1 necessary:2 adjust:2 medium:1 term:1 reduction:1 occur:1 gnp:2 high:1 domestic:3 demand:2 japan:2 germany:2 contrast:1 faster:1 indeed:1 happen:1 1986:1 appreciation:1 prevent:1 offset:1 appropriate:1 differential:1 look:1 financial:1 select:1 instrument:1 pay:1 great:1 heed:1 past:1 impact:2 expectation:1 consequent:1 decision:1 change:1 operate:1 open:1 rather:1 signal:1 give:2 substantial:1 important:1 achieve:1 goal:1 stability:1 full:1 employment:1 also:2 tackle:1 international:3 like:1 debt:1 strategy:1 design:1 help:1 safeguarding:1 non:1 inflationary:1 system:3 largely:1 free:2 disruption:2 float:1 agree:1 intervene:2 suffice:1 tell:1 see:1 next:1 year:1 intervention:1 point:2 set:1 test:1 order:1 jointly:1
BUNDESBANK CALLS FOR CENTRAL BANK COOPERATION Bundesbank board member Claus Koehler called on central banks of major industrialised nations to cooperate closely on exchange and interest rate policies. In a lecture at the University of Surrey, pre-released here, Koehler said that the only alternative to cooperation was protectionism and control on capital movements. 'Central banks have sufficient experience of exchange market transactions to steer exchange rates where they want to have them,' he said. He added that West German growth forecasts would have to be revised downward because of the recent dollar drop to 1.80 marks from above two marks at the start of 1987. Koehler said that transactions on foreign exchange markets had parted company with transactions in goods, services and investments. It was the scale of speculative transactions that determined market trends. Speculative inflows could cause monetary aggregates to grow. To reverse such a rise in the money stock, interest rates would have to be lowered to allow funds to drain off. 'In other words, the monetary policy measures required are different from -- and sometimes diametrically opposed to -- those needed when the money stock is increasing as a result of mounting economic activity,' Koehler said. The dollar fall was one means of reducing the massive U.S. Current account deficit. But attempts to keep the depreciation going by talking the dollar down posed problems. The sharp drop of the dollar had led to an immediate steep rise in the cost of U.S. Imports and a sharp fall in the cost of European imports. But the volume effect of falling imports to the U.S. And rising imports to Europe would take time to make itself felt compared with the price effect. 'Hence the depreciation of the dollar may well be going further than would be necessary to adjust the current account over the medium term,' Koehler said. A reduction in the U.S. Current account deficit would occur only if the growth rate of GNP was higher than domestic demand. In Japan and West Germany by contrast, domestic demand should rise faster than GNP. 'In Germany this did indeed happen in 1986,' Koehler said. If a further appreciation of the dollar was to be prevented, the U.S. Current account deficit could be offset by an inflow of foreign funds into the U.S.. But only if there was an appropriate interest rate differential would Europe and Japan look for financial investment in the U.S. When selecting monetary policy instruments, a central bank had to pay greater heed than in the past to the impact its measures might have on expectations and consequent decisions. Koehler said the Bundesbank was changing money market rates by operating on the open market rather than adjusting leading interest rates because of the signal this gives to the market and its substantial impact on exchange rates. It was not only important to achieve the domestic goals of price stability, economic growth and full employment but also to tackle international problems like the exchange rate problem, the debt problem and the current account problem. A strategy had to be designed that helped 'the safeguarding of non-inflationary economic growth in an international monetary system largely free of disruptions,' Koehler said. Given the system of floating exchange rates, it was necessary for central banks to agree to intervene. It sufficed to tell the market where central banks saw exchange rates over the next few years and intervention points should not be set, because they were only testing points for the market, he said. In order to keep the international monetary system free of disruptions central banks should not only intervene jointly but also cooperate on interest rate policies, Koehler said.
test/15365
test/15365 |@title australian:1 unemployment:1 rise:1 march:1 |@word australia:1 seasonally:1 adjust:1 unemployment:1 rate:2 rise:3 8:3 4:1 pct:5 estimate:2 workforce:3 march:2 2:1 february:3 7:1 9:3 year:2 earlier:2 statistic:1 bureau:2 say:2 number:2 jobless:1 650:1 700:1 631:1 900:1 593:1 200:1 unadjuste:1 unemployed:1 702:1 600:2 699:1 ease:1 0:1 1:1 reflect:1 slight:1 increase:1 1986:1 640:1 400:1 person:1 5:1 work:1
AUSTRALIAN UNEMPLOYMENT RISES IN MARCH Australia's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose to 8.4 pct of the estimated workforce in March from 8.2 pct in February and 7.9 pct a year earlier, the Statistics Bureau said. The number of jobless rose to 650,700 from 631,900 in February and 593,200 a year earlier, the Bureau said. Unadjusted, the number of unemployed rose to 702,600 from 699,600 in February but the rate eased to 9.0 pct from 9.1, reflecting a slight increase in the estimated workforce. In March 1986, 640,400 persons, or 8.5 pct of the workforce, were out of work.
test/15366
test/15366 |@title csr:2 say:1 retain:1 non:1 delhi:1 gas:1 oil:1 stake:1 |@word ltd:3 csra:1 say:2 sale:1 delhi:2 petroleum:1 pty:1 affect:1 oil:1 gas:4 interest:2 manage:1 operate:1 csr:2 sell:1 hold:1 average:1 25:1 pct:1 santos:1 stos:1 lead:1 cooper:1 eromanga:1 basin:1 onshore:1 liquid:1 joint:1 venture:1 exxon:1 corp:1 xon:1 unit:2 985:1 mln:1 dlrs:1 april:1 1:1 statement:1 clarify:1 position:1 retain:1 roma:2 associated:1 brisbane:1 pipeline:1 bula:1 oilfield:1 seram:1 indonesia:1 plus:1 exploration:1 queensland:1 hainan:1 island:1 china:1
CSR SAYS IT IS RETAINING NON-DELHI GAS-OIL STAKES CSR Ltd <CSRA.S> said its sale of <Delhi Petroleum Pty Ltd> will not affect the other oil and gas interests it manages or operates. CSR sold Delhi, which holds an average 25 pct in the Santos Ltd <STOS.S>-led Cooper-Eromanga Basin onshore gas and liquids joint ventures, to an Exxon Corp <XON> unit for 985 mln dlrs on April 1. In a statement to clarify the position, CSR said it will retain its Roma Gas unit, the associated Roma-Brisbane gas pipeline and the Bula oilfield on Seram, Indonesia, plus exploration interests in Queensland and Hainan Island, China.
test/15367
test/15367 |@title japan:1 ministry:1 comment:1 rice:1 talk:1 report:1 |@word agriculture:2 ministry:1 decline:1 comment:2 local:1 newspaper:1 report:2 japan:8 agree:1 hold:1 talk:4 closed:1 rice:4 market:1 new:2 gatt:3 round:3 idea:1 spokesman:1 tell:2 reuters:1 nihon:2 keizai:2 shinbun:1 quote:1 unnamed:1 government:1 source:1 say:4 would:1 u:5 secretary:1 richard:1 lyng:1 trade:5 representative:1 clayton:1 yeutter:1 intention:1 two:1 due:1 visit:1 later:1 month:1 farm:1 press:1 discuss:1 issue:1 general:1 agreement:1 tariff:1 right:1 forum:1 import:1 ban:1 foodstuff:1 control:1 act:1 plan:1 result:1 worry:1 mount:1 tension:1 try:1 persuade:1 policy:1 justify:1 93:1 nation:1 world:1 body:1 begin:1 uruguay:1 last:1 september:1 take:1 four:1 year:1 negotiate:1
JAPAN MINISTRY HAS NO COMMENT ON RICE TALKS REPORT The Agriculture Ministry declined comment on a local newspaper report that Japan had agreed to hold talks on its closed rice market in the new GATT round. 'We have no idea about the report and cannot comment,' a spokesman told Reuters. Nihon Keizai Shinbun, quoting unnamed government sources, said Japan would tell U.S. Agriculture Secretary Richard Lyng and U.S. Trade Representative Clayton Yeutter of its intentions. The two are due to visit Japan later this month for farm talks. The U.S. Has been pressing Japan to discuss the rice issue at the new round of General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade talks. But Japan has said GATT is not the right forum. Imports of rice to Japan are banned under the Foodstuff Control Act. Nihon Keizai said Japan's plan resulted from worries about mounting trade tension with the U.S. At the GATT talks, Japan will try to persuade the U.S. That its rice policy is justified, it said. The 93-nation world trade body began the Uruguay trade round last September. It will take four years to negotiate.
test/15368
test/15368 |@title showa:1 denko:1 export:1 aluminium:1 casting:1 equipment:1 |@word showa:2 denko:2 ltd:1 say:4 export:1 aluminium:3 billet:1 cast:2 equipment:3 technology:2 country:1 recently:1 begin:1 smelt:2 company:1 official:1 win:1 500:1 mln:1 yen:1 order:3 deliver:1 10:1 set:2 venezuela:1 venalum:1 end:1 1987:1 receive:1 one:1 bahrain:2 b:1 c:1 last:2 year:2 expect:2 smelter:1 withdraw:1 increase:1 sale:1
SHOWA DENKO EXPORTS ALUMINIUM CASTING EQUIPMENT <Showa Denko Ltd> said it is exporting aluminium billet casting equipment and technology to countries that have recently begun aluminium smelting. A company official said it won a 500 mln yen order to deliver 10 sets of casting equipment to Venezuela's Venalum by end-1987. He said it received an order for one set from Aluminium Bahrain B.S.C. Last year and expects further orders from the Bahrain smelter. Showa Denko withdrew from smelting last year but expects to increase its sales of equipment and technology, he said.
test/15372
test/15372 |@title economic:1 spotlight:1 telecom:1 key:1 japan:1 ministry:1 |@word japan:5 little:1 know:1 ministry:13 post:1 telecommunication:2 mpt:11 emerge:1 international:2 force:2 reckon:1 political:5 analyst:7 say:19 thrust:1 spotlight:1 trade:2 row:2 u:2 britain:3 position:1 strength:1 due:2 control:2 lucrative:2 industry:2 tie:1 important:3 politician:1 stand:2 athwart:1 regulatory:1 key:3 industrial:1 sector:3 information:1 one:3 diplomatic:3 source:3 potent:1 find:1 domestic:1 prowess:1 always:1 help:2 come:1 friction:1 diplomacy:1 minor:1 people:1 internationalize:1 waseda:1 university:1 professor:1 mitsuru:1 uchida:2 suddenly:1 centre:1 world:2 community:1 sense:1 loss:1 face:1 situation:1 recently:1 embroil:1 london:2 effort:1 cable:1 wireless:1 plc:1 keep:2 major:2 stake:1 two:2 consortium:1 try:1 compete:1 overseas:2 telephone:2 business:2 favour:1 merger:3 rival:1 group:2 argue:1 market:4 support:1 competitor:1 kokusai:1 denshin:1 denwa:1 co:1 ltd:1 monopolize:1 also:3 oppose:1 management:1 role:1 planned:1 non:1 japanese:1 telecommunications:3 firm:3 ground:1 precedent:1 exist:1 stance:1 outrage:1 threaten:1 retaliate:1 washington:2 plan:2 evidence:1 failure:1 honour:1 pledge:1 open:2 angry:1 move:1 limit:2 access:1 car:1 satellite:1 communication:1 much:2 new:2 prominence:1 stem:1 growth:1 regulate:1 happen:1 shift:1 economy:1 make:1 place:1 james:1 abegglen:2 head:1 consult:1 asia:1 advisory:1 service:2 inc:1 decision:1 competition:2 set:1 law:1 pass:1 1985:1 boost:1 rather:1 lessen:1 authority:1 legal:2 framework:2 ease:1 become:2 de:1 facto:1 bache:1 securities:1 darrell:1 whitten:1 close:1 link:1 powerful:1 faction:3 rule:1 liberal:1 democratic:1 party:1 ldp:1 nurture:1 former:3 prime:1 minister:1 kakuei:1 tanaka:2 another:1 influence:1 ignore:1 1970:1 forward:1 look:1 recognize:1 importance:1 many:2 bureaucrat:1 member:1 influential:1 add:1 power:1 financial:2 100:1 000:1 billion:1 yen:1 worth:1 deposit:2 postal:2 saving:2 system:2 block:1 finance:1 deregulate:1 interest:1 rate:2 small:1 element:1 liberalisation:1 since:1 change:1 would:1 remove:1 ability:1 offer:1 slightly:1 high:1 bank:1 frustrate:1 see:1 obstructionist:1 protectionist:1 posture:1 characterize:1 feudal:1 critic:1 charge:1 protect:1 turf:1 shelter:1 monopoly:1 wing:1 provide:1 consumer:1 good:1 low:1 price:1 take:2 back:1 seat:1 consideration:1 action:1 unlike:1 bureaucratic:1 counterpart:1 western:1 include:1 several:1 united:1 states:1 really:1 odd:1 man:1 government:1 view:2 want:1 order:1 utility:1 unusual:1 unreasonable:1
ECONOMIC SPOTLIGHT - TELECOM IS KEY JAPAN MINISTRY Japan's little-known Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications (MPT) has emerged as an international force to be reckoned with, political analysts said. MPT, thrust into the spotlight by trade rows with the U.S. And Britain, is in a position of strength due to its control of a lucrative industry and its ties with important politicians, they said. 'The ministry is standing athwart the regulatory control of a key industrial sector, telecommunications and information,' said one diplomatic source. 'They are a potent political force,' the diplomatic source said. But MPT is finding domestic political prowess does not always help when it comes to trade friction diplomacy, analysts said. 'The ministry was a minor ministry and its people were not so internationalized,' said Waseda University professor Mitsuru Uchida. 'Suddenly they're standing at the centre of the world community and in that sense, they're at a loss (as to) how to face the situation.' Most recently the ministry has been embroiled in a row with London over efforts by Britain's Cable and Wireless Plc to keep a major stake in one of two consortia trying to compete in Japan's lucrative overseas telephone business. The ministry has favoured the merger of the two rival groups, arguing the market cannot support more than one competitor to Kokusai Denshin Denwa Co Ltd, which now monopolizes the business. It has also opposed a major management role in the planned merger for any non-Japanese overseas telecommunications firm on the grounds that no such international precedent exists. The ministry's stance has outraged both London, which has threatened to retaliate, and Washington, which says the merger plan is evidence of Japan's failure to honour pledges to open its telecommunications market. Washington is also angry over other ministry moves which it says have limited access for U.S. Firms to Japan's car telephone and satellite communications market. Much of MPT's new prominence stems from the growth of the sector it regulates. 'What has been happening is an important shift in the economy which makes the ministry a very important place,' said James Abegglen, head of the consulting firm Asia Advisory Service Inc. A decision to open the telecommunications industry to competition under a new set of laws passed in 1985 has boosted rather than lessened MPT's authority, analysts said. 'With the legal framework eased, they became the de facto legal framework,' said Bache Securities (Japan) analyst Darrell Whitten. Close links with the powerful political faction of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) nurtured by former Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka are another key to MPT's influence, the analysts said. 'Other factions ignored MPT (in the 1970s), but the Tanaka faction was forward looking and ... Recognized the importance of MPT,' Uchida said. Many former bureaucrats became members of the influential political group, he added. The ministry also has power in the financial sector due to the more than 100,000 billion yen worth of deposits in the Postal Savings System, analysts said. MPT has helped block Finance Ministry plans to deregulate interest rates on small deposits, a key element in financial liberalisation, since the change would remove the Postal Savings System's ability to offer slightly higher rates than banks, they said. Diplomatic sources, frustrated with what they see as MPT's obstructionist and protectionist posture, have characterized the ministry as feudal. Critics charge MPT with protecting its own turf, limiting competition and sheltering the former monopolies under its wing. Providing consumers with the best service at the lowest price takes a back seat to such considerations, they said. But many of the ministry's actions are not unlike those of its bureaucratic counterparts in much of the Western world including Britain, several analysts said. 'The United States is really the odd man out,' Abegglen said. 'For a government to take the view that it wants to keep order in utilities markets is not an unusual and/or unreasonable view,' he said.
test/15375
test/15375 |@title g:1 7:1 issue:1 statement:1 meet:1 |@word follow:1 text:1 statement:2 group:1 seven:2 u:1 japan:4 west:1 germany:1 france:1 britain:1 italy:1 canada:1 issue:1 washington:1 meeting:4 yesterday:1 1:1 finance:1 minister:3 central:1 bank:1 governor:3 major:1 industrial:1 country:1 meet:1 today:1 continue:2 process:1 multilateral:1 surveillance:1 economy:2 pursuant:1 arrangement:1 strengthen:1 economic:3 policy:3 coordination:1 agree:3 1986:1 tokyo:1 summit:1 head:1 state:1 government:2 manage:1 director:1 international:1 monetary:1 fund:1 also:1 participate:1 2:1 reaffirm:3 commitment:1 cooperative:1 approach:1 recent:1 paris:1 note:1 progress:2 achieve:1 implement:2 undertaking:2 embody:1 louvre:4 agreement:2 however:1 action:1 essential:1 resist:1 rise:1 protectionist:1 pressure:1 sustain:1 global:1 expansion:1 reduce:1 trade:1 imbalance:1 connection:2 welcome:2 proposal:1 announce:1 govern:1 liberal:1 democratic:1 party:1 extraordinary:1 urgent:1 measure:1 stimulate:1 early:1 implementation:2 large:1 supplementary:1 budget:1 exceed:1 previous:1 year:1 well:1 unprecedented:1 front:1 end:1 loading:1 public:1 work:1 expenditure:1 intention:2 open:1 domestic:1 market:1 foreign:1 good:1 service:1 3:1 view:1 around:1 current:1 level:1 currency:1 within:1 range:1 broadly:1 consistent:1 fundamental:1 basic:1 outline:1 strong:1 conclude:1 present:1 prospective:1 provide:1 basis:1 close:1 cooperation:1 foster:1 stability:1 exchange:1 rate:1
G-7 ISSUES STATEMENT AFTER MEETING Following is the text of a statement by the Group of Seven -- the U.S., Japan, West Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Canada -- issued after a Washington meeting yesterday. 1. The finance ministers and central bank governors of seven major industrial countries met today. They continued the process of multilateral surveillance of their economies pursuant to the arrangements for strengthened economic policy coordination agreed at the 1986 Tokyo summit of their heads of state or government. The managing director of the International Monetary Fund also participated in the meeting. 2. The ministers and governors reaffirmed the commitment to the cooperative approach agreed at the recent Paris meeting, and noted the progress achieved in implementing the undertakings embodied in the Louvre Agreement. They agreed, however, that further actions will be essential to resist rising protectionist pressures, sustain global economic expansion, and reduce trade imbalances. In this connection they welcomed the proposals just announced by the governing Liberal Democratic Party in Japan for extraordinary and urgent measures to stimulate Japan's economy through early implementation of a large supplementary budget exceeding those of previous years, as well as unprecedented front-end loading of public works expenditures. The government of Japan reaffirmed its intention to further open up its domestic markets to foreign goods and services. 3. The ministers and governors reaffirmed the view that around current levels their currencies are within ranges broadly consistent with economic fundamentals and the basic policy intentions outlined at the Louvre meeting. In that connection they welcomed the strong implementation of the Louvre Agreement. They concluded that present and prospective progress in implementing the policy undertakings at the Louvre and in this statement provided a basis for continuing close cooperation to foster the stability of exchange rates.
test/15378
test/15378 |@title bank:1 france:1 hold:1 money:1 market:1 tender:1 today:1 |@word bank:3 france:2 say:2 invite:1 offer:1 first:1 category:1 paper:1 today:1 money:2 market:2 intervention:2 tender:1 operator:1 divide:1 whether:1 use:1 occasion:1 cut:3 rate:1 stand:1 7:1 3:1 4:2 pct:1 since:1 march:1 9:1 think:1 price:1 unlikely:1 room:1 1:1 point:1
BANK OF FRANCE TO HOLD MONEY MARKET TENDER TODAY The Bank of France said it has invited offers of first category paper today for a money market intervention tender. Money market operators were divided over whether the Bank of France will use to occasion to cut its intervention rate, which has stood at 7-3/4 pct since March 9. Some thought a price cut unlikely while others said there was room for a further 1/4 point cut by the bank.
test/15379
test/15379 |@title rio:1 tinto:1 zinc:1 corp:1 plc:1 1986:1 pretax:1 profit:1 601:1 7:1 |@word mln:4 stg:2 vs:2 614:2 4:2 rio:1 tinto:1 zinc:1 corp:1 plc:1 1986:1 pretax:1 profit:1 601:1 7:1
RIO TINTO-ZINC CORP PLC 1986 PRETAX PROFIT 601.7 mln stg vs 614.4 mln RIO TINTO-ZINC CORP PLC 1986 PRETAX PROFIT 601.7 mln stg vs 614.4 mln
test/15380
test/15380 |@title rio:1 tinto:1 zinc:1 net:1 attributable:1 profit:1 lower:1 |@word year:1 december:1 31:1 1986:3 shr:1 78:1 91p:1 vs:11 83:1 05p:1 div:1 16:1 5p:2 make:1 23:1 22p:1 pretax:1 profit:4 601:1 7:3 mln:16 stg:10 614:1 4:4 net:1 attributable:1 245:1 257:1 turnover:1 3:3 34:1 billion:4 09:1 note:1 account:2 restate:2 full:1 name:1 company:2 rio:1 tinto:1 zinc:1 corp:1 plc:1 rtzl:1 l:1 group:1 operate:1 529:1 470:1 operating:1 cost:1 2:2 81:1 63:1 share:1 less:1 loss:1 related:1 104:1 165:1 0:1 interest:3 receivable:1 income:1 41:1 5:1 47:1 payable:1 73:1 6:1 68:1 tax:1 274:1 8:1 277:1 1:1 leave:1 326:1 9:1 337:1 rtz:2 investment:1 australian:1 associate:1 cra:1 equity:1 1985:1 figure:1 basis:1 reduction:1 49:1 pct:1 october:1
RIO TINTO-ZINC NET ATTRIBUTABLE PROFIT LOWER Year to December 31, 1986 SHR 78.91p vs 83.05p DIV 16.5p making 23.5p vs 22p PRETAX PROFIT 601.7 mln stg vs 614.4 mln NET ATTRIBUTABLE PROFIT 245 mln stg vs 257 mln TURNOVER 3.34 billion stg vs 3.09 billion Note - Accounts have been restated Full name of company is Rio Tinto-Zinc Corp Plc <RTZL.L> Group operating profit 529.4 mln stg vs 470.7 mln Operating costs 2.81 billion stg 2.63 billion Share of profit less losses of related companies 104.4 mln stg vs 165.0 mln Interest receivable/other income 41.5 mln stg vs 47.4 mln Interest payable 73.6 mln stg vs 68.7 mln Tax 274.8 mln stg vs 277.1 mln Leaving 326.9 mln stg vs 337.3 mln RTZ' investment in Australian associate CRA has been equity accounted for 1986 and 1985 figures restated on the same basis after the reduction of RTZ's interest to 49 pct in October 1986.
test/15383
test/15383 |@title |@word burmah:2 oil:2 1986:2 pre:2 tax:2 profit:2 105:2 9:2 mln:4 stg:2 vs:2 79:2 6:2
Burmah Oil 1986 pre-tax profit 105.9 mln stg vs 79.6 mln. Burmah Oil 1986 pre-tax profit 105.9 mln stg vs 79.6 mln.
test/15384
test/15384 |@title german:1 banker:1 remark:1 revive:1 talk:1 rate:1 cut:1 |@word remark:1 two:1 lead:1 central:3 banker:1 spark:1 renew:1 speculation:2 financial:1 market:3 cut:3 west:2 german:2 three:1 pct:3 discount:2 rate:10 may:3 discussion:1 currency:2 dealer:5 say:6 bundesbank:4 board:2 member:1 claus:1 koehler:3 speech:2 monetary:5 growth:3 result:2 speculative:2 capital:2 inflow:2 require:2 interest:2 separately:1 berlin:1 state:1 bank:3 president:1 dieter:1 hiss:1 tell:1 journalist:1 could:2 fall:2 low:2 ever:1 point:1 2:1 75:1 make:2 clear:1 forecast:1 however:1 far:1 east:1 dollar:1 gain:1 slight:1 background:1 support:1 note:1 keep:1 3:1 80:1 unchanged:1 offer:3 liquidity:2 money:3 week:1 dash:1 expectation:1 either:1 fix:1 reduce:1 minimum:1 let:1 strength:1 demand:1 set:1 allocation:1 allocate:1 6:1 1:1 billion:2 mark:2 new:1 much:1 less:1 14:1 9:1 leave:1 prior:1 pact:1 expire:1 weaken:1 sentiment:1 move:1 accommodative:1 stance:1 surrey:1 england:1 cause:1 regardless:1 whether:1 intervene:1 exchange:1 word:1 policy:1 measure:1 different:1 sometimes:1 diametrically:1 oppose:1 need:1 stock:1 increase:1 mount:1 economic:1 activity:1 though:1 know:1 liberal:1 generally:1 monetarist:1 comment:1 first:1 time:1 concretely:1 suggest:1 counterpoint:1 overly:1 strong:1 reuter:1
GERMAN BANKERS' REMARKS REVIVE TALK OF RATE CUT Remarks by two leading central bankers sparked renewed speculation in financial markets that a cut in the West German three pct discount rate may be under discussion, currency dealers said. Bundesbank board member Claus Koehler said in a speech that monetary growth resulting from speculative capital inflows required cuts in interest rates. Separately, West Berlin state central bank president Dieter Hiss told journalists that the discount rate could fall below its lowest ever point of 2.75 pct. He made clear that he was not making a forecast on interest rates, however. Currency dealers here and in the Far East said the dollar gained slight background support from the speculation. But German dealers noted that the Bundesbank kept the 3.80 pct rate unchanged at which it offered liquidity to the money market this week, dashing some expectations that it may either offer lower fixed rate money or offer a reduced minimum rate and let the strength of banks' demands set the allocation rate. It allocated 6.1 billion marks in new liquidity, much less than the 14.9 billion leaving the market as a prior pact expired. This further weakened sentiment the Bundesbank could move to a more accommodative monetary stance, dealers said. Koehler said in a speech in Surrey, England, speculative capital inflows may cause monetary growth, regardless of whether central banks intervened or exchange rates fell. 'In other words, the monetary policy measures required are different from -- and sometimes diametrically opposed to -- those needed when the money stock is increasing as a result of mounting economic activity.' Though Koehler was known to be the most liberal of the generally monetarist Bundesbank board, his comments marked the first time cuts in rates had been concretely suggested as a counterpoint to overly strong monetary growth, dealers said. REUTER^M
test/15386
test/15386 |@title soviet:1 trade:1 deficit:1 west:1 soar:1 1986:1 |@word soviet:2 trade:4 deficit:2 west:3 almost:1 quadruple:1 last:1 year:2 reach:1 2:1 72:1 billion:3 rouble:2 compare:1 713:1 mln:1 1985:1 official:1 figure:1 show:2 statistic:1 publish:1 monthly:1 journal:1 foreign:1 turnover:1 1986:2 fall:1 130:1 9:1 142:1 1:1 previous:1 drop:1 7:1 8:1 pct:1 moscow:2 surplus:1 east:1 bloc:1 country:1 continue:1 grow:1 western:1 analyst:1 attribute:1 rise:1 world:1 oil:1 price:1 slump:1 hit:1 main:1 export:1 cut:1 hard:1 currency:1 earning:1 need:1 purchase:1
SOVIET TRADE DEFICIT WITH WEST SOARS IN 1986 The Soviet trade deficit with the West almost quadrupled last year, reaching 2.72 billion roubles compared with 713 mln in 1985, official figures showed. Statistics published by the monthly journal Foreign Trade showed Soviet trade turnover for 1986 fell to 130.9 billion roubles from 142.1 billion the previous year, a drop of 7.8 pct. Moscow's trade surplus with East Bloc countries continued to grow in 1986. Western analysts attributed the deficit rise with the West to the world oil price slump, which hit Moscow's main export and cut hard currency earnings needed for purchases in the West.
test/15387
test/15387 |@title burmah:1 oil:1 profit:1 climb:1 105:1 9:1 mln:1 stg:1 |@word year:1 1986:1 shr:1 33:1 54p:1 vs:7 34:1 2p:1 final:1 div:1 9:2 5p:1 make:1 14p:1 12:1 75p:1 pre:1 tax:1 profit:2 105:1 mln:6 stg:3 79:1 6:1 net:2 minority:2 56:1 52:1 1:3 turnover:1 duty:1 32:1 billion:2 46:1 800:1 000:1 extraordinary:1 debit:1 20:1 4:1 28:1 2:1 note:1 company:1 full:1 name:1 burmah:1 oil:1 co:1 plc:1 burm:1 l:1 reuter:1
BURMAH OIL PROFIT CLIMBS TO 105.9 MLN STG Year 1986 Shr 33.54p vs 34.2p. Final div 9.5p, making 14p vs 12.75p. Pre-tax profit 105.9 mln stg vs 79.6 mln. Net profit before minorities 56 mln vs 52.1 mln. Turnover net of duties 1.32 billion stg vs 1.46 billion. Minorities 800,000 stg vs same. Extraordinary debit 20.4 mln vs 28.2 mln. NOTE: Company's full name is The Burmah Oil Co Plc <BURM.L> REUTER^M
test/15388
test/15388 |@title china:1 wheat:1 crop:1 threaten:1 pest:1 disease:1 |@word pest:1 disease:1 destroy:1 1:3 mln:7 tonne:1 wheat:6 china:2 1986:2 threaten:1 crop:1 11:1 64:1 hectare:6 year:1 daily:1 say:2 14:1 54:1 affect:2 paper:1 abnormal:1 weather:1 condition:1 encourage:1 spread:1 midge:1 2:2 47:1 shanxi:1 henan:2 sichuan:1 anhui:1 hebei:2 jiangsu:1 shandong:1 aphid:1 4:1 67:1 red:1 mite:1 8:1 powdery:1 mildew:1 7:1
CHINA'S WHEAT CROP THREATENED BY PESTS, DISEASE Pests and disease, which destroyed 1.1 mln tonnes of wheat in China in 1986, are threatening crops on 11.64 mln hectares this year, the China Daily said. About 14.54 mln hectares of wheat were affected in 1986. The paper said abnormal weather conditions had encouraged the spread of wheat midges in 2.47 mln hectares in Shanxi, Henan, Sichuan, Anhui, Hebei and Jiangsu. In Henan, Shandong and Hebei wheat aphids are affecting 4.67 mln hectares, wheat red mite 2.8 mln hectares and wheat powdery mildew 1.7 mln hectares.
test/15389
test/15389 |@title rtz:1 see:1 rise:1 u:1 output:1 aid:1 1987:1 result:1 |@word rio:1 tinto:1 zinc:1 corp:1 plc:1 rtzl:1 l:1 rtz:6 say:2 predict:1 rise:1 industrial:3 production:1 u:2 europe:1 boost:1 1987:1 performance:4 consumption:1 base:1 metal:2 dlr:1 price:3 show:2 sign:1 improvement:1 although:1 iron:1 ore:1 market:1 weaken:1 oil:2 dlrs:1 1986:3 average:1 sustain:1 improve:2 energy:1 earning:1 company:1 comment:1 statement:1 result:1 restate:1 basis:1 net:3 attributable:1 profit:4 low:1 245:1 mln:7 stg:4 257:1 previous:1 year:1 pretax:1 also:2 dip:1 601:1 7:1 614:1 4:1 excellent:1 expand:1 range:1 business:2 offset:1 collapse:1 contribute:2 202:1 40:1 pct:2 increase:1 144:1 1985:1 60:1 total:1 trading:1 wholly:1 subsidiary:1 borax:1 ltd:4 cement:1 chemicals:1 pillar:1 first:1 time:1 contribution:1 recent:1 investment:1 acquisition:1 mainly:1 speciality:1 chemical:1 mineral:1 aid:1 activity:1 83:1
RTZ SEES RISING U.S. OUTPUT AIDING 1987 RESULTS Rio Tinto-Zinc Corp Plc <RTZL.L>, RTZ, said the predicted rise in industrial production in the U.S. And Europe should boost its 1987 performance. Consumption of some base metals and their dlr prices are showing signs of improvement, although iron ore markets have weakened. The oil price in U.S. Dlrs is above the 1986 average, and if sustained, should improve energy earnings. The company was commenting in a statement on its 1986 results which, on a restated basis, showed net attributable profits lower at 245 mln stg after 257 mln the previous year. Pretax profits also dipped to 601.7 mln stg after 614.4 mln. RTZ said the excellent performance of its expanding range of industrial businesses in 1986 was offset by the collapse in oil prices. Industrial businesses contributed 202 mln stg to net profit, a 40 pct increase from 144 mln in 1985, and 60 pct of the total. Trading performance improved at wholly-owned subsidiaries RTZ Borax Ltd, RTZ Cement Ltd, RTZ Chemicals Ltd and RTZ Pillar Ltd. First time contributions from recent investment and acquisitions mainly in speciality chemicals and minerals also aided performance. Metals activities contributed 83 mln stg to net profit.
test/15391
test/15391 |@title bridgestone:1 corp:1 brit:1 year:1 december:1 31:1 |@word group:2 shr:2 35:1 99:2 yen:2 vs:5 38:1 28:2 net:2 21:2 01:1 billion:11 08:1 current:3 47:1 73:1 48:1 06:1 operate:1 55:1 04:1 54:1 sale:2 792:1 71:1 864:1 note:1 company:1 forecast:1 year:1 37:1 70:1 22:1 52:1 800:1
BRIDGESTONE CORP <BRIT.T> YEAR TO DECEMBER 31 Group shr 35.99 yen vs 38.28 Net 21.01 billion vs 21.08 billion Current 47.73 billion vs 48.06 billion Operating 55.04 billion vs 54.99 billion Sales 792.71 billion vs 864.28 billion NOTE - Company forecast for current year is group shr 37.70 yen, net 22 billion, current 52 billion and sales 800 billion.
test/15394
test/15394 |@title ec:1 sugar:1 tender:1 see:1 mark:1 change:1 policy:1 |@word maximum:2 export:3 rebate:4 grant:1 yesterday:1 ec:3 sugar:5 tender:1 mark:1 change:2 policy:2 producer:2 complaint:1 obtain:2 intervention:3 price:3 outside:1 community:1 commission:3 source:2 say:4 46:2 496:1 ecus:2 per:2 100:2 kilo:2 118:1 350:1 tonne:2 864:1 previous:2 week:2 explain:1 world:1 market:1 condition:1 claim:1 short:2 level:1 need:1 equivalent:1 one:1 ecu:2 0:1 87:1 despite:1 fact:1 accept:1 785:1 000:1 operator:2 protest:1 low:1 early:1 may:1 withdraw:1 give:1 sign:1 plan:1 withdrawal:1 unless:1 review:1
EC SUGAR TENDER SEEN MARKING NO CHANGE IN POLICY The maximum export rebate granted at yesterday's EC sugar tender marked no change in policy over producer complaints that they are not obtaining the EC intervention price in exporting sugar outside the Community, EC Commission sources said. The maximum rebate was 46.496 Ecus per 100 kilos for 118,350 tonnes of sugar, down from 46.864 Ecus the previous week, but the change is explained by world market conditions. Producers claim the rebate was short of the level needed to obtain a price equivalent to the intervention price by over one Ecu per 100 kilos, and was 0.87 Ecu short the previous week, the sources said. They said this was despite the fact that the Commission had to accept 785,000 tonnes of sugar into intervention from operators protesting that rebates are too low. Operators have now until early May to withdraw this sugar. But they have not given any sign of planned withdrawals unless the Commission reviews its export policy, they said.
test/15396
test/15396 |@title burmah:1 oil:1 prospect:1 remain:1 favourable:1 |@word current:1 year:1 open:1 well:1 trading:1 prospect:1 remain:1 favourable:1 burmah:2 oil:2 co:1 plc:1 burm:1 l:1 say:1 statement:1 1986:2 result:1 company:1 plan:1 maintain:1 steady:1 rate:1 investment:1 marketing:1 operation:1 obtain:1 improved:1 profit:2 margin:1 liquified:1 natural:1 gas:1 lng:1 project:1 financial:1 capacity:1 continue:1 make:1 acquisition:1 within:1 business:1 sector:1 add:1 rationalisation:1 programme:1 include:1 sale:1 bahamas:1 terminal:1 peripheral:1 activity:1 complete:1 pre:1 tax:1 rise:1 105:1 9:1 mln:2 stg:1 79:1 6:1 reuter:1
BURMAH OIL PROSPECTS REMAIN FAVOURABLE The current year has opened well, with trading prospects remaining favourable, Burmah Oil Co Plc <BURM.L> said in a statement with its 1986 results. The company plans to maintain a steady rate of investment in its marketing operations and to obtain improved profit margins on its liquified natural gas, LNG, project. Burmah has the financial capacity to continue making acquisitions within its business sectors, it added. The rationalisation programme, including sale of the Bahamas oil terminal and all peripheral activities, is now complete. Pre-tax profit for 1986 rose to 105.9 mln stg from 79.6 mln. REUTER^M
test/15397
test/15397 |@title gebrueder:1 sulzer:1 1986:1 profit:1 almost:1 60:1 pct:1 |@word year:1 1986:1 consolidate:1 net:2 profit:2 67:1 mln:4 swiss:1 franc:7 vs:6 42:1 dividend:1 100:1 per:2 register:1 share:1 80:1 10:1 participation:1 certificate:1 eight:1 consolidated:1 turnover:2 4:3 55:1 billion:4 54:1 parent:2 company:3 38:1 2:3 26:1 20:1 29:1 note:1 full:1 name:1 gebrueder:1 sulzer:1 ag:1 sulz:1 z:1
GEBRUEDER SULZER 1986 PROFIT UP ALMOST 60 PCT Year 1986 Consolidated net profit 67 mln Swiss francs vs 42 mln. Dividend 100 francs per registered share vs 80 francs and 10 francs per participation certificate vs eight. Consolidated turnover 4.55 billion francs vs 4.54 billion. Parent company net profit 38.2 mln francs vs 26.4 mln. Parent company turnover 2.20 billion francs vs 2.29 billion. Note - Company's full name is Gebrueder Sulzer AG <SULZ.Z>
test/15400
test/15400 |@title japan:1 business:1 leader:1 say:1 g:1 7:1 accord:1 worry:1 |@word leader:1 two:1 japan:4 top:1 business:1 group:2 say:5 separate:1 statement:2 seven:1 g:4 7:4 accord:3 reach:1 washington:1 yesterday:1 deep:1 concern:1 show:1 major:1 industrial:1 nation:2 regard:1 yen:4 current:1 level:3 appropriate:2 eishiro:1 saito:2 chairman:2 federation:1 economic:3 organization:1 keidanren:1 present:2 rate:3 well:1 adequate:1 elaborate:1 takashi:1 ishihara:2 committee:1 development:1 prevent:1 rise:2 understand:1 approve:1 excessively:1 since:1 paris:1 member:2 britain:1 canada:1 france:1 italy:1 u:1 west:1 germany:1 consider:1 currency:1 within:1 range:1 broadly:1 consistent:1 fundamental:1 call:1 prepare:1 intervene:1 market:1 strongly:1 enough:1 ensure:1 exchange:1 stabilise:1
JAPAN BUSINESS LEADERS SAY G-7 ACCORD IS WORRYING The leaders of two of Japan's top business groups said in separate statements the Group of Seven (G-7) accord reached in Washington yesterday is of deep concern to Japan because it shows the major industrial nations regard the yen's current level as appropriate. Eishiro Saito, chairman of the Federation of Economic Organizations (Keidanren), said the yen's present rate is well above adequate levels. He did not elaborate. Takashi Ishihara, chairman of the Japan Committee for Economic Development, said the accord will not prevent the yen from rising further. 'We do not understand why the G-7 approved present rates as the yen has risen excessively since the Paris accord,' Ishihara said. G-7 members Britain, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the U.S. And West Germany said in a statement they consider their currencies are now within ranges broadly consistent with economic fundamentals. Saito called on each G-7 member nation to prepare to intervene in the market strongly enough to ensure exchange rates are stabilised at appropriate levels.