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PS NEW MEXICO <PNM> STUDIES SYSTEM PARTNERSHIP | Public Service Co of New
Mexico said it is evaluating placing its electric distribution
system in a limited partnership with assets of about 400 mln
dlrs.
The utility said it advised a customer task force this is
one restructuring alternative being considered for the
company's electric business.
The structure is being evaluated as part of the company's
overall initiative in response to several goals announced by
New Mexico Governor Garrey Carruthers, it explained.
Public Service New Mexico said a central feature of its
reorganization concept would be to separate the company's
electric utility operation into independent generation and
distribution entities, creating the opportunity for a targeted
35 mln dlr a year rate decrease.
Noting the use of the limited partnership structure by a
variety of businesses recently, the company said it believes
"the concept may well have an application in the utility
business and intend to investigate it fully."
The generation company would provide projected power needs
of the distribution entity under a 30-year "power security
agreement" which would have a federally regulated rate
structure, the company said.
Public Service New Mexico said the restructuring could
provide for its gas and water utilities and its non-utility
companies becoming subsidaries of the proposed holding company
approved by the company's shareholders in May 1986.
This holding company would be the general partner of the
limited partnership, the company said.
The company said its limited partnership concept was
presented to an ad hoc customer task force convened by Gov.
Carruthers to review the company's reorganization proposals.
It said the reorganization and limited partnership are an
alternative structure that would help reduce rates through a
lower overall cost of capital.
Last month the governor said "I have outlined to PNM
critical goals which I have asked them to cooperate with may
administration in achieving" adding the goals include immediate
rate reduction, stabilization of future rates and stimulation
of business expansion.
The company told the task force the new distribution
company, under the limited partnership alternative or
otherwise, would continue to be fully regulated by state
regulators.
PNM's proposed generation company would continue to be
owned by common shareholders through the holding company. Its
rates would be set by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
which regulates for wholesale electric power sales and
transmission services. The generation company would have no
retail customers.
PNM said it expects to file a detailed restructuring plan
with state regulators in the near future, noting approval would
also be needed by FERC.
Reuter
|
CASTLE AND COOKE <CKE> TAKES FOURTH QTR LOSS | Castle and Cooke Inc said it would
take a fourth quarter after-tax loss of 33.9 mln dlrs from the
previously reported sale of its Flexi-Van container leasing
business to Itel Corp <ITEL> for about 215 mln dlrs.
Earlier, the company reported a loss for the fourth quarter
ended January 3 of 31.9 mln dlrs, or 76 cts a share, compared
with a loss of 3.3 mln dlrs, or 21 cts per share, in 1985's
fourth quarter.
For the year, however, the diversified holding company
reported a net profit of 43.9 mln dlrs, or 56 cts a share,
versus 46.4 mln dlrs, or 56 cts a share, in 1985.
David Murdock, chairman and chief executive officer, said,
"Both our food business and our real estate operations
increased their earnings during the year (1986)."
But, he added that Flexi-Van's 1986 results were hit by
depressed daily rental rates for leased equipment caused by
oversupplies.
The company also reported that George Elkas, formerly
executive vice president, has been named president and chief
operating officer of Flexi-Van Corp, while William Burns has
been named executive vice president of Flexi-Van.
Reuter
|
FED EXPECTED TO ADD TEMPORARY RESERVES | The Federal Reserve is expected to
enter the U.S. Government securities market to add temporary
reserves, economists said.
They expect it to supply the reserves indirectly by
arranging around 1.5 of customer repurchase agreements.
Federal funds, which averaged 6.22 pct yesterday, opened at
six pct and remained there in early trading.
Reuter
|
XEROX <XRX> LAUNCHES MORE POWERFUL SOFTWARE | Xerox Corp said it is launching in May
a more powerful version of its Xerox Ventura Publisher desktop
computer software called Release 1.1. that offers 80 new
features.
It said the new software, used for both long and short
documents in IBM PCs, includes conversion for Hewlett-Packard
Soft Fonts and more sophisticated graphics and page layout
applications.
Reuter
|
OMNIBUS COMPUTER IN DEFAULT ON LINE OF CREDIT | <Omnibus Computer Graphics Inc> said it
is in default of certain credit provisions of its line of
credit with its Canadian banker, resulting from a working
capital beficit of eight mln dlrs.
The company said it is currently negotiating additional
financing to alleviate the problem.
Reuter
|
CONVENIENT FOOD MART <CFMI> AGREES TO BUY CHAIN | Convenient Food Mart Inc said it
has tentatively agreed to buy all the outstanding stock of
Plaid Pantries Inc and two associated businesses in Oregon and
Washington for undisclosed terms.
Plaid Pantries owns and operates 161 convenience stores in
the Portland and Seattle areas. The other business are two
companies involved in the wholesale distribution of groceries
and health and beauty aids, it said.
Closing is expected by May 15.
Reuter
|
AFG INDUSTRIES <AFG> DEBT AFFIRMED BY S/P | Standard and Poor's Corp said it
affirmed the BB-plus rating on AFG Industries Inc's 185 mln
dlrs of subordinated debt.
S and P said it believed AFG would make acquisitions of
moderate size in the next few years. AFG's healthy cash flow
and pro forma cash balances of 169 mln dlrs at September 30,
1986, should be adequate to fund internal expansion and
moderate acquisitions.
While AFG's participation in a 1.4 billion dlr bid for Lear
Siegler Inc was aggressive, AFG was mainly interested in Lear's
profitable auto glass operations, S and P noted.
Reuter
|
WAL-MART STORES INC 4TH QTR SHR 65 CTS VS 47 CTS
| |
HOECHST CELANESE NAMES SENIOR OFFICERS | <Hoechst Celanese Corp>,
recently formed from the merger of the Celanese Corp with
American Hoechst Corp, a unit of <Hoechst AG>, said Juergen
Dormann, former member of Hoechts AG's management board, has
been named chairman and chief executive officer of Hoechst
Celanese.
The chemical company also said it named Dieter zur Loye,
formerly president of American Hoechst, vice chairman, while
Ernest Drew, former group vice president of Celanese, has been
named president and chief operating officer.
Hoechst Celanese said Richard Clarke, also formerly a group
vice president of Celanese, has been appointed senior executive
vice president of the new company, and Harry Benz, former
executive vice president and chief financial officer of
American Hoechst, has been named executive vice president and
chief financial officer.
The company also said the former Celanese Corp's fiber
operations will operate separately as Celanese Fibers Inc, a
wholly owned unit, pending divestment of certain polyester
textile fiber assets.
Reuter
|
DATA ARCHITECTS <DRCH> GETS TOKYO BANK CONTRACT | Data Architects Inc said it
received a contract from the <Bank of Tokyo> to expand the
installation of its bank electronic support systems at the
bank.
It said the contract exceeds one mln dlrs.
Reuter
|
GENERAL DATACOMM <GDC> IN SALE/LEASEBACK DEAL | General DataComm Industries
Inc said it has agreed to sell for 40 mln dlrs its Network
Services facility and its corporate facility and lease back the
facilities.
It said it has an option to buy the buildings back at a
later date. Proceeds from the financing will be used to reduce
debt, it said.
Reuter
|
MARINE MIDLAND <MM> BUYS BROKERAGE ASSETS | Marine Midland Banks Inc said it has
acquired the customer account base of New York discount
brokerage firm Ovest Financial Services Inc for undisclosed
terms to expand its discount brokerage operations in the
Northeastern U.S.
It said it will combine Ovest's activities with those of
its Marine Midland Brokerage Service unit.
Reuter
|
U.K. ONE BILLION STG BOND ISSUE EXHAUSTED | A one billion stg issue of nine pct
Exchequer stock due 2002 which became available for trading
only this morning was exhausted in mid-afternoon trading on the
U.K. Government bond market, dealers said.
The Bank of England said the issue was no longer operating
as a tap. The issue was announced Monday at a price of 96 stg
pct and dealers said the Government broker's supplies were sold
out this afternoon at a partly-paid 20-20/32 stg pct. The bonds
started trading this morning at 20 stg pct.
Dealers noted the market had seen vigorous demand
throughout the day, prompted mainly by sterling strength.
Dealers said that demand had been seen for the tap from
both domestic and overseas sources, including from Japan and
the U.S.
Although the issue had not been designated as free of tax
to residents abroad (FOTRA) widespread bullish sentiment for
the market in general had generated foreign buying.
The stock had been regarded as slightly expensive when it
was announced and dealers said that even first thing this
morning it had seemed slightly dear in relation to comparable
existing stocks.
However, sterling's continuing firm performance had
prompted interest in the tap right at the outset.
The issue's value had been enhanced by its partly-paid
structure, which not only enabled investors to defer payment of
the major part of the price until April 27, but also conferred
a substantial gearing element.
This meant, dealers explained, that investors who bought
the bonds benefitted fully from price gains registered by the
market in general, although only 20 stg pct of the total
purchase price was tied up initially.
REUTER
|
U.S. TREASURY DEPUTY ASST SECRETARY BERGER SAYS FURTHER DOLLAR DROP COULD CAUSE INFLATION
| |
WEST GERMANY, TANZANIA AGREE DEBT RESCHEDULING | West Germany and Tanzania have signed an
agreement on rescheduling 145 mln marks worth of commercial
credits, the Finance Ministry said.
Tanzania will now have until April 1, 1997 to pay back the
credits, some of which had originally fallen due in 1979, a
ministry statement said.
Interest on the credits will be paid at market rates.
REUTER
|
COMMISSION REPORT WARNS ON EC FINANCING | The European Community is close to
bankruptcy, the EC's Executive Commission said in a report.
In its bluntest ever warning about the state of EC
finances, it said "The Community is at present faced with a
budgetary situation which can only be characterised as being on
the brink of bankruptcy."
The report, dated Saturday, is meant to set the scene for a
major change in the way the EC is financed, which foreign
ministers are due to start debating next month.
The Commission blamed the EC's new cash crisis on the
"considerable reluctance" of governments to pay for decisions
they themselves have taken.
Reuter
|
AMERICAN MOTORS CORP LATE FEBRUARY CAR SALES
| |
WAXMAN INDUSTRIES <WAXM> TO SELL CONVERTIBLES | Waxman Industries Inc said it filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission a registration
statement covering a 25 mln dlr issue of convertible
subordinated debentures due 2007.
Proceeds will be used to repay short-term indebtedness and
for general corporate purposes, which may include acquisitions,
Waxman said.
The company named Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc as sole
underwriter of the offering.
Reuter
|
DOM REPUBLIC SELLS CZARNIKOW 35,000 TONS SUGAR | The Dominican Republic sold
35,000 long tons of sugar for immediate delivery, with an
option for 25,000 tons more, to Czarnikow Rionda of New York,
the state sugar council announced.
It was not immediately clear when the sale was made or at
what price. A council communique said "the sale was made at the
best prevailing conditions in the world sugar market."
Reuter
|
EC BACKS NEW MOVE TO ENCOURAGE UNLEADED GASOLINE | The EC Executive Commission has backed
a plan to allow member countries to ban regular leaded gasoline
in a move designed to encourage use of unleaded fuel.
It said in a statement it backed a proposal to allow EC
states to ban sales of regular grade gasoline containing lead
at six months notice. The proposal, which needs approval by EC
ministers, would not force any member state to impose the ban.
"It's an option, not an obligation," a spokesman said.
But the Commission said imposing the ban would encourage
the use of unleaded fuel, as well as making it easier for gas
stations by cutting the number of types of gasoline they had to
stock.
Reuter
|
SUN RAISES CRUDE OIL POSTINGS ONE DLR ACROSS BOARD. WTI NOW 17.00 DLRS/BBL
| |
STRONG POINT UNIT TO MARKET PRODUCT IN EUROPE | <Strong Point Inc> said its
Pharmaceutical Technologies Inc subsidiary will market in
Europe its Immunol-RD nutritional product, designed to protect
individuals exposed to medium or minimal radiation dosage
levels.
The company said it will market the product in Europe
because of the radiation exposure from the Chernobyl nucelar
power accident.
The company asserted that the product can offset the
deleterious effects of radiation, which weakens the immune
system.
Reuter
|
MICHAELS STORES <MKE> FEBRUARY SALES RISE | Michaels Stores Inc said February
sales rose 26.2 pct to 8,049,000 dlrs from 6,380,000 dlrs a
year before, with same-store sales up 10.6 pct.
Reuter
|
<DEVTEK CORP> 2ND QTR JAN 31 NET | Shr 14 cts vs nine cts
Net 1,180,000 vs 640,000
Revs 25.6 mln vs 20.1 mln
Six mths
Shr 26 cts vs 12 cts
Net 2,103,000 vs 853,000
Revs 44.8 mln vs 33.0 mln
Reuter
|
SAXTON INDUSTRIES LTD <SAXIF> YEAR NET | Shr 13 cts vs 41 cts
Net 1,079,100 vs 3,535,205
Revs 13.6 mln vs 16.2 mln
Note: Current results for 16 months after change in fiscal
year end to December 31 from August 31
Reuter
|
TORONTO SUN PLANS TWO-FOR-ONE STOCK SPLIT | <Toronto Sun Publishing Corp> said it
planned a two-for-one split of its common shares, subject to
regulatory approval and approval by shareholders at the April
21 annual meeting.
Reuter
|
SERVO CORP OF AMERICA <SCA> 1ST QTR JAN 31 NET | Shr 43 cts vs 41 cts
Net 316,000 vs 298,000
Sales 4,857,000 vs 4,543,000
Reuter
|
ELECTRO-NUCLEONICS INC <ENUC> 2ND QTR DEC 31 | Shr loss 1.77 dlrs vs profit 15 cts
Net loss 8,036,000 vs profit 576,000
Sales 16.2 mln vs 17.2 mln
Avg shrs 4,539,437 vs 3,816,580
1st half
Shr loss 1.96 dlrs vs profit 26 cts
Net loss 8,231,000 vs profit 996,000
Sales 30.9 mln vs 32.2 mln
Avg shrs 4,205,707 vs 3,814,141
NOTE: Current half net includes 68,000 dlr tax credit.
Current year net both periods includes 6,700,000 dlr
writedown of inventory of clinical chemistry products.
Reuter
|
WAL-MART STORES INC <WMT> 4TH QTR JAN 31 NET | Shr 65 cts vs 47 cts
Net 184.3 mln vs 133.1 mln
Sales 3.85 billion vs 2.77 billion
Year
Shr 1.59 dlrs vs 1.16 dlrs
Net 450.1 mln vs 327.5 mln
Sales 11.91 billion vs 8.45 billion
Reuter
|
FORD LATE FEBRUARY U.S. CAR SALES UP 29.3 PCT
| |
MICROPOLIS <MLIS> TO OFFER CONVERTIBLE DEBT | Micropolis Corp said it filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission a registration statement
covering a 75 mln dlr issue of convertible subordinated
debentures due 2012.
Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes and
possible acquisitions, Micropolis said.
The company named Kidder, Peabody and Co Inc as lead
manager, and Robertson, Colman and Stephens as co-manager of
the offering.
Reuter
|
<MIRTONE INTERNATIONAL INC> 1ST QTR DEC 31 NET | Shr two cts vs two cts
Net 407,396 vs 376,243
Revs 5,341,353 vs 4,292,819
Reuter
|
U.S. TREASURY AIDE WARNS ON INFLATION | Thomas Berger, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury, said that a further drop in the
exchange value of the dollar could cause prices to go up and
trigger inflation.
He told a meeting of the President's Export Council that
the Japanese and the Germans have cut their profit margins to
reflect recent drops in the dollar, so prices have remained
much the same.
But he added that if the dollar dropped further there could
be inflation in the United States.
Berger also said that a further devalued dollar may cause
economic depressions in some U.S. trading partners, and that
would not be in America's interest because it would close those
markets to U.S. goods.
Reuter
|
INDEPENDENT AIR <IAIR> IN EXCHANGE FOR WARRANTS | Independent Air Holdings Inc said it is
planning an exchange offer for its Class A warrants, which
expire April 11.
The company said for 30 days after the effective date of
the registration statement covering the offer, it would
exchange 100 dlrs principal amount of 12 pct convertible
subordinated notes due 1991 plus 300 common shares for each 800
warrants plus 145 dlrs.
It said interest on the notes would be payable annually in
cash or common stock at the company's option, and the principal
would also be payable in cash or stock at maturity.
The company said if the note principal were paid in stock,
a noteholder would receive 625 common shares for each 100 dlrs
principal amount. It said the notes would be convertible into
common stock at 16 cts per share after one year and redeemable
in whole or in part at the company's option after two years.
Reuter
|
LEAF DISEASE HITS SRI LANKA RUBBER | A leaf disease affecting seven pct of
Sri Lanka's rubber plantations may reduce output this year and
raise currently depressed prices, industry officials and
researchers told Reuters.
About 2,900 hectares of rubber planted with the Rubber
Research Institute (RRI) clone 103 have been hit by the fungus
"corenes pora" which attacks the roots of the tree and kills the
leaves. The disease was first discovered about six months ago.
Trade sources say prices might boom once again if the
crisis leads to output below the 1987 target of 143,000 tonnes.
Last year's output is estimated at between 133,000 and 135,000
tonnes.
Researchers say the fungus could spread to other rubber
clones if no immediate action is taken.
"The RRI is considering asking estates to remove the trees
seriously affected by the fungus because it was too late to use
chemicals to kill the disease," an Institute spokesman said.
Senior industry and research officials met yesterday at
Padukka, east of here, to discuss ways of controlling the
fungus which is affecting estates mostly belonging to the State
Plantations Corp and Janatha Estates Development Board.
The two state-owned groups account for 30 pct of rubber
land with the balance belonging to small private producers with
a total of 145,600 hectares.
The RRIC 103 is a new clone propagated by the Research
Institute as high yielding and recommended two years ago for
planting. Only the two state groups seriously planted these
clones while smallholders preferred the low-yielding but older
PBX Malaysian clones.
Officials at yesterday's crisis meeting said it was decided
to uproot only some of the affected trees while others would be
treated. They declined to comment on other decisions taken.
Trade sources said supplies had improved in the past week
but prices had hit their lowest since last December. "If there
is a shortage of rubber, prices are bound to rise," a spokesman
for a company buying on behalf of the Soviet Union said.
Rubber prices, particularly crepe, fell sharply by about
four rupees a kilo between December and March. The best crepe
one-X traded at 23.68 rupees a kilo, averaged 19.75 at this
week's auction. Sheet prices fell by a rupee in the same
period.
Quantities offered at the auction also fell to an average
of 300 tonnes per auction last month from 800 tonnes in
December because of wintering in early February in producing
areas.
Over 550 tonnes were offered at this Tuesday's auction with
the supply position showing improvements.
Trade sources said the smaller availability of rubber last
month did not raise prices as on previous occasions.
"Some factors, like less storage space from excess stocks,
meant we could not buy much at the auction until we disposed of
the rubber we already had," one buyer said.
Other sources said there were few forward contracts and
speculative buying last month, while delays in steamer arrivals
aggravated the problem.
European buyers delayed their purchases because of winter
closures of factories and also in the hope that prices would
ease further.
They said another problem that could hit the industry is
the dry spell in producing areas. "If the inter-monsoonal rains
expected in late March/April are delayed, we would have further
shortages," one official said.
"But this again could benefit prices," a buyer said.
Reuter
|
PYRO ENERGY CORP <BTU> YEAR NET | Shr 36 cts vs 66 cts
Net 4,775,000 vs 9,342,000
Revs 105.5 mln vs 130.0 mln
Reuter
|
EC COMMISSION DETAILS SUGAR TENDER | The European Commission confirmed it
authorised the export of 60,500 tonnes of current series white
sugar at a maximum rebate of 43.147 European Currency Units
(ECUs) per 100 kilos.
Out of this, traders in the U.K. Received 43,500 tonnes, in
the Netherlands 12,000, in Denmark 4,000 and in West Germany
1,000 tonnes.
REUTER
|
U.S. CAR MAKERS HOPE TO PROFIT FROM WEAK DOLLAR | The Geneva Motor Show, the first major
car show of the year, opens tomorrow with U.S. Car makers
hoping to make new inroads into European markets due to the
cheap dollar, automobile executives said.
Ford Motor Co <F> and General Motors Corp <GM> sell cars in
Europe, where about 10.5 mln new cars a year are bought. GM
also makes a few thousand in North American plants for European
export.
Now Chrysler Corp <C> is saying it will begin exporting
American-made vehicles before the end of this year to Europe, a
market it left in 1978 when it was near bankruptcy.
Ford's European operations in Britain and West Germany
manufactured and sold about 1.5 million cars in Europe last
year -- the largest U.S. Manufacturer's share of the European
market.
Opel/Vauxhall, with factories in West Germany, Spain and
Britain, accounted for most of GM's sales in Europe with about
1.3 million vehicles in 1986, officials said.
James Fry of GM overseas distribution system said GM hoped
for a five-fold rise this year in sales of North American-made
vehicles in Europe, selling between 7,000 and 8,000 (North
American-made) units in Europe for the year to August 1987. "A
low dollar makes our prices very attractive," he told Reuters.
Using an average price of 13,000 dlrs per car, his
projected sales figure would translate into between 91 million
and 104 mln dlrs in turnover, Fry added.
That would be a jump from 1986 when GM sold 1,500
North-American made cars for revenue of 19 mln dlrs.
Ford has 41 factories in West Europe, which manufacture all
of its cars sold on the continent. But Walter Hayes, vice
president of Ford Europe, told Reuters he did not expect a
large rise in sales this year as a result of the weak dollar.
"We have concluded that despite the dollar difference.... Europe
is inevitably a small volume market."
Hayes said the cost of changing American cars to conform to
European environmental specifications cut into profit margins.
But Robert Lutz, Chrysler executive vice-president, said
the weak dollar would now help Chrysler compete in Europe.
"After a lapse of almost nine years, Chrysler is about to
re-enter the European market," he said.
"We prefer to export to Europe rather than manufacture here
because it will allow us to take full competitive advantage of
the favorable exchange rates due to the declining value of the
dollar."
Reuter
|
BUNDESBANK CHANGES REPURCHASE PACT SYSTEM | The Bundesbank is planning changes in
the system by which banks bid for funds in securities
repurchase pacts to improve the flexibility of its key open
market instrument, central bank officials said.
Banking economists said the changes will shorten the tender
process to two days from three currently, enabling the
Bundesbank to offer repurchase pacts of shorter maturity if it
chooses, to steer money market liquidity more flexibly.
The changes will probably come into force in April.
Under the current system, banks must themselves specify at
the tender which securities they will sell to the Bundesbank
for subsequent repurchase, a time consuming business.
Banks hold securities for this purpose in safe custody
accounts in the Landeszentralbank (LZB) regional central banks,
which are the local offices of the Bundesbank at state level.
Some 50 billion marks of securities are held in such
accounts at the Hesse LZB, which covers the Frankfurt area.
The change to come into force next month will allow the
Bundesbank access to these accounts to select the bonds itself,
in a process legally comparable to direct debiting.
At present the Bundesbank generally announces a tender on
Monday, holds the tender late on Tuesday morning, announces the
result early Tuesday afternoon and allocates funds Wednesday.
The Bundesbank generally sets repurchase pacts running 28
days. But sometimes public holidays result in longer pacts or
longer tender periods being necessary.
For instance the Bundesbank announced a tender last Friday
to be held today (Wednesday) for crediting funds tomorrow
(Thursday). The advance announcement took into account the
carnival holiday in Duesseldorf on Monday and in Frankfurt
yesterday (Tuesday).
Central bank officials and money market dealers said the
shortening of the tender process should be seen as purely
technical, with no direct implications for interest rates.
"It is not a credit policy matter but a technical matter,"
said an official at the Hesse LZB.
Bundesbank President Karl Otto Poehl said last December
that security repurchase pacts had proved a much greater
success since their introduction in their present form two
years ago, and praised their flexibility.
The tender process changes will make the repurchase pact
instrument even more flexible, banking economists said.
By speeding up the tender process, they will make it
possible for the Bundesbank to offer repurchase pacts for
periods of less than a month, something long sought by banks,
to respond to changing money market conditions.
"With the help of this instrument liquidity steering will be
refined, but there won't be any effect on interest rates," said
Berliner Handels- und Frankfurter Bank economist Hermann
Remsperger.
The Bundesbank would be able to react more quickly to money
market developments, but by steering liquidity, not interest
rates, he said.
REUTER
|
UNITRODE CORP <UTR> 4TH QTR JAN 31 LOSS | Shr loss 13 cts vs profit 10 cts
Net loss 1,804,062 vs profit 1,370,063
Revs 33.5 mln vs 40.4 mln
12 mths
Shr loss 51 cts vs profit cts
Net loss 7,030,235 vs profit 9,163,141
Revs 149.4 mln vs 167.9 mln
NOTE: income before taxes for the 12 mths ended Jan 1987
includes gains 895,000 for fire insurance settlement, and
unusual charges of 7,900,000 for provisions for estimated cost
of severance pay for terminated workers and a one-time
writedown of inventory and equipment.
Reuter
|
NATIONAL SEMI <NSM> UNIT STEPS UP DELIVERIES | National Semiconductor
Corp's National Advanced Systems unit said it is accelerating
the delivery schedule for the two most powerful models of its
AS/XL series mainframe processors because of growing customer
demand.
The company said the AS/XL 90 and AS/XL 100, which had been
scheduled for general availability in the third quarter, will
now be available in the second quarter.
National Advanced Systems also announced a new 7480
cartridge tape subsystem which uses 18 track compact tape
cartridges.
Reuter
|
BUEHLER INTERNATIONAL INC <BULR> 4TH QTR NET | Shr five cts vs 20 cts
Qtly div two cts vs two cts prior
Net 223,000 vs 1,418,000
Sales 15.3 mln vs 17.1 mln
Year
Shr 61 cts vs 81 cts
Net 3,106,000 vs 5,940,000
Sales 63.0 mln vs 59.5 mln
NOTE: 1986 net includes tax credits of 63,000 dlrs in
quarter and 1,365,000 dlrs in year.
1986 net both periods includes 500,000 dlr pretax inventory
writedown.
Dividend pay March 27, record March 5.
Reuter
|
FORD <F> LATE FEBRUARY CAR SALES UP 29.3 PCT | Ford Motor Co said its sales of
U.S.-made cars in late February rose 29.3 pct over the same
period last year.
The automaker said it sold 51,411 domestic cars in the
February 21-28 period, up from 39,754 last year's period. There
were seven selling days in both periods.
Ford's sales of U.S. cars for the month of February were up
6.9 pct to 157,031 from 146,898. Year-to-date, the company's
car sales dipped 10.5 pct to 265,301 compared to 296,298.
Sales of Ford trucks in the late February period increased
48.3 pct to 39,080 from 26,358 vehicles sold in the same period
last year.
For the month, Ford sold 111,853 trucks, up 16.5 pct on a
daily sales basis from last year, when the company sold 96,058
trucks in the period. Ford's year-to-date truck sales through
February, at 195,694 vehicles against last year's 194,715, were
0.5 pct ahead of the 1986 pace.
Reuter
|
STANHOME INC <STH> RAISES QUARTERLY TWO CTS | Qtly div 23 cts vs 21 cts prior
Pay April 1
Record March 16
Reuter
|
INSTRON CORP <ISN> SETS QUARTERLY | Qtly div three cts vs three cts prior
Pay April 2
Record March 16
Reuter
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WEST GERMAN BANK ISSUES LUXEMBOURG FRANC BOND | Landesbank Rheinland-Pfalz
International SA is issuing a 300 mln Luxembourg franc private
placement bond with a 7-1/4 pct coupon at par, lead manager
Caisse d'Epargne de l'Etat du Grand-Duche de Luxembourg said.
The five-year, non-callable bullet bond is for payment on
March 24 and coupon payments are annually on March 25.
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FED PROPOSES CURRENCY, RATE SWAP RISK GAUGE AS PART OF NEW CAPITAL STANDARD
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GERMAN INSTITUTE SEES INFLATION RISING IN 1987 | The cost of living in West Germany will
likely be about 0.5 pct higher on average in 1987 than in 1986,
when the cost of living actually fell by an average 0.2 pct in
the first recurrence of "negative inflation" since the 1950s, the
HWWA economic research institute said.
The re-emergence of inflation will result mainly from the
fading of two factors which influenced the fall in the 1986
cost of living - the steep decline in both oil prices and the
value of the dollar, the institute said in a report.
The institute said inflation will see a rising trend in the
course of 1987, but will average only 0.5 pct for the year as a
whole because year on year rates will remain negative in the
first part of 1987.
Provisional inflation figures for February released last
week showed the cost of living last month was 0.5 pct lower
than in February 1986. In January prices had fallen 0.8 pct
against the same month a year earlier.
The HWWA said its forecast assumed the dollar would remain
around 1.80 marks and oil prices would range between 15 and 17
dlrs per barrel.
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CEREALS MCAS TO BE UNCHANGED NEXT WEEK | Cereals Monetary Compensatory Amounts,
MCAs, will be unchanged for the week starting March 9, an EC
Commission spokesman said.
They will be plus 2.4 points for the Netherlands and West
Germany, minus two for Denmark, minus eight for France, minus
nine for Ireland, minus 5.7 for Italy, minus 30.2 for Britain,
minus 44.1 for Greece and minus 10.5 for Spain.
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WORLD BANK SAYS S. AMERICAN DEBTORS STILL TALKING | Latin American debtor nations are
still willing to negotiate on their debts, World Bank director
for Latin America and the Caribbean Rainer Steckhan said.
In an article published in today's Handelsblatt daily,
Steckhan said despite decisions by Peru, Costa Rica, Ecuador
and Brazil to suspend some interest payments, these nations
were still willing to talk constructively about their debts.
"These countries are still prepared to negotiate, and the
instruments of cooperation developed thus far provide the means
to deal with the crisis over time," Steckhan said.
Several highly indebted nations have made great efforts to
meet their debt payments, especially Latin American countries,
Steckhan said.
Chile achieved gross national product growth of five to six
pct last year and quadrupled its trade surplus from 1984,
despite lower prices of key commodity exports like copper.
Mexico, hit by a catastrophic earthquake and declines in
world oil prices also boosted its non-oil exports by one third
in 1986, the highest growth rate in its post-war history.
The World Bank's annual lending to Latin America rose to
4.8 billion dlrs last year from three billion in 1984, he said.
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FED DRAFTS CURRENCY, RATE SWAP RISK GAUGE | The Federal Reserve Board voted
unanimously to propose a formula for calculating the risk of
interest rate and currency swaps as part of its ongoing effort
to come up with a new capital standard for U.S. banks that
takes into account the riskiness of a bank's loans and other
assets.
Fed officials said an identical proposal was being issues
today by the Bank of England.
The Fed set a 60-day period for public comment on the plan.
The proposal adopted today addresses only the credit risks
associated with interest rate swaps, forward foreign exchange
contracts and similar financial instruments.
Previously, the Fed Jan. 8 proposed a series of guidelines
for calculating the risk of other off-balance-sheet activities
that banks would be required to take into account in
calculating the minimum financial cushion they would need to
maintain.
Both guidelines set five broad categories of risk for loans
and other bank assets and assigned to each a level of risk that
would establish a bank's minimum capital needs.
The additional guidelines proposed today would determine
the amount of capital support required for a bank's current
exposure for a given asset and the potential future exposure.
The current exposure would be measured by the
mark-to-market value of the asset, which would reflect the
replacement cost.
Potential future increases in the replacement cost would be
calculated using credit conversion factors based on statistical
analyses by the staffs of the Bank of England and U.S. banking
regulators. Future exposure would rise over the life of the
asset.
The Fed staff said the risk gauge attempted to balance
conflicting needs for precision and simplicity.
They ignore, for example, the relative volatility of the
particular currencies involved in exchange rate contracts.
Board officials said the new gauge could increase the
capital required of the largest money center banks, which are
the principal participants in these types of activities.
They cautioned the Fed board to take account of the
potential impact of the plan on the ability of U.S. banks to
compete in world financial markets.
However, the staff concluded, "The credit risks inherent in
such contracts now constitute a significant element of the risk
profiles of some banking organizations."
The Fed proposal would exempt all but the 20-25 largest
participants in this market, on grounds the benefits of
including the smaller banks would be outweighed by costs.
Also excluded would be interest rate and foreign exchange
contracts traded on organized exchanges.
Governor Martha Seger said she was concerned that Japan was
not involved in the U.K.-U.S. effort to draft new capital
rules.
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IDEAL SCHOOL SUPPLY CORP <IDEL> 4TH QTR NET | Oper shr 10 cts vs eight cts
Oper net 325,000 vs 228,000
Sales 7,070,000 vs 6,483,000
Avg shrs 3,313,000 vs three mln
Year
Oper shr 69 cts vs 51 cts
Oper net 2,124,000 vs 1,536,000
Sales 31.2 mln vs 22.7 mln
Avg shrs 3,071,000 vs three mln
NOTE: 1986 net both periods includes 72,000 dlr tax credit.
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SALOMON INC <SB> SETS REGULAR QUARTERLY | Qtly div 16 cts vs 16 cts prior
Pay April One
Rcord March 20
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JANUARY CRUDE OIL MOVEMENTS FALL SEVEN MLN TONS | Worldwide spot crude oil movements fell
to 30.07 mln long dwt in February from 37.25 mln tons in
January and 41.44 mln in December, London shipbroker Howard
Houlder said.
The decline mainly reflected a sharp drop in movements out
of the Mideast Gulf, which totalled 7.4 mln tons last month
against 11.65 mln in January. These included shipments to
western options at 2.05 mln tons against 3.59 mln previously.
Liftings from the Gulf to eastern options fell to 4.15 mln
tons from 5.94 mln and those from the Gulf to other areas
dropped to 1.2 mln tons from 2.13 mln, Howard Houlder said.
U.K./Continent coastal movements declined sharply to 2.91
mln tons from 4.77 mln but those from the U.K./Continent to the
U.S. rose to 1.99 mln from 1.69 mln.
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EC SOURCES DETAIL NEW FARM SOCIAL PACKAGE | The 350 mln Ecu three-year package of
social and structural measures agreed early today by European
Community farm ministers features a plan to compensate farmers
for reducing output of certain surplus products, EC Commission
sources said.
The ministers agreed that under this "extensification"
scheme, farmers would qualify for compensation if they cut
output of specific products by at least 20 pct.
The plan would initially apply to cereals, beef, veal and
wine, they added.
Cereals farmers would have to achieve their output cuts by
reducing acreage, while cattle farmers would reduce their
number of head and vinegrowers would cut yield. In each case,
farmers would have to undertake not to step up their capacity
for output of other products which are in surplus in the EC.
The sources said payment levels have not yet been fixed but
will be designed to compensate farmers for loss of profit on
the production they forego.
The sources said the package also contains provisions for
payments to farmers who embark on a program aimed at protecting
or improving the environment.
It would also mean compensatory allowances in less favoured
farming areas would be extended to crops. At present such
allowances are available only for livestock.
The package would provide 20 mln Ecus for research into
alternative farming techniques, the sources added.
At a news conference EC Farm Commissioner Frans Andriessen
said the Commission is also working on proposals to enable the
EC and member states to provide direct income supports for
relatively poor farmers.
Andriessen did not give full details, but said member state
aid would be subject to "strict criteria to avoid distortion of
competition."
EC payments would aim to help farmers to survive a
difficult period while the EC tackles the problems of surplus
production.
The Commission withdrew from the package agreed last night
proposals to pay "early retirement" pensions to farmers aged 55
or over who gave up production. Those who took their land
completely out of farm production, rather than passing it on to
their heirs, would have received more generous payments.
Andriessen said the Commission plans to present revised
proposals along these lines in an effort to get a scheme
agreed.
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NATIONAL FUEL <NFG> PROPOSES ARGO REORGANIZATION | National Fuel Gas Co said it has
proposed a plan of reorganization for <Argo Petroleum Corp>.
The proposal calls for National Fuel's Seneca Resources
Corp subsidiary to receive 75 pct of Argo's principal producing
and undeveloped oil and gas assets in return for refinancing
Argo's debt to Seneca.
The plan calls for Seneca to made an additional 500,000 dlr
advance to Argo, National Fuel Gas said.
National Fuel Gas said it reorganzation was proposed in a
term sheet signed by Seneca, Argo and representatives of Argo's
unsecured creditors committee. Seneca became Argo's principal
secured creditor in November when it purchased notes totaling
about 40 mln dlrs from Continental Illinois National Bank and
Trust Co for about 35 mln dlrs.
National Fuel Gas said the additional advance to Argo would
allow it to capitalize, together with other assets, a new
company for its existing shareholders.
National Fuel Gas said the plan calls for Argo's existing
secured debt to be refinanced in an 8,875,000 dlr refinancing
note and a 75 pct interest in Argo's principal oil and gas
properties.
Seneca and Argo will enter into a venture to be 75 pct
owned by Seneca and 25 pct by Argo to develop their jointly
owned properties.
In addition to restructuring and refinancing Argo's
existing debt, Seneca will provide Argo with a two mln dlr
revolving line of credit to finance its 25 pct share of the
venture's development costs, National Fuel Gas said.
It said the proposed plan calls for Argo oil and gas assets
not subject to the venture to be transferred to a new
corporation. Existing Argo shareholders will receive all the
new company's common stock while its unsecured creditors will
receive 100 pct of the new capital stock of Argo in exchange
for their claims against the company.
Reuter
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WEST GERMAN BANK ISSUES LUXEMBOURG FRANC BOND | Landesbank Rheinland-Pfalz
International SA is issuing a 300 mln Luxembourg franc private
placement bond with a 7-1/4 pct coupon at par, lead manager
Caisse d'Epargne de l'Etat du Grand-Duche de Luxembourg said.
The five-year, non-callable bullet bond is for payment on
March 24 and coupon payments are annually on March 25.
Reuter
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U.S., BRITAIN AGREE FURTHER BANK CAPITAL PROPOSALS | The Bank of England and the U.S. Federal
Reserve Board have agreed new proposals for joint standards to
measure the risk of an array of credit exposures that do not
show up in bank balance sheets, the Bank of England said.
The plan, covering swaps, forward contracts and options
involving interest or exchange rates, complements proposals
agreed in January between the two central banks to make
commercial banks in the U.S. And Britain subject to similar
standards for measuring capital adequacy, the proposal said.
It said no final decisions had been reached yet and banks
have until April 16 to comment on the trunk proposals.
The Bank of England and Fed said they had faced a dilemma.
"On the one hand (we) are determined to require adequate
capital support for potential future exposure -- on the other
hand (we) are concerned that overly stringent capital
requirements might unnecessarily affect the ability of U.S. And
U.K. Banking organisations to price...Contracts competitively."
At the basis of the new proposals lies the concept of the
so-called credit equivalent amount - the current value of a
currency or interest rate contract and an estimate of its
potential change in value due to currency or interest rate
fluctuations until the contract matures.
In treatment similar to that agreed in January for balance
sheet assets, the credit equivalent will be assigned one of
five risk weights between zero and 100 pct, depending on the
quality of the counterparty, the remaining maturity of the
contract and on collaterals or guarantees to the contract, the
plans showed.
The proposal showed that collaterals and guarantees would
not be recognised in calculating credit equivalent amounts.
They would, however, be reflected in the assignment of risk
weights. The only guarantees recognised are those given by U.S.
And U.K. Governments or, in the U.S., By domestic national
government agencies, the proposals showed.
The paper said the proposed rules would not cover spot
foreign exchange contracts and securities traded in futures and
options exchanges.
It said U.S. Regulatory authorities and the Bank of England
were keen to encourage banks to "net" contracts -- consolidate
multiple contracts with the same counterparty into one single
agreement to create one single payments stream.
It recognised that "such arrangements may in certain
circumstances reduce credit risk and wish to encourage their
further development and implementation," and said some of the
current proposals may be changed to take this into account.
The paper said the proposed rules would not cover spot
foreign exchange contracts and securities traded in futures and
options exchanges.
It said U.S. Regulatory authorities and the Bank of England
were keen to encourage banks to "net" contracts -- consolidate
multiple contracts with the same counterparty into one single
agreement to create one single payments stream.
It recognised that "such arrangements may in certain
circumstances reduce credit risk and wish to encourage their
further development and implementation," and said some of the
current proposals may be changed to take this into account.
Reuter
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OUTBOARD MARINE <OM> KNOWS NO REASON STOCK IS UP | Outboard Marine Corp, whose stock is
trading higher, said there were no corporate developments to
account for the rise.
Outboard Marine was up 2-1/2 to 34 with 48,000 shares
traded.
A spokesman said the company wasn't planning any
announcements. Several analysts who follow the company also did
not know why Outboard was trading higher.
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PIEDMONT AVIATION <PIE> BOARD TO MEET TODAY | Piedmont Avaition Inc's board of
directors will conduct a special meeting beginning at 1400 est
today, a Piedmont spokesman said.
The spokesman would not say what was on the agenda.
In mid-February, Piedmont said its board would meet to
discuss all proposals to acquire the company. Its board also
withdrew a recommendation to accept a 65 dlrs a share cash
offer from Norfolk Southern Corp <NSC> in light of a competing
revised bid from U.S. Air Group Inc <U>. U.S. Air offer to buy
50 pct of the company's stock for 71 dlrs a share cash, and the
remaining for 73 dlrs a share of its stock.
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FIRST UNION <FUR> LEAVES DIVIDEND UNCHANGED | First Union Real Estate Investments
said its board left the quarterly dividend unchanged at 37-1/2
cts per share, payable April 30, record March 31.
The trust, which has raised its quarterly dividend
frequently in the past two years and in the first quarter in
both years, said the Tax Reform Act of 1986 has limited its
flexibility on dividends, and trustees will now consider the
appropriateness of any dividend increases only during the later
quarters of the year.
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RYKOFF-SEXTON INC <RYK> 3RD QTR JAN 31 NET | Shr 21 cts vs 28 cts
Net 1,456,000 vs 1,925,000
Sales 258.7 mln vs 290.2 mln
Nine Mths
Shr 77 cts vs 1.10 dlrs
Net 5,384,000 vs 7,658,000
Sales 804.3 mln vs 760.1 mln
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JAMAICA WILL MAKE NEW DRAWING UNDER IMF PROGRAM | Jamaica will draw down 40.9 mln Special
Drawing Rights (SDRs) from the International Monetary Fund
following IMF approval yesterday of a new credit program for
the island, the government announced.
Financing from the compensatory facility is meant to offset
losses in export earnings and does not carry the same
conditions attached to other IMF loans.
The government will also receive 85 mln SDRs under a new
stand-by agreement. The new credit agreement signed in January
was originally to last 15 months, but the government now says
it will go for one year beginning this month.
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SYSTEM SOFTWARE ASSOCIATES <SSAX> 1ST QTR NET | Periods end January 31, 1987 and 1986
Shr 12 cts vs nine cts
Net 507,000 vs 362,000
Revs 5,010,000 vs 3,558,000
NOTE: System Software Associates Inc is full name of
company.
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GEICO CORP <GEC> RAISES QTRLY DIVIDEND | Qtrly div 34 cts vs 27 cts prior
Pay March 31
Record March 16
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STANLEY WORKS <SWK> SETS QUARTERLY | Qtly div 19 cts vs 19 cts prior
Pay March 31
Record March 12
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NOVELL INC <NOVL> 1ST QTR JAN 31 NET | Shr 31 cts vs 20 cts
Net 3,541,000 vs 2,071,000
Sales 29.9 mln vs 14.5 mln
Avg shrs 11.6 mln vs 10.4 mln
NOTE Fourteen vs 13-week periods.
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FROST NOT EXPECTED TO DAMAGE POLAND'S WHEAT | Poland's winter wheat is likely to
survive recent frosts but the impact of the cold will not be
known until late April, the Polish meteorology institute said.
Some varieties of winter wheat sown in Poland can survive
ground temperatures as low as minus 20 degrees C, Spokesman
Teresa Tomaszewska told Reuters.
Even though an earlier thin protective layer of snow mainly
melted in February, air temperatures down to minus 30 C should
not be harmful, she said, but added that wheat can still be
damaged by cold spells in March and April, when young shoots
may be exposed to night frosts.
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BROWN-FORMAN <BFDB> TO CHANGE RECORD DATES | Brown-Forman Inc said at the
suggestion of the American Stock Exchange it has changed the
record date for the 28 ct per share quarterly dividend on its
Class A and Class B common stock that is payable April One to
March 20 from March 13, to coincide with the record date for a
three-for-two stock split declared February 26.
It said the record date for the dividend on its four pct
cumulative preferred stock has also been changed to March 20
from March 13.
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GOODYEAR TIRE <GT> DETAILS 1986 TAX REFUND | Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co said its
1986 results include a tax refund of 75.7 mln dlrs from the
costs of restructuring the company in a successful defense
against a takeover attempt by James Goldsmith.
Chairman Robert Mercer said, "Heavy restructuring costs
related to the takeover attempt combined with government tax
incentives for investments ... resulted in this federal tax
refund."
The refund was included but not broken out in its initial
1986 results, a spokesman said. It reported 1986 net income of
124.1 mln dlrs against 412.4 mln dlrs a year earlier.
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GEICO CORP <GEC> NAMES NEW BOARD MEMBERS | Geico Corp said it named two
board members, W. Reid Thompson, chairman and the chief
executive officer of Potomac Electric Power Company, and Norma
Brown, major general US Air Force retired.
Reuter
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U.S. PRESENTS MOSCOW WITH DRAFT MISSILE TREATY | The United States today handed Soviet
arms negotiators a draft treaty which would eliminate all
superpower medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe and slash
such weapons elsewhere to 100 warheads on each side.
Maynard Glitman, who heads the American team discussing
medium-range nuclear forces, told reporters the document, "a
full treaty text," was now on the negotiating table.
The proposal responds to a new Soviet offer to abolish
"Euromissiles" and cut sharply medium-range nuclear forces
elsewhere announced by Mikhail Gorbachev last Saturday.
The developments have been described by many disarmament
experts as the first real opening for a superpower accord since
they resumed arms control talks in March 1985.
Glitman presented the draft treaty during a one and a half
hour meeting at the American diplomatic mission with the Soviet
team on medium-range missiles headed by Lem Masterkov.
He told reporters: "It is a complete document. It has to be
because we want precision. We don't want any ambiguities."
The draft called for elimination - removal and destruction
- of all superpower medium-range missiles in Europe over five
years and reduction elsewhere during that period to 100 atomic
warheads on each side, Glitman added.
In Europe, this includes 270 Soviet triple-warhead SS-20's
and 316 single-warhead U.S. Pershing-2 and cruise missiles.
Reuter
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GREAT NORTHERN NEKOOSA <GNN> ANNOUNCES SPLIT | The Great Northern Nekoosa Corp
said it will recommend to shareholders a two-for-one common
stock split.
The company said it will make the proposal to shareowners
at its annual mmeting May 6 in Dothan, Ala., near the company's
Great Southern Paper division operations.
In conjunction with the stock split proposal, the
shareowners will be asked to approve an increase in the
authorized common stock from 60 mln to 150 mln shares, the
company said.
The company said it will propose an increase in its
dividend rate if the split is approved effective with the June
payment.
The company said the present rate on GNN common is 43 cts
per share. The company said it would recommend a quarterly rate
of 23 cts a share on the split stock. This would be equal to a
dividend of 46 cts a share on the present common, seven pct
higher than the current rate.
The company said it had increased the dividend by 13 pct
last December. Great Northern Nekoosa's last common stock
split, a three-for-two, was in December 1983, it said.
As of Dec 31, 1986, there were 26,661,770 shares of GNN
common stock outstanding, according to the company.
Reuter
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CONED <ED> AGREES TO CUT RATES, WRITE OFF DEBITS | Consolidated Edison Co of New York Inc
has agreed to reduce its rates 3.1 pct next month and write-off
50 mln dlrs of deferred debits, New York Governor Mario M.
Cuomo said.
He told a press conference the 132.5 mln dlr reduction in
annual rates, along with the removal of 50 mln dlrs in fuel
charges from base rates are part of an agreement which will
reduce the utility's base electric rates by about 500 mln dlrs
per year over the next three years and bar any rate increases
until at least April 1990.
Governor Cuomo said the agreement with Con Ed, which must
be approved by the State Public Service Commission, was
negotiated by the State Consumer Protection Board, Public
Servcice commission Trial Staff, the State Attorney General,
the City of New York and several other parties.
He said the agreement "will produce the first base eldctric
rate decrease for Con Edison in more than 20 years.
As a result of an earlier stipulation, we have already had
a four year freeze on Con Edison's base electric rates since
March 1983," he added.
Con Edison said the agreement reflects reduced federal
taxes and lower interest rates.
The utility said another factor includes improved economic
conditions in the New York City area, which led to increased
sales.
It pointed out "declining fuel costs have resulted in an
average 10 pct decrease in our customers' bills since 1984."
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HARRIS LIFTS BUILDERS TRANSPORT <TRUK> STAKE | Harris Associates L.P., a Chicago
investment advisor, said it raised its stake in Builders
Transport Inc to the equivalent of 466,754 shares, or 9.1 pct
of the total outstanding, from 335,800 shares, or 6.7 pct.
In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
Harris said it bought 36,700 Builders Transport common shares
on Feb 10 at 17 dlrs a share. It also said it bought debentures
on Feb 23 that could be converted into 94,254 shares.
Harris said its dealings in Builders Transport were on
behalf of its advisory clients. It has also said it has no
intention of seeking control of the company.
Reuter
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PAINE WEBBER <PWJ> IN FOUR MLN SHARE OFFERING | PaineWebber Inc, The First Boston Corp
<FBC> and Salomon Inc <SB> said Paine Webber Group Inc has
made a public offering of four mln shares of 1.375 dlrs
convertible exchangeable preferred stock, with a liquidation
preferance of 25 dlrs per share.
The firms, co-managers of the underwriting group, said
Paine Webber originally planned to offer 3.6 mln shares.
They added the shares are covertible into Paine Webber
Group's common stock at a conversion price of 44.125 dlrs a
share.
The underwriters also said the Paine Webber Group will use
the offering's proceeds to redeem about 60 mln dlrs of
debentures due 2008 and for general corporate purposes.
They added that the preferred stock is redeemable, at the
company's option, at prices declining to 25 dlrs per share on
and after March 15, 1997.
But, they said its is not redeemable before March 15, 1989,
unless Paine Webber Group's common stock price equal or
exceeding 140 pct of the conversion price at the time.
The group added the preferred stock also can be exchanged
on any dividend payment date beginning June 15, 1989, for the
company's 5-1/2 pct convertible subordinated debentures due
June 15, 2017.
Reuter
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COFFEE TALKS FAILURE SEEN PRESSURING U.S. | Failure of talks on re-establishing
International Coffee Organization, ICO, coffee quotas last week
may put political pressure on the United States, particularly
the State Department, to reassess its position, but the U.S. is
unlikely to back away from its basic demand quotas be set by
"objective criteria", U.S. officials said.
Jon Rosenbaum, assistant U.S. trade representative and head
of Washington's delegation to the talks, told Reuters on his
return from London that the United States is willing to resume
the coffee negotiations as early as April if necessary.
Rosenbaum said the United States will be "flexible" in
discussing the method of establishing objective criteria and
any transition to new quotas, but not on the basic aim of
establishing an objective method of setting quotas.
At the ICO talks major consuming nations, led by the U.S.,
proposed that future coffee export quota shares be calculated
by a formula incorporating a producer's recent exportable
production and verified stocks, while large producers led by
Brazil proposed maintaining the traditional ad hoc division of
shares. The consumer position would have in effect reduced the
market share of Brazil, by far the world's largest producer.
Rosenbaum said the administration would continue to support
legislation now before Congress which would allow the U.S.
customs service to monitor coffee imports, as a way to comply
with any future coffee quotas.
He said the Reagan administration would be reviewing the
coffee policy situation following the collapse of the London
talks, but "nobody is proposing we change our position."
However, other U.S. government officials involved in coffee
policy said they are bracing for a diplomatic and coffee market
offensive from producer countries, led by Brazil and Colombia,
to soften the consumer position.
"Knowing that its next crop is fairly large, Brazil will
kind of want to test the resolve of other producers and
consumers," said one U.S. official.
The U.S. official, who asked not to be identified, said
Brazil and Colombia may flood the coffee market in the next few
months in an effort to drive down prices and pressure other
countries, particularly the splinter group of small producers
who differed with the major producers in London.
This in turn could lead to urgent appeals from Latin
American countries, faced with mounting debt problems, to the
U.S. State department, and to the National Security Council in
the White House, for an easing of the U.S. position, U.S.
officials said.
The State department, a major player in setting U.S. coffee
policy, may then face conflicting pressures, particularly from
politically-sensitive U.S. allies in Central America, U.S.
officials said.
El Salvador and Guatemala both backed Brazil and Colombia
at the London talks in resisting pressures for quotas based on
objective criteria. But the Dominican Republic and Costa Rica
joined the splinter group, which said it would agree to
objective criteria.
There is a strong feeling among some in the State
Department that the United States should continue to support
the splinter group of producers who have taken the
politically-risky step of opposing Brazil on the objective
criteria question, U.S. officials said.
Within the consuming countries there also is expected to be
some pressure to reassess positions.
In London, the U.S. was supported by the U.K., the
Netherlands, West Germany, Japan, Australia and New Zealand on
the issue of objective criteria, U.S. officials said.
This bloc represented enough votes among consuming nations
to successfully prevent adoption of the producer proposals.
However, U.S. sources said West Germany's support was at
times qualified and there is some concern that the European
Community could come under pressure to be more accommodative to
producers in future talks. France backed the Ivory Coast and
other African producers during the talks.
A softening of the EC stance would make it more difficult,
although not impossible, for the U.S. to block producer plans.
While political manuevering by small producers and
consuming countries will be important, U.S. officials said the
key to any future outcome will be Brazil's position.
U.S. officials blamed Brazil's intransigence for the
failure of the talks and said a more flexible position from
Brasilia would be the most important step toward agreement.
Reuter
|
IBM <IBM> DEMONSTRATES NEW CHIP | International Business
Machines Corp said it demonstrated an experimental computer
chip called an opto-electronic receiver that transforms light
into electrical signals that translate into computer language.
IBM said the chip is two times faster than any similar chip
reported and can read 40 encyclopedia volumes a second.
The chip is made of gallium arsenide which moves electrical
signals faster than the silicon used in most computer circuits.
IBM also said that since gallium arsenide is more efficient
in turning light signals into electrical signals, it seems to
be an ideal material for the light-based computer
communications expected to be widely used in the future.
The chip's speed is also enhanced through the elimination
of wiring by placing the functionally dissimilar photodetector
and transistor circuitry close together.
Bringing these elements closer together also isolates the
receiver from other electronic circuits and reduces noise and
distortion, it said.
Reuter
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INVESTORS HAVE 12.9 PCT OF EXOVIR <XOVR> | Mark Hammer, a private investor from
Melville, N.Y., and members of his family told the Securities
and Exchange Commission they have acquired a total of 375,200
shares of Exovir Inc, or 12.9 pct of the total outstanding.
Hammer said his group has been accumulating Exovir stock
since Oct 28, 1985 for investment purposes and may buy more
shares or sell all or part of his current stake.
While he said he has no intention of seeking control of the
company, Hammer said that because of his "extensive business
experience" and his interest in Exovir stock, he may be
"invited" to become a member of the company's board.
Reuter
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TORRENTIAL RAINS HALT ARGENTINE GRAIN HARVEST | Torrential rains throughout
Argentina's grain-producing areas virtually paralysed coarse
grain harvesting in the week to yesterday, trade sources said.
Sunflower, maize and sorghum harvests were particularly
affected, they said. But the rains proved to be a great aid to
soybean crops as their harvesting will not begin until April or
May.
The rains did no damage to maize, sunflower and sorghum
crops though fresh rains in similar volume could reduce yields
and cut the total volume of this year's harvest.
Rainfall measured between 15 and 270 mm in Buenos Aires,
with the heaviest rains in the province's western sectors,
between 15 and 100 mm in Cordoba, 15 and 120 mm in La Pampa, 10
and 75 mm in Santa Fe, 10 and 60 mm in Entre Rios, five and 40
mm in Misiones, and five and 50 mm in San Luis.
No rain was recorded in Corrientes, Chaco and Formosa.
Growers did not revise their estimates for total volume of
the coarse grain harvest over last week's estimates.
Maize harvesting continued moving forward in central Santa
Fe, though slowly. Growers had harvested seven to nine pct of
total planted area, compared to five to seven pct last week.
Total maize area planted for the 1986/87 harvest was
estimated at between 3.58 and 3.78 mln hectares, or two to
seven pct less than the 3.85 mln hectares planted in the
1985/86 harvest.
Maize production is expected to total between 10.4 and 11
mln tonnes, or a drop of 17.5 to 19.4 pct over the 12.4 to 12.6
mln tonnes harvested last year according to private estimates,
or 18.9 to 21.9 pct lower than last year's volume, according to
official figures.
The sunflower harvest advanced to between seven and nine
pct of total planted area.
Two to 2.2 mln hectares have been planted with sunflowers
for this harvest, down 29.9 to 36.3 pct from last year's figure
of 3.14 mln hectares.
Sunflower production is expected to total between 2.4 mln
and 2.7 mln tonnes, which would mean a drop of between 34.1 and
41.5 pct against the record 4.1 mln tonnes harvested in the
1985/86 harvest.
Grain sorghum harvesting inched forward to between two and
four pct of total planted area, which this harvest is 1.23 to
1.30 mln hectares or 10.3 to 15.2 pct less than the 1.45 mln
hectares planted in the 1985/86 harvest.
Sorghum production is expected to total between 3.2 mln and
3.5 mln tonnes, or 16.7 to 22 pct less than the 4.1 to 4.2
million tonnes harvested in 1985/86.
Soybean production, by contrast, is expected to hit a
record 8.0 to 8.4 mln tonnes, which would mean an increase of
11.1 to 15.1 pct over last year's record figure of 7.2 to 7.3
mln tonnes, according to private estimates. Official figures
put last year's soybean harvest at 7.1 mln tonnes.
Soybean crops were reported to be in generally very good
condition, helped by abundant rains and high temperatures.
Total soybean-planted area for the 1986/87 harvest is
expected to be a record 3.7 to 3.8 mln hectares, up 10.8 to
13.8 pct from last year's harvest figure of 3.34 mln hectares.
Reuter
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DELTA <DAL> UNIT POSTS LOWER LOAD FACTOR | The Western Airlines unit of Delta
Air Lines Inc said its February load factor fell to 52.6 pct
from 57 pct a year earlier and its year-to-date load factor was
down to 52.2 pct from 54.8 pct during the same period last
year.
February revenue passenger miles rose to 790 mln from 786
mln a year earlier and year-to-date revenue miles were up to
1.64 billion from 1.60 billion.
Available seat miles for the month increased to 1.50
billion from 1.38 billion and for the first two months of the
year available miles were up to 3.14 billion from 2.92 billion,
Western Airlines said.
Reuter
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LOTUS <LOTS> TO ACQUIRE <COMPUTER ACCESS CORP> | Lotus Development Corp said it
has signed a letter of intent to acquire substantially all of
the assets of Computer Access Corp for undisclosed terms.
Computer Asscess makes BlueFish full-text search and
retrieval software for International Business Machines Corp
<IBM> and compatible personal computers.
The company said the acquisition is subject to approval by
both boards.
Reuter
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EQUITABLE OF IOWA COS <EQICA> 4TH QTR NET | Oper shr 78 cts vs 51 cts
Oper net 7,030,000 vs 4,944,000
Revs 126.6 mln vs 120.9 mln
Year
Oper shr 1.59 dlrs vs 89 cts
Oper net 14.7 mln vs 9,864,000
Revs 425.1 mln vs 416.9 mln
NOTE: Net excludes realized gains on investment of 73,000
dlrs vs 4,224,000 dlrs in quarter and 6,253,000 vs 14.5 mln
dlrs in year.
Net excludes discontinued Massachusetts Casualty operations
loss 5,180,000 dlrs vs gain 778,000 dlrs in quarter and gain
9,214,000 dlrs vs gain 3,504,000 dlrs in year.
Reuter
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CORROON AND BLACK CORP <CBL> RAISES QUARTERLY | Qtly div 21 cts vs 16-1/4 cts prior
Pay April One
Record March 17
Reuter
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CHEYENNE RESOURCES <CHYN> COMPLETES RESTRUCTURE | Cheyenne Resources Inc said it
has restructured its 499,750 debt to the First Interstate Bank
of Denver to 250,000.
It said it gave the bank 500,000 shares of restricted
Cheyenne Resources common stock. It said it would pay the
balance on a monthly basis over 28 months.
Cheyenne also reported it had settled out of court a
112,000 dlr judgment against it for 60,000 dlrs. It said the
judgment involved a land sale which Cheyenne refused payment on
after it learned it was not the land advertised in the sale.
Reuter
|
EC APPOINTS NEW TRADE CHIEF | The European Community Commission today
appointed its chief spokesman, Hugo Paemen, as its top official
in charge of multilateral trade negotiations, a Commission
spokesman said.
Paemen, a Belgian official who had previously been chief
aide to former External Affairs Commissioner Etienne Davignon,
has been in his post since January 1985.
The spokesman said Paemen will continue as chief spokesman
until the retirement on May 1 of Paul Luyten, who is now in
charge of EC departments handling negotiations in the world
trade body GATT, the OECD and other forums.
Reuter
|
EASTMAN KODAK CO FILES 900 MLN DLR DEBT SHELF REGISTRATION
| |
U.S. SENATOR TO PROPOSE 0/92 FOR 1987 CROPS | Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., said he
intended to offer legislation that would allow 1987 producers
of wheat, feedgrains, cotton and rice to receive at least 92
pct of their deficiency payments, regardless of how much they
planted.
Boschwitz told the Senate Agriculture Committee that
applying the so-called 0/92 provision to 1987 crops was
supported by the Reagan administration and would save
approximately 500 mln dlrs, including 266 mln dlrs in corn
payments, 90 mln dlrs in wheat and 30 mln dlrs in cotton.
The Minnesota senator said he might offer the bill on the
Senate floor or in a conference committee with the House of
Representatives in the event a similar bill before the House
Agriculture Committee is approved by that body.
Boschwitz told Reuters that neither he nor the U.S.
Agriculture Department had decided whether or how deficiency
payments should be guaranteed to farmers who might choose not
to plant under the decoupling scheme.
If payments are not set in advance under decoupling, market
prices conceivably could rise, thereby leading to diminished
deficiency payments.
Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.,
said he wanted to go to conference with the House as soon as
possible on the issue, but would have to study the matter
further before deciding how he would vote on it.
Reuter
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BRAZILIAN FINANCE MINISTER MEETS SWISS OFFICIALS | Brazilian Finance Minister Dilson Funaro
met his Swiss counterpart Otto Stich, Swiss Economics Minister
Jean-Pascal Delamuraz and National Bank President Pierre
Languetin on the fourth leg of a tour to discuss his country's
debt problems.
Funaro told reporters his trip, which has already taken him
to London, Paris and Bonn, was aimed at explaining his
country's stance to governments. Talks with commercial banks
will take place at a later date.
Funaro said a mechanism would have to be found to end
Brazil's debt crisis but it would not be easy.
Brazil would not repeat the measures it took in response to
its debt crisis of 1982, which he said had provoked the biggest
recession in his country's history, he added.
He said European and Japanese banks were showing a more
flexible attitude towards Brazil's problems than U.S. Banks and
it was difficult to discuss capitalisation with the latter.
A Swiss official said the Brazilian delegation had made no
demands.
Funaro, who travels to Italy this evening, said it was
unclear if he would go to Japan on Friday or return to Brazil
first.
REUTER
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CHRYSLER LATE-FEBRUARY U.S.-BUILT CAR SALES UP 11 PCT
| |
UAW TO MEET WITH PRESS THIS AFTERNOON ON AMERICAN MOTORS
| |
GATT TO RULE ON U.S. CUSTOMS USER FEE DISPUTE | The world trade body GATT has decided to
set up an arbitration panel to rule on objections by Canada and
the European Community to a customs user fee imposed by the
U.S. Government, a GATT spokesman said.
Canada and the EC told a GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade) council meeting that the fee, which imposes a tax on
an ad valorem basis on imports as of December 1, 1986, is
illegal under GATT rules.
U.S. Ambassador Michael Samuels said the fee, imposed by
the U.S. To help cover customs expenditure as part of the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, does
not breach GATT rules and is similar to fees charged by many
other countries.
Samuels suggested that a working party be set up to examine
the dispute, instead of a panel empowered to rule on it.
In another development, Hong Kong, supported by a large
number of developing countries, attacked the "textile and
apparel trade act of 1987" introduced in the U.S. Congress last
February 19.
Hong Kong representative Michael Cartland said the bill is
"blatantly protectionist." He added there is "almost nothing about
the bill which could be regarded as in any way consistent with
either the GATT or the Multi-Fibre Arrangement (MFA)."
If the bill were to be passed by Congress, Cartland said "it
would forestall any attempt to negotiate liberalisation of
world trade in textiles."
GATT's council also decided to set up a working party to
study China's application for full GATT membership. The group
is due to report to the next GATT council meeting on April 15.
Reuter
|
NATIONAL HEALTHCARE <NHCI> GETS DEFAULT WAIVERS | National Healthcare Inc said it has
received a waiver until May 26 of its technical defaults under
covenants of its bank credit agreement.
The company said that under an amendment to the credit
agreement, its line of credit has been cut to 125 mln dlrs due
to reduced requirements for acquisition financing, interest on
all borrowings has been increased and National Healthcare has
agreed to provide additional collateral.
It said the banks have advanced it another six mln dlrs for
working capital, bringing the total borrowed against the line
to about 120 mln dlrs.
National Healthcare said that during the waiver period it
intends to seek more permanent modifications to covenants of
the bank credit agreement.
Reuter
|
MCDONALD'S <MCD> FILES 300 MLN DLRS SHELF OFFER | McDonald's Corp said it filed a
shelf registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission
covering 300 mln dlrs of debt securities.
McDonald's said it intends to issue the securities from
time to time, denominated in U.S. dollars, and/or other
currencies including European Currency Units.
Proceeds may be used for debt refinancings, capital
expenditures and other general corporate purposes, the company
said.
Reuter
|
EC DAIRY PACT MAY DISRUPT MARKET - DUTCH FARMERS | The new European Community dairy
regime agreed last night is too complicated and may destabilise
prices, Abele Kuypers, secretary of the dairy section of the
Dutch farmers' organisation Landbouwschap said.
He welcomed the decision to write off existing stocks of
butter and skimmed milk powder and agreed there should be some
reduction of pressure on stores but said the Landbouwschap was
unhappy at the mechanism for limiting sales to intervention
except when prices fall too far.
But Harm Schelhaas, chairman of the Milk Commodity Board,
was less worried by the new dairy regime. Dutch milk output
will fall by up to six pct this year due to the new regime, but
cheese output should rise, he said.
Reuter
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INDIA BUYS UP TO 10 CARGOES SUGAR - TRADERS | India bought up to 10 cargoes of white
sugar at a buying tender today which originally called for just
two to three cargoes of March/April shipment, traders said.
London trader E D and F Man said it sold two cargoes at 233
dlrs a tonne CIF for March/April shipment with an option to
sell an additional two cargoes at the same price.
Traders said at least one other international trader made a
similar contract while a French house sold two cargoes at an
outright price of 233 dlrs CIF without the option. This brought
total Indian purchases to at least six cargoes with traders
having options to sell another four.
Reuter
|
CHRYSLER <C> LATE-FEBRUARY SALES RISE 11 PCT | Chrysler Corp said sales of its
U.S.-built cars rose 11 pct in the February 20-28 period to
30,634 units compared to 27,526 in the period a year ago.
There were seven selling days in both periods.
For the month of February sales fell two pct to 78,508 cars
from 80,322 a year ago.
Year-to-date sales were not immediately available.
Reuter
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TWA <TWA> GETS LONDON/BALTIMORE ROUTE | The Department of Transportation said
it has tentatively awarded the Baltimore to London route to
Trans World Airlines Inc.
The DOT issued a show cause order which give interested
parties seven days to question the decision.
In addition, the White House must decide on the choice
under foreign policy and national security grounds.
The DOT said the route became avaialable when it was
abandoned last September by World Airways Inc.
REUTER
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