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TREASURY'S BAKER SAYS ECONOMIC COOPERATION WORKS | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
the meeting last month in Paris in which finance ministers
agreed to keep the dollar at current levels showed that the
economic cooperation process was working.
He said that at that meeting the surplus countries
committed themselves to strengthening their growth prospects,
while the deficit countries agreed to reduce their domestic
imbalances.
For its part, he said the United States must press forward
with reductions in the federal budget deficit and must continue
to oppose protectionist pressures.
Reuter
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PAN ATLANTIC RE INC <PNRE> 4TH QTR NET | Oper shr 15 cts vs 1.07 dlrs
Oper net 372,000 vs 2,601,000
Year
Oper shr 80 cts vs 61 cts
Oper net 1,952,000 vs 1,491,000
NOTE: Net excludes realized investment loss 13,000 dlrs vs
gain 986,000 dlrs in quarter and gains 1,047,000 dlrs vs
1,152,000 dlrs in year.
1986 year net excludes tax credit 919,000 dlrs.
Reuter
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QUAKER CHEMICAL CORP <QCHM> SETS QUARTERLY | Qtly div 12-1/2 cts vs 12-1/2 cts prior
Pay April 30
Record April 17
Reuter
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RAYTHEON <RTN> DIRECTOR RESIGNS | Raytheon Co said D. Brainerd
Holmes, who retired as Raytheon president in May 1986, has
resigned from the board effective April One.
The company said Ferdinand Colloredo-Mansfield, chairman of
Cabot, Cabot and Forbes, will succeed Holmes on the board.
Reuter
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MIDDLE SOUTH <MSU> TO CONSIDER DIVIDEND | Middle South Utilities Inc will not
consider payment of a common stock dividend until there is
another ruling on a Mississippi Supreme Court order rolling
back rates at the company's Mississippi Power and Light Co
subsidiary, chairman Edwin Lupberger said.
He told security analysts Middle South was close to
recommending resumption of the common stock dividend when the
Mississippi court ordered the rate rollback. Following the
order, he noted, the unit cancelled a planned sale of preferred
stock. Middle South has petitioned the court for a rehearing or
a stay of the order while it is being appealed.
Reuter
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MONARCH CAPITAL <MON> CALLS PREFERRED | Monarch Capital corp said
its board has called its convertible preferred stock for
redemption on May Eight.
The company said shareholders may exchange the preferred
shares for shares of new nonconvertible preferred stock with a
dividend of five dlrs to 6.40 dlrs per share, convert them into
common stock at a rate of 0.8 common share for each preferred
share or allow the preferred to be redeemed for 46.51 dlrs per
share.
Reuter
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CYANOTECH <CYAN> SETS WAY TO EXTRACT CAROTENE | Cyanotech Corp said it has
developed a new way to extract beta carotene from algae.
The company said the method reduces energy requirements by
70 pct and produces 90 pct recovery.
The company has been a commercial producer of beta carotene
since May, 1986.
Reuter
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SAS TO UPGRADE CABIN SERVICE IN SCANDINAVIA | Scandinavian Airlines Systems, SAS,
said it will improve cabin service for business class
passengers on intra-Scandinavian routes starting next week.
The company also said it will simplify timetables on routes
in Scandinavia, with many flights departing hourly.
SAS said it will upgrade meals and between meal
refreshments and relegate the sale of tax-free candy and
cosmetics to airport shops to give cabin attendants more time
to devote to the enhanced service.
Reuter
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BELGIUM PLANS TO OUTLAW INSIDER TRADING | A Belgian finance ministry spokesman
said new rules planned on insider trading would enable
offenders to be fined and imprisoned for up to a year, and be
compelled to forfeit gains.
The new rules require parliamentary approval, and
government sources said it was unclear when they would come
into force. Insider trading is currently not an offence in this
country.
The cabinet approved a separate bill that analysts said
includes provisions to make more difficult the build-up of
major new stakes in Belgian companies.
The bill would make obligatory the declaration of major
stakes in companies quoted on the bourse with own resources of
more than 200 mln francs.
The Minister for Economic Affairs would need to be informed
in advance of deals under which foreign interests planned to
buy a new stake of more than ten pct of the voting shares in a
large Belgian company, or to increase an existing stake to more
than 20 pct.
REUTER
|
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS <OCF> SELLS FOAM UNIT | Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp said
it sold its controlling interest in its French foam insulation
producing subsidiary to a Lafarege Corp <LAF> subsidiary.
Owens-Corning said it sold its interest in Sentuc Porxpan
SA for an undisclosed price.
Reuter
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U.S. SHOE INC 4TH QTR SHR 31 CTS VS 56 CTS
| |
U.S. TAX FRAUD CHARGES BROUGHT AGAINST THREE | Three men were charged today with
operating a large tax fraud scheme that provided more than 500
mln dlrs in phony tax losses for many prominent people,
including CBS Inc. <CBS> president Laurence Tisch and his
brother Preston, who is President Reagan's postmaster general.
The indictment was handed down by a federal grand jury to
in New York.
The three indicted were named as Charles Atkins, William
Hack and Ernest Grunebaum, all well-known promoters of tax
shelters. Atkins was well-known as an organizer of tax shelters
in the late 1970s and early 1980.
The indictment said that between 1978 and 1983, the
defendants conspired to defraud the government by arranging
"rigged and fraudulent" transactions in governmenmt securities
and false tax deductions based on phony trading losses and
interest expenses.
More than 350 mln dlrs in false deductions were passed on
to partners in three tax shelters.
In addition, the defendants sold over 200 mln dlrs in phony
trading losses and interest expenses to other entities and
individuals to be used as tax deductions.
The indictment said that over 1.1 billion dlrs in trading
losses and interest expenses were generated by the scheme but
were off-set by "fictious gains."
Laurence Tisch was said by the indictment to have reported
a net loss of 1.1 mln dlrs. His brother, Preston Tisch,
reported a loss of 480,000 dlrs.
None of the three men's clients were charged with any
criminal acts. But should the three be found guilty, their
clients will be required to pay taxes they originally avoided
through the tax shelter scheme, plus interest and possibly
penalties.
Reuter
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O'BRIEN ENERGY <OBS> IN CITICORP <CCI> LEASE | O'Brien Energy Systems Inc said it
has signed a 12-year 12 mln dlr lease with Citicorp covering
its wood gasification project in Quincy, Fla.
O'Brien said it retains rights to the residual value of the
project and may participate in the development of additional
electric generating facilities as part of a second phase of the
project, which started operating January One.
Reuter
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QUAKER CHEMICAL <QCHM> TO REPURCHASE SHARES | Quaker Chemical Corp said its
board has authorized the repurchase from time to time of up to
300,000 common shares.
Quaker now has about 6.6 mln shares outstanding.
Reuter
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TREASURY'S BAKER OUTLINES TRADE BILL CRITICISMS | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
that some of the trade bills proposed by Congress conflict
significantly with certain basic principles the Reagan
administration considers critical.
Baker told a Senate committee that the administration would
resist such measures as a general import surcharge,
sector-specific protection such as import quotas for individual
products, mandatory retaliation, and limits on presidential
discretion in negotiating more open markets abroad and other
trade steps.
Reuter
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CASINO COMMISSION DELAYS VOTE ON HOLIDAY <HIA> | The New Jersey Casino Control
Commission said it will put off for one week a decision on
whether to approve a 2.4 billion dollar recapitalization plan
previously announced by Holiday Corp <HIA>.
Holiday Corp is the licensee of Harrah's Marina Hotel and
Casino in Atlantic City, N.J.
A spokeswoman for the commission said the commissioners
felt they needed more time to review testimony taken at an
all-day meeting Monday.
A decision had been expected at the group's regular weekly
meeting today but the vote is now due April one.
The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement last week
completed a review of the Holiday recapitalization plan and
listed 10 areas of concern.
The enforcement unit, which did not draw conclusions or
make recommendations, said the Commission had to decide if the
adoption of a leveraged financial structure will leave Holiday
in a financially stable condition which is required by the New
Jersey Casino control Act.
Reuter
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WORTHERN BANKING <WOR> IN AGREEMENT WITH FEDS | Worthern Banking Corp said it
entered into a formal written agreement with the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
The corporation said it will submit written plans and
reports on a regular basis to the Reserve Bank on several
matters, including current and future dividend policy for the
corporation and its affiliates.
It also will inform the Reserve Bank about retaining an
independent management corporation to appoint a chairman of its
board, and it will first get approval from the Reserve Bank
before it takes on any more debt.
In addition, Worthern said it will report on its
maintenance of adequate capital at the corporation and its
affiliate banks, its strategic business plan for the remainder
of 1987 and 1988, and its improvement in the corporation's and
certain non-banking affiliates' position with respect to
certain assets previously subject to adverse classification.
In addition, Worthern will provide the Federal Reserve Ban
with quarterly progress reports specifying the actions taken to
secure compliance with the agreement together with quarterly
balance sheets and income statements.
Separately, Worthern said its results of oeperations for
the year ended Dec 31, 1986, previously announced Jan 29, 1987,
would be revised to reflect additional loan and lease loss
reserves and loan charge-offs, resulting in additional losses
for that period.
Reuter
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U.S. SHOE CORP <USR> 4TH QTR JAN 31 NET | Shr 31 cts vs 56 cts
Net 13.7 mln vs 25.2 mln
Sales 610.9 mln vs 575.9 mln
Avg shrs 45.0 mln vs 44.8 mln
Year
Shr 57 cts vs 1.46 dlrs
Net 25.5 mln vs 64.9 mln
Sales 2.00 billion vs 1.92 billion
Avg shrs 45.0 mln vs 44.5 mln
NOTE: Current year net both periods includes gain five cts
shr from sale of Just for Kids! and Giggletree mail order
catalogs and charges of 10 cts shr from writedowns of assets
related to the closing of linens and domestics stores and
leased departments and of leased shoe departments.
Year net includes LIFO inventory charges six cts shr vs two
cts shr.
Reuter
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NUTMEG INDUSTRIES <NUTM> SETS LICENSING PACT | Nutmeg Industries Inc said it
signed an agreement in principle with (NBA Properties Inc)
to make sportswear bearing the logos of National Basketball
Association teams.
Under the three-year pact, the company's Nutmeg Mills Inc
unit will design, manufacture and sell apparel for men, women
and children bearing the colors, names and symbols of the 23
basketball teams in the league.
Nutmeg signed similar pacts in February with (Major League
Baseball Promotion Corp) and last week with (National Hockey
League Service) to make sportswear with the logos of baseball
and hockey teams.
Reuter
|
ARGENTINE SOYBEAN YIELD ESTIMATES DOWN FURTHER | Argentine grain producers again
reduced their estimates for the total yield of the 1986/87
soybean crop, which will begin to be harvested in mid-April,
trade sources said.
They said growers now forecast soybean production this
season at between 7.5 and 7.8 mln tonnes, down from last week's
estimate of 7.7 to eight mln tonnes and the 8.0 to 8.4 mln
tonnes forecast in mid-February.
The new forecast is still higher than last season's record
total production.
Private sources put 1985/86 production at a record 7.2 to
7.3 mln tonnes -- 4.2 to 6.4 pct lower than the new forecast
for the current crop. The official figure for 1985/86 is 7.1
mln tonnes, 5.6 to 9.9 pct below this season's new estimates.
Growers in the past week discovered more empty soybean pods
in the main producing areas of southern Cordoba and Santa Fe
provinces and northern Buenos Aires.
The crop since January has been hit by high temperatures
and inadequate rainfall. Growers fear they may find more empty
pods and have to further reduce their forecasts of total yield.
The area sown to soybeans this season was a record 3.7 to
3.8 mln hectares, 10.8 to 13.8 pct higher than the 1985/86
record of 3.34 mln hectares.
The state of the crop continued to be good in general until
last week but intense, heavy rains since could have caused
damage in areas where rainfall was higher than 100 mm.
Where the rains were less heavy they were considered
beneficial although too late to improve yield estimates.
The rains also benefitted maize and sorghum crops in
southern Buenos Aires province but are not expected to
influence production forecasts.
In other areas, especially western Buenos Aires, where
rainfall was more than 200 mm, parts of the sunflower, maize
and sorghum crops not yet harvested may have been damaged.
The coarse grain crop harvest was interrupted last week by
rains which also reached over 100 mm in parts of Cordoba, La
Pampa and Santa Fe and almost 90 mm in parts of Entre Rios.
The area sown with maize this season was between 3.58 and
3.78 mln hectares, two to seven pct less than the 3.85 mln
hectares in 1985/86.
The yield of 1986/87 maize continued to be forecast at
between 9.9 and 10.1 mln tonnes.
This estimate is 19.8 to 20.2 pct lower than the 12.4 to
12.6 mln tonnes at which private sources put 1985/86 production
and 21.1 to 22.7 pct lower than the official 12.8 mln tonnes.
The sunflowerseed harvest has covered 23 to 26 pct of the
area sown and continues in parts of central Buenos Aires
although at a standstill elsewhere due to rain and floods.
A resumption of full harvesting and assessment of damage is
impossible until rains stop and a spell of a week to 10 days of
sunshine dries the fields.
The area sown this season was 2.0 to 2.2 mln hectares, down
29.9 to 36.3 pct on last year's record 3.14 mln hectares.
Sunflowerseed 1986/87 production is still forecast at 2.3
to 2.6 mln tonnes, 34.1 to 41.5 pct below the 1985/86 record of
4.1 mln tonnes.
The grain sorghum harvest was the least affected by the
rains, advancing steadily in Santa Fe and Cordoba and starting
in La Pampa to cover 14 to 16 pct of the total area sown.
The area sown was 1.23 to 1.30 mln hectares, 10.3 to 15.2
pct less than the 1.45 mln hectares the previous season.
Yield estimates remained at 3.2 to 3.5 mln tonnes, 16.7 to
22 pct down on 1985/86 production of 4.1 to 4.2 mln tonnes.
Reuter
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BETA PHASE <BETA> TO SELL EYEGLASS TECHNOLOGY | Beta Phase said it has
agreed to sell its shape-memory eyeglass frame manufacturing
technology and equipment to privately-held Universal Optical.
The company said Universal Optical will also purchase the
existing Beta Phase inventory of raw materials, its work in
progress and its manufacturing equipment and tooling.
Under the pact, Beta Phase will receive a 20 pct share of
CVI/Beta Ventures, a joint venture owned by Beta Group and
CooperVision Inc <EYE>, which markets worldwide shape memory
eyeglass frames. The venture will then be owned 54 pct by Beta
Group, 26 pct by Coopervision and 20 pct by Beta Phase.
Reuter
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LYNG SAYS AGRICULTURE SHOULD SHARE SPENDING CUTS | U.S. Agriculture Secretary Richard
Lyng said agriculture should share spending cuts under the
Gramm-Rudman law and that this would ultimately help exports.
"There needs to be some reduction of some expenditures to at
least get close to the Gramm-Rudman figure," he said.
"Agriculture would not be independent from that."
He told a Virginia Farm Bureau lunch, "I don't think anyone
believes we'll meet the 108 billion dlr target."
Lyng said if the federal deficit came down, this would help
exports. "A failure to get the fiscal deficit under control is
having a harmful effect on agricultural exports."
He added, however, that U.S. agricultural exports had
increased under the Farm Security Act but so far had not
recovered to what he called the successful levels of 1981.
Reuter
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TREASURY'S BAKER SAYS NEW MONEY NOT PANACEA | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
that massive new lending to the debtor nations could actually
increase their difficulties in the period ahead without
protections.
In testimony before a Senate committee, Baker said that
"throwing money at the debtor nations won't solve their
problems."
He said it might seem like an easy solution to the debt
problems and might appear a simple way to boost U.S. exports
and growth in the debtor nations.
Baker told the committee that such an approach could "worsen
their difficulties unless the new financing can be productively
absorbed and is consistent with their ability to grow and
service debt."
He said that the debt initiative that bears his name is a
long-term approach and that further progress "will be gradual
and will vary among nations, depending upon their own
determination to implement growth-oriented reforms and the
continued active support of the international community."
Reuter
|
VERTEX INDUSTRIES INC <VETX> 2ND QTR JAN 31 NET | Oper shr loss three cts vs loss four cts
Oper loss 40,870 vs loss 39,827
Revs 584,855 vs 727,432
Six mths
Oper shr loss two cts vs loss two cts
Oper loss 24,311 vs loss 26,947
Revs 1,246,992 vs 1,497,251
NOTE: Current periods exclude net gain of 150,865 dlrs from
termination of retirement plan for salaried employees. Also
excludes gain of 83,100 dlrs from in current qtr and gain
90,400 dlrs in six mths from benefit of tax loss carryforwards.
Company went public in September 1986.
Reuter
|
CYCLOPS <CYL> SAYS DIXONS APPOINTEES RESIGN | Cyclops Corp said the three
members of its board appointed last week by <Dixons Group PLC>
had resigned and that it named three Cyclops executives to
replace them.
Cyclops said the moves followed the announcement earlier
today by Dixons that it received only 20 pct of Cyclops
outstanding common stock under an extended tender offer that
expired yesterday.
Dixons initially ended its 90.25 dlr a share tender offer
on March 17 after receiving 54 pct of Cyclops shares.
However, the Securities and Exchange Commission last Friday
pressed Dixons to reopen the offer because the U.K.-based
company had dropped a condition that at least 80 pct of Cyclops
stock be tendered by the close of the offer.
Dixons then extended the offer until yesterday and earlier
today indicated that a substantial number of tendered Cyclops
shares had been withdrawn, leaving it with only 852,000 shares,
or just over 20 pct of the roughly 4.26 mln Cyclops shares
outstanding.
Dixons said today that it purchased the tendered shares,
which, when combined with the shares it already holds, gives it
a 21.7 pct stake in Cyclops.
Cyclops said its reconstituted board includes the three
newly named directors and five outside directors, all of whom
were on the board prior to Dixons tender offer.
The three Cyclops directors were replaced by Dixons
appointees on March 17 under an agreement reached between the
two companies.
Reuter
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ECUADOR NEGOTIATES WITH NIGERIA FOR LENDING OIL | Earthquake-stricken Ecuador is
negotiating with Nigeria to have the African country lend it
10,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude for export, Deputy Energy
Minister Fernando Santos Alvite told Reuters.
He said Ecuador was negotiating a shipments schedule and
the terms of repaying the loan. Ecuador has suspended crude
exports for about five months until it repairs a pipeline
ruputured by a March five tremor.
Santos Alvite added Ecuador is finalizing details for a
program under which Venezuela would temporarily lend the
country 50,000 bpd for export.
Reuter
|
COMPUTERVISION <CVN> UNVEILS NEW DESIGN GEAR | Computervision Corp said it
introduced additions to its CADDS 4X software line, a new
CADDStation workstation and upgrade kits for existing
CADDStation workstations.
The company said the new software products include
Autoboard SMT, priced at 35,000 dlrs, which is a microchip
version of its printed circuit board software.
The new CADDStation, based on Sun Microsystems Inc's <SUNW>
workstation technology, is a 32-bit system, available initially
as a server, with a processing capacity of four mips, or
million instructions per second.
The new CADDStation, Computervision said, is priced at
90,400 dlrs.
The company said it is also offering kits to upgrade its
2-mips CADDstation priced at 35,000 dlrs.
Reuter
|
NORTHERN STATES POWER CO <NSP> VOTES QUARTERLY | Qtly div 47-1/2 cts vs 47-1/2 cts prior qtr
Pay 20 April
Record 6 April
Reuter
|
SUMMIT TAX EXEMPT BOND FUND <SUA> SETS PAYOUT | Qtrly div 40 cts vs 40 cts prior
Pay Aug 14, 1987
Record April One, 1987
Reuter
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U.S. SENATE TRADE LEADER CONCERNED ABOUT CANADA | The chairman of the U.S. Senate
committee with jurisdiction over trade said he was concerned
about a resolution on bilateral trade negotiations adopted by
the Canadian House of Commons last week.
The resolution supports negotiation of a bilateral trading
agreement with the United States while protecting Canadian
political sovereignty, social programs, agricultural marketing
systems, the auto industry and Canada's cultural identity.
Senate Finance Committee chairman Lloyd Bentsen said the
resolution may jeopardize the viability of the proposed free
trade agreement between the two countries, which are each
other's largest trading partners.
"We need a truly free trade agreement, which means both
countries have to work toward a deal that is mutually
beneficial and comprehensive, a large agreement," the Texas
Democrat said in a statement.
"I do not question Canada's right to protect its political
sovereignty or cultural identity. However, if these phrases
mean the government of Canada means to take important economic
issues off the table in these negotiations, I am deeply
concerned," he added.
Bentsen said Canada restricts trade 15 different ways while
the United States uses only six trade restriction methods. He
said if Canada proposes an agreement where both countries get
rid of six methods of trade restriction, it would not be fair
and might not win Senate approval.
"I am deeply concerned that when the President visits Prime
Minister (Brian) Mulroney next month, he will be presented with
this kind of argument, and I hope he makes it clear -- as I did
when I was in Canada -- that only a mutually beneficial
agreement will be successful," Bentsen said.
Reagan and Mulroney are scheduled to meet April 5-6 in
Ottawa.
Bentsen urged Mulroney to withdraw a proposal that would
ban imports of independently produced films into Canada by
non-Canadians, which the senator called a protectionist
measure.
Reuter
|
TREASURY'S BAKER SAYS NEW MONEY NOT DEBT PANACEA | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
massive new lending to debtor nations could actually increase
their difficulties in the period ahead without protections.
In testimony before the Senate Committee on Governmental
Affairs, Baker said, "throwing money at the debtor nations won't
solve their problems."
Baker told the committee such an approach could "worsen
their difficulties unless the new financing can be productively
absorbed and is consistent with their ability to grow and
service debt."
He said the debt initiative associated with his name is a
long-term approach and further progress "will be gradual and
will vary among nations, depending upon their own determination
to implement growth-oriented reforms and on the continued
active support of the international community."
Reuter
|
BAKER SAYS U.S. WILLING TO COOPERATE TO STABILIZE EXCHANGE RATES
| |
BAKER SAYS U.S. WANTS TO STABILIZE EXCHANGE RATES | Treasury Secretary James Baker said
the United States and other nations were willing to cooperate
to stabilize foreign exchange rates at the levels that existed
at the time of an international agreement last month.
"Our position with respect to the dollar goes back to the
Paris Agreement that the currencies were within ranges broadly
consistent with underlying economic conditions," Baker told a
Senate committee.
Baker continued, "We said further that we and others are
willing to cooperate closely to foster stability in exchange
rates around those levels."
He referred to a February agreement by six leading
industrial nations to cooperate on monetary matters.
Baker refused to answer a question whether Japan and
Germany had done enough to stimulate their domestic economies
for the United States to support the dollar.
"I will not comment because the foreign exchange market
reads more or less than is intended in my statements," Baker
said.
Baker said that the other signatories recognized that they
must carry their share of the load of correcting external
imbalances that have hindered the world's economy.
He cited news reports that Germany would increase a
proposed tax cut for 1988 by about five billion marks to
stimulate domestic growth.
Japan also agreed to consider stimulative measures after
the Japanese budget was made final.
Baker said those nations were stimulating their economies
in a manner consistent with gains against inflation.
Reuter
|
JUSTICE, DOT BACK AIRLINE ANTITRUST SWITCH | Strong competition remains in the
airline industry despite a recent wave of mergers, a
Transportation Department official said.
But Assistant Transportation Secretary Matthew Scocozza
said at a Senate antitrust committee hearing he would not
object to a transfer of the department's authority over airline
mergers to the Justice Department.
Scocozza and Deputy Assistant Attorney General Roger
Andewelt said both departments felt airlines should be judged
under the same antitrust standards as all other industries.
The Transportation Department is due to lose its authority
in 1989, but subcommittee chairman Howard Metzenbaum wants it
shifted now because he feels the Department has approved too
many airline mergers.
"Airline mergers have proceeded at a breakneck pace with
barely a whimper being uttered by the Department of
Transportation. Nine airlines control 94 per cent of the
market," the Ohio Democrat said.
Metzenbaum said he was concerned about the effects the
pending U.S.-Air-Piedmont Airlines merger would have on
service, especially at Dayton, Ohio, a major Piedmont hub.
Scocozza said even with the recent mergers, such as Texas
Air Corp's acquisition of Eastern Air Lines and People Express,
more airlines were flying now in the United States than before
the 1978 airline deregulation act.
"Airline deregulation has worked, is working, and, given
the department's commitment to preserving a competitive
environment, will continue to work," Scocozza said.
He said the department considers the effect each merger
will have on competition over all the routes involved and will
not approve a merger which will reduce competition.
Scocozza said most of the recent mergers involved airlines
in financial difficulty being taken over by other carriers.
Andewelt said he was optimistic competition would increase
as airlines expanded airport hubs and routes and believed the
industry did not need special treatment under antitrust laws.
"It is time to treat the airline industry in precisely the
same way as other U.S. industries; any differences are not
significant for the purpose of merger analysis," Andewelt said.
Reuter
|
U.S. GOVERNMENT EXPANDS CRACKDOWN ON BAD DEBTS | The administration is expanding its
crackdown on bad debts, officials of the White House Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) told reporters.
OMB Deputy Director Joseph Wright said the administration
this year plans to turn over to private credit rating firms
data on about 3.5 mln "deadbeats" who are seriously behind or in
default in their payments on federal loans.
Next year, the government will turn over to private
collection bureaus four billion dlrs in bad education loans and
three billion dlrs in other bad government loans, Wright said.
The government is also considering letting individuals make
payments on their student loans with credit cards, officials
told reporters.
The Internal Revenue Service is already studying the use of
credit cards to pay income taxes, but this usage would require
a change in federal law while no congressional action would be
needed for credit cards to be used for student loans, the
officials said.
The officials disclosed these plans in releasing the third
annual OMB report to Congress on management of the U.S.
government.
The report details steps to be taken by the administration
to increase federal efficiency and to continue President
Reagan's highly publicized "war on waste, fraud and abuse."
According to the report, elinquent U.S. debt had soared to
68.3 billion dlrs, or 18.8 pct of total receivables, by the end
of the fiscal year that ended last Sept. 30. At the end of
fiscal 1981, when Reagan took office, bad debt stood at 29.8
billion dlrs or 12.3 pct of total debt.
But OMB officials said other Reagan administration efforts
had already saved taxpayers 84 billion dlrs and would save
another 25 billion dlrs or so by the time Reagan left office.
Reuter
|
FIRST FEDERAL DELAWARE AGREEMENT EXTENDED | <First Federal Savings Bank>
of Delaware said its agreement to negotiate exclusively for its
sale with <Oxford Financial Group> has been extended until
April 8 from March 18.
The company said it is in the final stages of talks with
Oxford over the terms of the proposed acquisition. Under a
nonbinding letter of intent signed in June 1986, Oxford would
pay 11 dlrs per First Federal share, subject to First Federal
shareholder approval.
Reuter
|
EDELMAN GROUP IN PLAN TO BUY MORSE SHOE <MRS> | A group led by New York investor
Asher Edelman said Morse Shoe Inc agreed to provide it
confidential company information and that his group would make
an offer to buy Morse only in a friendly, negotiated deal.
The group also said in a filing with the Securities and
Exchange Commission that its members would not, without Morse
approval, buy or offer to buy any company securities giving the
group a 10 pct or more stake in the company.
Edelman and his group said his terms held until the earlier
of 90 days from March 3 or the date on which Morse announces a
definite agreement for its sale.
At the same time, the Edelman group said it cut its stake
in Morse to 8.4 pct from 9.7 pct.
Reuter
|
PHILIP MORRIS' <MO> OSCAR MAYER SETS REDEMPTION | Oscar Mayer and Co Inc, a unit of
Philip Morris Cos Inc, said it will redeem all of its
outstanding 7.85 pct debentures due January 15, 1996 on April
30, 1987, at 1,014.50 dlrs plus accrued interest for each 1,000
dlrs prinicpal amount.
A notice of redemption will be mailed to noteholders March
27, it said.
Reuter
|
U.S AUTO AGENCY GRANTS FORD <F> AIR BAG REQUEST | The National Highway Transportation
Safety Administration said it granted a request by Ford Motor
Co to delay for four years until 1994 a requirement that air
bags or other passive restraint systems be installed on the
passenger side of the front seat of all new autombiles.
Under the decision announced today by Transportation
Secretary Elizabeth Dole, automakers will be required to meet
federal passive restraint requirements only on the driver's
side. "The action we are taking today will result in the
installation of more air bags, sooner than would have occurred
without this rule," Dole said.
Under the ruling announced today, 10 pct of model year 1987
cars must have automatic seat belts or air bags on the driver's
side. For the 1988 model year, 25 pct must have passive
restraints, and for 1989, 40 pct must be so equipped.
By the 1990 model year, all new cars must be equipped with
passive restraint systems on the driver's side.
For the passenger side of the front seat, ordinary seat
belts will suffice until 1994 under the new ruling. As
previously written, the federal standard required passive
restraint systems such as air bags on both the driver's and
passenger's side of the front seat in all new cars by 1990.
Reuter
|
MERCK <MRK> GETS FDA HEARTWORM MEDICINE APPROVAL | Merck and Co Inc said its
veterinary drug Heartgard-30 for the prevention of heartworm
disease in dogs has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
The company said the drug will be availiable only through
licensed veterinarians.
Reuter
|
JOHN LABATT SEES GOOD FOURTH QUARTER, YEAR | <John Labatt Ltd> anticipates a good
fourth quarter and a new peak in sales and earnings for the
fiscal year ending April 30, president Peter Widdrington told
financial analysts.
He would not make any specific forecast, but said he was
optimistic for further growth in fiscal 1988 in the company's
brewing and food products operations.
Labatt's earnings rose to 92.8 mln dlrs in the nine months
ended January 31 from year-earlier 78 mln dlrs. Revenue for the
nine months rose to 3.20 billion dlrs from 2.70 billion dlrs.
Widdrington said Labatt's three-year business plan, now
being updated, targets total sales of about six billion dlrs,
including 2.50 billion dlrs in the U.S.
Labatt, Canada's leading brewer, has expanded in the U.S.
food products industry by acquisitions.
Widdrington said Labatt's strategy for U.S. expansion
stemmed partly from its strong market position in the Canadian
food and beverage industry. The U.S. share of revenues for this
year will be about 35 pct, rising to 40 pct in fiscal 1988, he
said.
Reuter
|
HUSKY <HYO> SETS MEETING TO APPROVE MERGER | Husky Oil Ltd said the board
called a special meeting for April 22 for shareholders to vote
on its previously announced agreement for Hong Kong-based
Hutchison Whampoa Ltd and Hongkong Electric Holdings Ltd to
acquire a 43 pct interest in the company.
The acquisition requires two-thirds approval by Husky
shareholders other than <Nova, An Alberta Corp>, which owns a
57 pct interest in Husky.
If approved by shareholders, the amalgamation will take
effect April 30, Husky said.
Following completion, Oil Term Holdings Ltd, a new company
controlled by Nova, will hold a 43 pct stake in Husky.
Hutchison and Hongkong will indirectly hold 43 pct, Victor T.K.
Li will own nine pct and <Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce>
will have a five pct interest.
Husky said a special committee of five outside directors
recommended the board approve the transaction after determining
that the deal was in the best interests of Husky and fair to
shareholders.
Husky previously announced shareholders will have the
option to receive 11.80 Canadian dlrs cash for each common, or
6.726 dlrs cash and one common share of Oil Term Investment
Ltd, which will be controlled by Nova through Oil Term Holdings
and own an insterest in Husky.
U.S. shareholders will be restricted to the right to
receive 11.80 Canadian dlrs cash per share, which will be paid
in U.S. funds, the company said.
Reuter
|
BALTIMORE GAS AND ELECTRIC <BGE> FILES DEBT | Baltimore Gas and Electric Co said it
filed a registration with the Securities and Exchange
Commission to sell 100 mln dlrs of unsecured debt.
The debt filing was registered under the SEC's shelf
procedure which gives the utility up to two years to sell its
debt.
Once the registration becomes effective Baltimore Gas and
Electric will be able to issue debt on short notice as market
or corporate conditions warrant.
Reuter
|
MERCK <MRK> GETS APPROVAL FOR DOG HEART DRUG | Merck and Co said a drug to
prevent heartworm disease in dogs, ivermectin, has been
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
The drug, made by Merck's animal health and agricultural
products division, will be sold under the name Heartgard-30
through licensed veterinarians.
Reuter
|
WASHINGTON GAS LIGHT CO <WGL> HIKES PAYOUT | Qtly div 45 cts vs 44 cts prior
Pay May one
Record April 10
Reuter
|
ZENITH <ZE> NAMES NEW FINANCIAL OFFICER | Zenith Electronics Corp said
Howard Graham has been named vice president-finance and chief
financial officer, effective April 1.
Reuter
|
FERC DECISION COULD CUT COLUMBIA GAS <CG> NET | Columbia Gas System Inc said a
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission decision today on natural
gas cost recovery could reduce its 1987 earnings by about 1.25
dlrs a share.
The company said "this could bring earnings for 1987 below
Columbia's stated goal of earning no less than its 3.18 dlrs
per share dividend." It earned 2.12 dlrs a share in 1986.
It said management expects to recommend to the board that
the dividend rate be maintained in 1987.
Columbia Gas said the impact of the FERC decision may be
offset by a one-time accounting change rleated to future tax
liabilities under the new federal tax laws.
The company recorded these liabilities based on older,
higher tax rates, but an action being considered by the
Financial Accounting Standards Board could result in a gain of
about 1.20 dlrs a share in 1987, it explained.
"Thus there is a good chance that we will attain our 1987
earnings goal -- although not in the way originally planned,"
Columbia Gas said.
Columbia Gas said the FERC decision would limit the
recovery of certain gas contract costs by Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp, the company's principal pipeline subsidiary.
It said the decision specifically excluded from a purchased
gas adjustment filing by the pipeline costs related to
amortizing payments made to producers to reform gas purchase
contracts. These were excluded on the grounds the subsidiary
failed to sufficiently support cost recovery.
The company said its subsidiary is not precluded from
making a new filing to provide sufficient support.
Reuter
|
U.S. OFFERS MORE CREDITS FOR VEG OIL TO N. YEMEN | The U.S. Commodity Credit
Corporation (CCC) has authorized an additional 10.0 mln dlrs in
credit guarantees to cover sales of U.S. vegetable oils to
North Yemen, the U.S. Agriculture Department said.
The department also said at the request of the North Yemen
Government five mln dlrs in credit guarantees previously
earmarked for sales of wheat have been switched to cover sales
of mixed poultry feed.
The actions increase the value of credit guarantees for
vegetable oil for the current fiscal year to 38 mln dlrs,
reduce the guarantee coverage for sales of wheat to eight mln
dlrs and increase the coverage for sales of mixed poultry feed
to 10 mln dlrs.
All exports must be completed by September 30, 1987.
Reuter
|
PUERTO RICAN CEMENT CO <PRN> SETS PAYOUT | Qtly div five cts vs five cts prior
Pay May 13
Record April 14
NOTE: Company said up to 20 pct of dividend payment may be
withheld in accordance with Puerto Rico tax law.
Reuter
|
U.S. SHOE <USR> TO OPEN 421 STORES IN 1987 | U.S. Shoe Corp said it plans
to open 421 stores and close 33 units in 1987, bringing the
total number of its outlets to 2,655.
Earlier the large retailer reported that its earnings
dropped 61 pct to 25.5 mln dlrs for the year ended January 31.
In the year earlier period it earned 64.9 mln dlrs. Sales rose
four pct to 2.0 billion dlrs from 1.9 billion dlrs.
U.S. Shoe cited severe merchandising problems in its key
retail divisions and competition in its footwear divisions as
some of the reasons for the earnings decline last year.
U.S. Shoe also said it expects results for the first
quarter to end May 31 will show an improvement over the 3.2 mln
dlrs it earned in the year-ago quarter.
It said that initial orders for spring were down
"moderately," but reorder activity was "excellent" within its
women's footwear divisions.
The company said it "will continue to search for ways to
make its footwear assets more productive and operations more
efficient." It said it expects capital outlays in fiscal 1987
to exceed 165 mln dlrs, a 12 pct increase over 1986 levels.
It said capital outlays to improve domestic productivity
this year are planned to increase 50 pct over 1986 levels.
The company also said it plans to increase its presence in
Brazil and to start production in Hong Kong, which along with
other overseas offices, will strenghten its overall import
capability.
Reuter
|
BARRIS <BRRS> TO BUY BACK STOCK | Barris Industries Inc
said it agreed to buy back 763,546 shares, or 8.6 pct of its
own common stock from company founder Charles Barris for 12.50
dlrs per share.
Barris and the company have also terminated an agreement
which granted Barris Industries the right of first refusal for
a five year period on any project initiated by Barris, the
company said.
Reuter
|
CANADA MAY MONITOR STEEL SHIPMENTS | Canada may begin monitoring steel
flowing in and out of the country to determine if any steel is
being illegally "trans-shipped" to the U.S., senior government
trade officials said.
The officials, asking not to be identified, said the
government will investigate an industry contention that steel
imported from countries such as South Korea and Taiwan is being
diverted to the U.S. and ultimately exasperating concerns about
the level of Canadian exports south of the border.
But the senior officials, asking not to be indentified,
said that despite intense pressure from the Reagan
Administration, Ottawa was not considering any kind of formal
limits on Canadian shipments to the U.S.
"In a sense what I hope we are doing is buying some time,"
said one official who claimed Canadian companies were "fair
traders" in the big American market.
If approved by the Canadian cabinet, the officials said a
monitoring system will be established in the next three or four
months.
"I guess if we find trans-shipment is a problem, we would
have to do something about it," said a trade official.
Canadian steel shipments to the U.S. have risen to 5.7 pct
of the U.S. market in recent months, almost double the level
just two years ago.
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 among domestic steel
producers.
Some U.S. lawmakers have proposed Canada's share of the
American market be limited to 2.4 per cent.
The Ontario Government has urged Ottawa to require foreign
companies to obtain permits to import steel into the country.
Currently, import licences are required only for carbon or raw
steel, which makes up less than half the steel market.
Canada exported two billion Canadian dlrs worth of steel in
1986, while importing 944-mln dlrs worth of the product in the
same year.
Reuter
|
MEXICO SIGNS 100 MLN DLR IADB TOURISM LOAN | Mexican officials, led by Finance
Minister Gustavo Petricioli, signed a 100 mln dlr loan with the
Inter-American Development Bank to help finance the promotion
of foreign tourism.
The loan is for 15 years with 4-1/2 years grace at a
variable interest rate.
The IADB has approved previous loans totaling 207.5 mln
dlrs to help finance investments of some 580 mln dlrs in
Mexico's tourism sector.
The total cost of the program announced today is about 334
mln dlrs, of which the IADB loan will cover 29.9 pct.
Reuter
|
WESCO FINANCIAL CORP <WSC> 4TH QTR NET | Shr 79 cts vs 5.05 dlrs
Net 5,628,000 vs 35,936,000
Revs 41.8 mln vs 39.4 mln
Year
Shr 2.32 dlrs vs 7.24 dlrs
Net 16,524,000 vs 51,541,000
Revs 160.2 mln vs 114.9 mln
Note: Current qtr figures include securities gain of 2.1
mln dlrs, or 29 cts per share, vs gain of 34.3 mln dlrs, or
4.81 dlrs per share.
Current year figures include security gain of 4.6 mln dlrs,
or 64 cts per share, vs gain of 41.5 mln dlrs, or 5.83 dlrs per
share.
Reuter
|
HELM <H> SELLS ADDITIONAL SHARES IN BAMBERGER | Helm Resources Inc said that, pursuant
to the exercise of an overallotment option by underwriters in
Bamberger Polymers INc's initial public offering, it has sold
another 35,000 Bamberger shares and reduced its ownership in
Bamberger to 51 pct from 55 pct.
To date, Helm has sold 435,000 Bamberger's for 3.5 mln
dlrs.
Bamberger has sold a total of 600,000 shares and received
net proceeds of about 4.8 mln dlrs since the February 1987
offering.
Reuter
|
AMPAL-AMERICAN ISRAEL CORP <AIS.A> YEAR NET | Shr 27 cts vs 25 cts
Net 6,416,000 vs 5,988,000
Revs 112.2 mln vs 99.8 mln
NOTE: 1985 includes extraordinary income of 647,000 dlrs or
three cts/shr. 1985 restated.
Reuter
|
COCOA COUNCIL CHAIRMAN SEEKS BUFFER COMPROMISE | International Cocoa Organization, ICCO,
Council chairman, Denis Bra Kanon, said he will attempt to
reach a compromise on buffer stock rules for the International
Cocoa Agreement.
Bra Kanon called for bilateral consultations among
producers and consumers Thursday morning to resolve outstanding
differences on how much non-member cocoa the buffer stock can
purchase and differentials to be fixed for different origin
cocoa, consumer delegates told reporters.
Bra Kanon is expected to meet with about eight delegations
individually in attempt to iron out remaining problems.
Producers and consumers indicated support "in principle" for
the draft buffer stock rules package formulated over the past
week by a small working group, consumer delegates said.
Despite remaining differences delegates remained confident
a buffer stock accord would be agreed to by Friday when the
council session ends, but certain technical points need further
clarification, the delegates said.
Certain consumers are concerned that differentials included
in the draft buffer stock package are out of line with market
realities, consumer delegates said.
Unless these are modified there are fears it would promote
purchases of quality cocoas, such as Ghana origin, which are
normally required by manufacturers, they said.
Restrictions on buffer stock purchases of non-member cocoa
might lead to a supply overhang in Malaysian cocoa, which would
depress prices, they added.
Reuter
|
SNC GROUP EXPECTS HIGHER 1987 EARNINGS, SALES | <SNC Group Inc> expects 1987 earnings
to rise to 1.20-1.40 dlrs a share from 91 cts a share last
year, with revenues climbing to about 430 mln dlrs from last
year's 350 mln dlrs, president Alex Taylor said before the
annual meeting.
SNC, Canada's second biggest engineering and construction
group, became the country's largest ammunition manufacturer
last year with its 90 mln dlr acquisition of Canadian Arsenals
Ltd from the Canadian government.
The impact of that and several smaller deals will be felt
fully in 1987, Taylor said.
Defense preoducts and other manufacturing operations will
account for more than half SNC's total 1987 revenues, helping
to counterbalance the more cyclical engineering and
construction acivities, Taylor said.
Last year, SNC earned 8.7 mln dlrs, including a small
extraordinary gain.
In 1987, a total manufacturing activities will generate
about 235 mln dlrs in revenues, and engineering and
construction about 200 mln dlrs, he said, adding that defense
products operations should be a major contributor to earnings.
Reuter
|
MINE SAFETY <MNES> SELLS SOUTH AFRICA UNIT | Mine Safety Appliances Co said it
will sell through its German subsidiary, Auergesellschaft, its
controlling interest in MSA (Africa), (PTY) Ltd, of
Johannesburg, South Africa to Boart International, a wholly-
owned subsidiary of Anglo American Corp of South Africa Ltd
<ANGL>.
The company said the terms of the sale were not disclosed.
The company will operate as Boart-MSA (PTY) Ltd, it said.
L.N. Short Jr, president of the company, said it sold the
unit because of slumping profits due to South Africa's economic
decline.
Reuter
|
MEDAR INC <MDXR> 4TH QTR DEC 31 LOSS | Shr loss 10 cts vs loss nine cts
Net loss 558,800 vs loss 469,200
Sales 5.5 mln vs two mln
Nine mths ended Dec 31
Shr profit two cts vs loss four cts
Net profit 91,045 vs loss 207,000
Sales 17.3 mln vs 8.4 mln
Avg shrs 5,465,433 vs 5,037,819
Year ended March 31
Shr loss 28 cts vs profit 19 cts
Net loss 1,356,321 vs profit 818,723
Sales 10.9 mln vs 12.2 mln
Avg shrs 4,862,499 vs 4,683,591
Note: Medar changed end of fiscal year to December 31 to be
more in phase with business cycle of its major customers.
Reuter
|
MEDAR <MDXR> CHANGES FISCAL YEAR | Medar Inc said it
changed the end of its fiscal year to December 31 from March
31.
The company, in reporting its annual results, said the
change was made to bring its financial reporting in phase with
the order cycle of its major customers.
Medar earlier said it lost 558,800 dlrs in its final 1986
quarter, compared to a loss of 469,200 dlrs in the same 1985
quarter.
Reuter
|
EPSILON DATA <EPSI> GETS NEW CREDIT AGREEMENT | Epsilon Data Management Inc
said it had executed a new revolving credit and term loan
agreement with the Shawmut Bank N.A.
It said the total credit available under the newly-signed
agreement is six mln dlrs.
It said the new agreement will, at its option, convert to a
four-year term loan in September 1988.
Reuter
|
U.S. SECURITIES INDUSTRY ASSN BACKS RESTRAINTS ON TAKEOVERS, INSIDER TRADING
| |
CHEMFIX TECHNOLOGIES INC <CFIX> 2ND QTR NET | Ended Feb 28
Shr profit one ct vs loss four cts
Net profit 53,040 vs loss 255,568
Revs 2,252,246 vs 755,605
Six mths
Shr profit three cts vs loss eight cts
Net profit 217,884 vs loss 517,538
Revs 4,895,720 vs 1,569,662
Reuter
|
ALABAMA UPGRADED IN BRUCELLOSIS PROGRAM | Alabama has advanced from a Class B
to a Class A rating in the eradication of cattle brucellosis
program, thus relieving some restrictions in the interstate
movement of cattle from the state, the U.S. Agriculture
Department said.
To qualify for a Class A rating, a state must keep its herd
infection rate at or below 0.25 pct for 12 months.
The change in Alabama's classification reduces the testing
and identification requirements for cattle moved interstate for
breeding purposes, to immediate slaughter or to quarantined
feedlots, USDA said.
Brucellosis is an infectious bacterial disease that causes
abortion, reduced fertility and lower milk yields in cattle, it
noted.
Reuter
|
HELM <H> AFFILIATE SELLS SYSTEM | Teletrak Advanced Technology Systems
Inc, 35 pct-owned by Helm Resources Inc, said it received a
contract to provide its Laser Base 400 System to a national
commercial bank.
The system is an optical disk storage and retrieval system
that utilizes commercially accepted computer hardware, it said.
Teletrak also said a New York law firm has retained it to
develop the laser base software for the firm's word processing
system.
Reuter
|
FEDERAL PAPER <FBO> OFFERS PREFERENTIAL SHARES | Federal Paper Board Co Inc said
its is offering 2,800,000 shares, or 140 mln dlrs, of its 2.875
cumulative convertible preferred stock at 50 dlrs per share.
The company said it is applying to list the preferred stock
on the New York Stock Exchange.
The First Boston Corp, Morgan Stanley and Co Inc and
PaineWebber Inc are underwriting the issues, the company said.
The preferred stock has a liquidation preference of 50 dlrs
per share and is convertible at any time into common stock at
55 dlrs per share subject to adjustment.
The preferred stock is redeemable starting at 52.875 dlrs
per share on March 15, 1987, and declining on each March 15 to
50 dlrs on and after March 15, 1997.
The company said it intends to used the proceeds from the
sale to redeem its entire 125 mln dlrs of its outstanding 13
pct subordinated debentures due 2000, with the balance to be
added to the company's general funds.
Reuter
|
ALLIS-CHALMERS <AH> SELLS SWISS UNIT | Allis-Chalmers Corp said it
has sold its Elex Ag unit in Zurich, Switzerland, to private
investors for an undisclosed amount.
The company said Elex produces electrostatic precipitators
used in air pollution control.
Reuter
|
MONARCH CAPITAL <MON PR> WILL NOT RESUME TRADING | The New York Stock Exchange said
Monarch Capital Corp Pfd will not resume trading today.
Reuter
|
FLORIDA EMPLOYERS INSURANCE CO <FLAE> YEAR 1986 | Shr 29 cts vs nine cts
Net 651,000 vs 214,000
NOTE: 1986 net includes loss of 500,000 dlrs for
extraordinary item.
Reuter
|
SHELL OIL GETS 104.3 MLN DLR CONTRACT | Shell Oil Co of Houston has been
awarded a 104.3 mln dlr contract for jet fuel, the Defense
Logistics Agency said.
REUTER
|
U.S. 4-YEAR NOTE AVERAGE YIELD 6.79 PCT, STOP 6.79 PCT, AWARDED AT HIGH YIELD 95 PCT
| |
DETROIT EDISON FILES SHELF REGISTRATION FOR ONE BILLION DLRS IN BONDS
| |
NIKE INC <NIKE> 3RD QTR FEB 28 NET | Shr 12 cts vs 30 cts
Net 4,255,000 vs 11.5 mln
Revs 199.4 mln vs 258.7 mln
Nine mths
Shr 64 cts vs 1.19 dlrs
Net 24.4 mln vs 45.5 mln
Revs 639.7 mln vs 824.3 mln
Reuter
|
ZENITH NATIONAL INSURANCE <ZNAT> QTLY DIVIDEND | Shr 20 cts vs 20 cts prior qtr
Pay May 14
Record April 30
Note: Full name Zenith National Insurance Corp.
Reuter
|
REDKIN LABORATORIES INC <RDKN> QTLY DIVIDEND | Shr five cts vs five cts prior qtr
Pay April 17
Record April 3.
Reuter
|
INT'L MINERALS <IGL> PLANS BIOTECHNOLOGY PROJECT | International Minerals and
Chemical Corp said its board approved a 50-mln-dlr budget to be
spent over the next several years to build production
facilities for a newly developed product to be used to improve
the lean weight of hogs.
The new product, porcine somatotropin (PST) is described as
a natural bio-synthetic protein that improves the lean weight
and rate of weight gain, as well as reduces the cost of feed
for market hogs, the company said.
Specific details of the PST production project, including
sites for the proposed facilities and engineering plans, were
not disclosed.
International Minerals said it set a completion target for
the spring of 1989, by which time necessary Food and Drug
Administration approvals are expected to be obtained.
Reuter
|
COOPERVISION INC <EYE> QTLY DIVIDEND | Shr 10 cts vs 10 cts prior qtr
Pay April 17
Record April 9.
Reuter
|
UAL <UAL> SURROUNDED BY TAKEOVER SPECULATION | UAL Inc's diversification into hotels
and rental cars may be its downfall, analysts said.
Digesting its acquisitions of hotels, Pan Am Corp's Pacific
air routes, and Hertz rental cars, combined with stiff air fare
competition has left the company with an undervalued stock
price, analysts said.
The vulnerability of UAL's stock has fueled takeover
speculation, as have reports that real estate magnate Donald
Trump has bought a large amount of its stock.
Today, a UAL executive told Reuters its chairman Richard
Ferris spoke with Trump last week. Trump said his interest in
the stock was as an investment, but the executive said the
company does not know how much Trump owns or whether he has any
other plans.
UAL senior vice president Kurt Stocker said the company
believes its diversification strategy will work since it can
feed customers from one business to another. Several weeks ago,
it announced the new name of Allegis, to be taken in May.
"The strategy that Dick Ferris was talking about a couple
weeks ago when we announced the Allegis name is that the whole
really ends up to be worth more than the sum of the parts.
Unfortunately, some people haven't really come to this
understanding," Stocker said.
But those same parts - Westin Hotels, Hertz rental cars,
United Airlines and its reservation system - also has Wall
Street calculating a wide range of breakup values from about
100 dlrs per share to 130 dlrs per share.
Analysts aren't so sure the strategy is going to work. They
mention Transworld Corp, initially Trans World Airlines,
as an example of an airline diversification gone wrong.
Transworld Corp ended up spinning off its TWA airline.
Transworld, now TW Services, is selling Hilton International to
UAL.
"If you want to be negatively biased you say it's a stupid
philosophy, and if you're United and you put billions of dlrs
into other acquisitions, this is a good idea. There's not much
evidence one way or the other," said Dean Witter analyst Mark
Daugherty.
"In the short or long run, they all (UAL's businesses) make
money and perform well," said Stocker. He said the stock price
hasn't caught on since the strategy is relatively new.
Analysts say it's because earnings are relatively poor.
Earnings last year were 25 cts per share. Louis Marckesano of
Janney Montgomery predicts 1987 net of 3.50 dlrs per share.
"They're potential is enormous. I think their problem has
been execution. The strike was the single biggest factor that
set them back in 1985. Last year, the whole industry was
involved in fare wars. They were hit harder by the fare wars
than anyone else," said Marckesano.
Marckesano said United Airlines was particularly hurt by
the fare wars because it shares a Denver hub with Texas Air
Corp's price-slashing Continental Airlines.
Analysts said the same strategy which has contributed to an
undervalued stock price may also result in a strong takeover
defense. They said UAL paid a lot for some of its assets and
that in itself may make the company undesireable.
"I think they have a fairly tough management that will at
least be able to do battle with a potential shark and may well
be able to defeat them. These guys aren't pushovers," said
Steve Lewins, an airline analyst at Citicorp.
Lewins believes the company could ultimately boost the
stock price to a level that would reflect its assets, but it
will take time and improvements in earnings.
"If they put their nose to the grindstone, we're talking
about years for anyone (in the airline industry)," he said.
"The whole unwinding of the battle of Texas Air is going to
take years, establishing the Pacific in competition with (NWA
Inc <NWA>) Northwest is going to take until 1990," Lewins said.
UAL today rose 2-1/2 to 62-1/2 on heavy volume of 1.9 mln
shares.
Reuter
|
U.S. SECURITIES GROUP BACKS INSIDER RESTRAINTS | The Securities Industry Association
backed a variety of restraints on insider trading and hostile
corporate takeovers and asked Congress to define insider
trading in law.
The industry trade association called on U.S. securities
firms to take steps to protect sensitive corporate secrets to
guard against illegal trading by employees.
The association also backed broad federal restrictions on a
variety of tactics used in hostile corporate takeovers.
But it said investment banking firms should be allowed to
continue to engage in both arbitrage and merger and acquisition
activities so long as those functions were kept separate.
The SIA, in a report adopted yesterday by its board of
directors, backed a higher enforcement budget for the federal
Securities and Exchange Commission and called on U.S. stock
exchanges to beef up their supervision of member brokerages.
The report said securities firms "should be more rigorous in
restricting sensitive information on a need-to-know basis."
It said firms should train their employees to understand
the need for confidentiality of market-sensitive information.
It said legislation to define insider trading should avoid
expanding current law in a way that would impede the market.
It said an insider trading definition should exempt a
securities firm from liability for law violations by its
employees unless the firm had participated in or was aware of
the wrongdoing.
In the mergers and acquisitions area, the association
advocated a ban on greenmail payments or poison pill takeover
protection plans without prior shareholder approval.
It said a group or individual buying up a company's stock
should be required to file a public disclosure statement before
acquiring more than five pct of the company's shares. Under
current law, disclosure may be made as late as ten days after
exceeding the five pct limit.
The association said all purchases exceeding 20 pct of a
company's voting stock shouls be made only through a tender
offer open to all shareholders. Under current law there is no
limit on open market purchases.
The group said the federal government should preempt state
regulation of defensive takeover tactics.
The group said all tender offers should remain open for at
least 30 calendar days.
The current requirement is expressed in business days.
It said so-called "lockup" devices, in which securities are
issued to a friendly investor to seal a takeover deal or fend
off an unfriendly predator should be limited to 18.5 pct of the
target company's total common stock.
Association president Edward O'Brien said the group acted
out of concern over the ad hoc restructuring of corporate
America on Wall Street and investor fears about insider trading
and fairness in the marketplace.
Reuter
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TEXACO <TX> RESERVES DOWN DESPITE LOWER OUTPUT | Texaco Inc's oil and gas reserves
declined in 1986 despite reduced production and upward
revisions in the company's previous reserve estimates, its
annual report said.
The statement of the report's auditor was qualified -- as
was the previous one -- because of the unkonwn final impact of
the judgement won by Pennzoil Co <PZL> against Texaco on
charges Texaco interfered with Pannzoil's contract to acquire
Getty Oil Co.
The auditor's point out, as Texaco has in the past, the
company's loss of any of several pending court decisions in
this case could cause it "to face prospects such as having to
seek protection of its assets and business pursuant to the
bankruptcy and reorganization provisions of Chapter 11" of the
federal bankruptcy code.
Commenting on a Texas Court of Appeals ruling which reduced
Pennzoil's judgement by two billion dlrs, to 9.1 billion dlrs,
Texaco said it will file a motion for a rehearing by the
appeals court no later than March 30.
Texaco said the proven crude oil reserves of the company
and its consolidated subsidiaries totaled 2.54 billion barrels
at the end of 1986, down from 2.69 billion a year earlier.
However, inclusion of Texaco's equity in the Eastern
Hemisphere reserves of a nonsubsidiary company limited the
decline to 2.91 billion barrels from 3.00 billion at the end of
1985.
Worldwide production by the consolidated subsidiaries
declined to 341 mln barrels last year from 362 mln in 1985 and
upward revisions in previous reserve estimates rose to 143 mln
barrels from 117 mln, respectively.
Texaco said the largest drop in reserves came in the United
States -- where the total dropped to 1.46 billion barrels from
1.55 billion.
The company said U.S. liquids production averaged 660,000
barrels per day last year, down from 714,000 in 1985, with
about 44 pct of the decline -- some 24,000 barrels per day --
representing high-cost production shut-in or curtailed in
response to the decline in crude oil prices during 1986.
Texaco said its natural gas reserves totaled 8.16 trillion
cubic feet at year end, down from 8.87 trillion cubic feet at
the end of 1985.
Reuter
|
SIX REPORTED WOUNDED IN ECUADOR GENERAL STRIKE | At least six persons, including three
soldiers, were reported wounded at the start of a general
strike in Ecuador called to press the government to suspend an
earthquake-related austerity programme.
The information ministry said workers had partially
complied with the strike. Witnesses said bus transport ground
to a halt in Quito and schools were closed throughout the
country, but banks and shops remained open.
Three soldiers on a military truck were burned by a
gasoline bomb, information minister Marco Lara told reuters.
In the central city of Latacunga, three workers were
wounded in clashes with police, unionists and hospital
authorities said. The strike was called for one day but could
be extended.
Reuter
|
INT'L MINERALS PROJECT TO BOOST HOG LEAN WEIGHT | International Minerals and
Chemical Corp said its board approved a 50 mln dlrs budget over
the next several years to build production facilities for a
newly developed product to be used to improve the lean weight
of hogs.
The new product, porcine somatotropin (PST) is described as
a natural bio-synthetic protein that improves the lean weight
and rate of weight gain, as well as reduces the cost of feed
for market hogs, the company said.
Specific details of the PST production project, including
sites for proposed facilities and engineering plans, were not
disclosed. International Minerals said it set a completion
target for the spring of 1989, by which time necessary Food and
Drug Administration approvals are expected to be obtained.
Reuter
|
LOMAC TO PAY 17 MLN DLRS TO CLEAN SITE IN FIRST SUPERFUND-2 SETTLEMENT
| |
PULITZER PUBLISHING CO <PLTZC> DECLARES QTLY DIV | Qtly div 10 cts vs 10 cts prior
Pay May 1
Record April 10
Reuter
|
FEDERAL CO <FFF> SETS REGULAR PAYOUT | Qtly 29-1/2 cts vs 29-1/2 cts prior
Payable June 1
Record May 1.
Reuter
|
TRANSCANADA PIPE <TRP> SETS SHARE REDEMPTION | TransCanada PipeLines Ltd said it will
redeem all 1.6 mln outstanding cumulative redeemable
retractable first preferred shares, series F on May 1, 1987 at
a price of 52 dlrs a share, or a total of 83.2 mln dlrs.
The regular quarterly dividend of 1.795 dlrs a share
payable May 1, 1987 to shareholders of record March 31, will be
mailed separately from the notice of redemption, the company
said.
Reuter
|
SOUTHWESTERN BELL <SBC> SEES EARNINGS DILUTION | Southwestern Bell Corp said that
its planned acquisitions of cellular telephone and paging
systems, including those of <Metromedia Inc>, will result in
some initial earnings dilution and an increase in debt ratio.
In a letter to shareholders in its 1986 annual report, the
regional Bell company did not indicate the degree of earnings
dilution it expects from the acquisitions, which total some
1.38 billion dlrs. However, the company said the rise in its
debt ratio will be temporary and will leave its debt level
within an acceptable range.
In its 1986 yearend financial statement, Southwestern Bell
listed a debt-to-equity ratio of 43.4 pct, down slightly from
43.7 pct in 1985.
In 1986, the company earned 1.02 billion dlrs, or 10.26
dlrs a share, compared with 996.2 mln dlrs, or 10 dlrs a share
in 1985. Revenues dipped to 7.90 billion dlrs from 7.93 billion
dlrs.
Southwestern Bell said it expects the new tax law to have a
negative impact on its cash flow, due mainly to the loss of
investment tax credits.
By mid-year, however, the company said a reduced corporate
tax rate should have a positive impact on its net income and
cash flow.
In addition, the company said it is projecting a 1.7 pct
gain in customer telephone lines and a three to four pct
increase in long distance calling volumes.
Southwestern Bell said 1987 capital expenditures will be
lower that the 1.97 billion dlrs spent in 1986, a year in which
expenditures were held below budget.
Reuter
|
BOLIVIAN DEBT BUYBACK PLAN SAID GAINING GROUND | Bolivia's proposal to repurchase at a
deep discount the 900 mln dlrs it owes to foreign commercial
banks is likely to be accepted, bolivian central bank governor
Javier Nogales Iturri said.
Speaking to reporters at the annual meeting of the Inter-
American Development Bank, Nogales said Bolivia's bank advisory
committee, led by Bank of America, is seeking permission from
creditor banks worldwide to go ahead with the scheme.
More than 50 pct of the banks must approve, and Nogales
said he is confident this threshold will be reached.
"It's working out very well, and I think we'll get a clear
majority," Nogales said.
A senior banker working on the deal also said that banks
are responding positively and said all the legal waivers
necessary could be obtained within two months.
Bolivia halted all payments on its commercial bank debt in
March 1984. Hyperinfltion has been curbed and public spending
trimmed, but the country's debt still trades as low as 10 cts
on the dollar on the secondary market, and many banks have
written off most, if not all, of their loans to the country.
Few bankers see little chance for a subtantive recovery in
Bolivia's economic fortunes and so are willing to collect what
they can on the loans.
Nogales said Bolivia would offer to buy back the debt at a
market price. He said some banks might want to hold out for a
higher price, but others would see the repurchase offer as an
opportunity to cut their losses.
Bolivia intends to pay for the repurchase with aid that
foreign goernments, especially the United States and West
Germany, are providing to help finance the eradication of coca
crops. Cocaine, although illegal, is Bolivia's largest export.
The campaign to persuade farmers to grow legal crops
instead of coca would be financed instead using local currency,
Nogales said.
Because the fiscal deficit has been reduced to some four
pct of gross domestic product, money supply could be increased
to pay for the drug-eradication drive without too much of n
impact on inflation, he added.
Nogales said he does not expect Bolivia's debt repurchase
to become a model for other debtors in dire straits. "We're not
seeking a universal solution," he said."
Reuter
|
BRAZIL WANTS TO INCREASE STEEL EXPORTS TO U.S. | Brazil wants to increase its
steel exports to the United States, now limited because of
tough import restraints set in 1984 by the Reagan
administration, a spokeswoman for the Brazilian Steel Institute
(IBS) said.
Brazilian and U.S. Trade officials held the first of a
three-day meeting today in Brasilia to discuss the issue.
In 1984, after three months of painstaking negotiations,
the U.S. Government reached accords with seven steel-exporting
nations - Australia, Brazil, Japan, Mexico, Spain, South Africa
and South Korea - to reduce their shipments to the United
States by about 30 pct in 1985.
The 1984 restraints established that for 1987 Brazil's
steel exports to the U.S. Could not exceed 632,000 tonnes,
increasing to 640,000 tonnes in 1988 and 670,000 tonnes in
1989, the last of the five-year deadline set by the agreements.
Brazilian officials are trying to increase Brazil's export
share of non-flat products to the U.S. Market.
The spokeswoman said there were reports of domestic supply
problems in the United States.
Reuter
|
XYLOGICS IN INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING | Xylogics Inc is making an initial
public offering of 1,089,300 shares of common stock at 16 dlrs
a share, co-managing underwriters Salomon Brothers Inc and
Cowen and Co said.
Of the shares being offered, 750,000 are being sold by the
company and the rest by selling shareholders. The company has
granted the underwriters an over-allotment to buy up to 150,000
more shares.
Proceeds to the company will be used to acquire automated
manufacturing, testing and engineering equipment, to finance
facilities expansion, for working capital and general corporate
purposes.
The company makes controllers that manage data flow between
computers and peripherals.
Reuter
|
DETROIT EDISON <DTE> REGISTERS BONDS | Detroit Edison Co said it filed a shelf
registration for the proposed offering of one billion dlrs in
general and refunding mortgage bonds.
The offering will be underwritten by Morgan Stanley and Co
Inc. Detroit Edison said the bonds will be offered to the
public this year and next, with the first bond sale scheduled
for early next month.
Net proceeds from the sale will be used to refund
obligations under the company's Belle River Project financing
and to refund or replace funds utilized by the company for the
purpose of meeting debt and equity obligations.
Reuter
|
S/P DOWNGRADES DANA CORP'S 900 MLN DLRS OF DEBT
| |
ANCHOR SAVINGS BANK OFFERING FULLY SUBSCRIBED | Anchor Savings Bank said its
subscription offering was fully subscribed, precluding an
underwritten public offering of Anchor stock.
The company, which will be traded on Nasdaq under the
symbol <ABKR>, said final tabulation has not been completed.
The offering was made in connection with Anchor's
conversion from a federally chartered mutual savings bank to a
federally chartered stock savings bank, it said.
The bank offered 15.3 mln shares of common stock at 8.50
dlrs to 11.50 dlrs a share, with the possible issuance of up to
an additional 2,295,000 shares, it said.
The company said trading in the bank stock will not
commence until all regulatory requirements have been completed.
Anchor said it had total assets of 7.3 billion dlrs as of
June 30, 1986.
It said shares were offered to bank depositors, borrowers
and through a direct mail campaign.
Reuter
|
LEAR SIEGLER HOLDING CORP PLANS TO DIVEST AEROSPACE SUBSIDIARY
| |
VARITY CORP YEAR SHR LOSS 21 CTS VS LOSS 16 CTS
| |
NORDSON <NDSN> SETS 3-FOR-2 SPLIT | Nordson Corp said its board
declared a 3-for-2 stock split to be paid as a 50 pct stock
dividend on April 30 to shareholders of record April 10.
As a result, the number of shares outstanding will increase
to 10.2 mln from 6.8 mln, the maker of industrial equipment
said.
Reuter
|
BALDRIGE SEES U.S. TRADE DEFICIT STARTING TO DECLINE IN FEB OR MARCH DATA
|