Tag Archive: international


NEW YORK – Marriott International Inc. said Wednesday its fourth-quarter net income fell 18 percent, hurt by a one-time charge tied to the spinoff of its timeshare business.

The Bethesda, Md., company earned $141 million, or 41 cents per share, compared with $173 million, or 46 cents per share, a year earlier. Taking out one-time items in both periods, it earned $159 million, or 46 cents per share, compared with $135 million, or 35 cents per share in the fourth-quarter of 2010.

Revenue inched higher to $3.69 billion from $3.64 billion the year before.

The results fell short of Wall Street’s expectations, and shares fell slightly in electronic trading after the results were released. According to FactSet Research, analysts expected a profit of 47 cents per share on revenue of $3.74 billion. They usually exclude one-time items from their estimates.

Revenue per available room — a key measure of health for hotel companies — rose 5.9 percent in the quarter. That metric grew at a faster rate in North America than the rest of the world.

Marriott, which also operates Ritz-Carlton and other lodging brands, expects growth to continue this year as increases in the number of hotel rooms overall slows in North America, allowing for higher prices if demand continues to rise. For the first quarter, the company expects revenue per available room to rise between 5 and 6 percent across North America and worldwide.

“We are bullish about the long-term growth prospects for both Marriott and the global lodging industry,” J.W. Marriott, Jr., chairman and chief executive officer of Marriott International, said in a statement. “With a growing middle class and rapid economic growth in many emerging markets, global demand is increasing steadily.”

For 2012, Marriott sees emerging markets driving strong global growth, and forecasts earnings well above current analyst forecasts.

It expects to earn between $1.52 and $1.64 per share for the year. Analysts currently project $1.38 per share, on average.

Just days before the expected Feb. 13 release of President Obama’s fiscal 2013 budget, the Defense Department’s top weapons buyer sought to reassure nervous contractors that the White House will protect vital industries even as it implements major cuts in procurement and personnel spending.

Frank Kendall, acting undersecretary of Defense for acquisitions, technology and logistics, told a Monday forum at the Center for Strategic and International Studies his highest priorities include beefing up the federal acquisition workforce, strengthening the military industrial base, preserving technical superiority, and buying into only affordable and dependable programs.

He also suggested that the Pentagon might intervene to help key contractors that are struggling in the current economy. “When people see that there’s a supplier who is in trouble, or they’re in trouble themselves, they need to come let us know,” he said, according to an account in National Journal . “When they look out and see their business base eroding, or see that they’re not going to be viable for whatever reason, we need to know that. Then we can do assessments that look at whether we need to maintain competition there, whether it is a nice capability that we need to continue to support — how we might intervene.”

Fred Downey, vice president of national security at the Aerospace Industries Association, told Government Executive that “ongoing reductions in defense spending coupled with the threat of sequestration cuts are causing a great deal of concern among smaller companies in the supply chain. Many of these companies have unique capabilities that could be lost if their workflow is interrupted by cancellations and delays.” He added, “Kendall’s comments could lead to positive action to sustain critical small suppliers. We look forward to more discussion about how the Pentagon would go about executing such support.”

Alan Chvotkin, executive vice president and counsel of the Professional Services Council, which represents contractors, said the comments were “reassuring in that they demonstrate renewed attention at high levels. But a bailout, for lack of a better word, should not be counted on as a strategy by companies as the Pentagon takes steps to make sure the supply chain is not disrupted.”

Both the budget cuts now being prepared by Obama defense strategists and the additional reductions that could be mandated next year under the 2011 Budget Control Act have fueled concern about long-term dwindling of the nation’s defense-related industrial infrastructure.

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Howard “Buck” McKeon, R-Calif., sounded the alarm in January after the Pentagon released its latest strategic guidance. A fact sheet his committee released warned that “industry cannot be turned on and off like a light switch [and] requires a steady, enduring partnership that allows for innovation, expertise and growth.”

It said the Pentagon’s planned cuts would result in delays or a shutdown of production lines that would cost highly skilled manufacturing jobs.

Two defense analysts who spoke to reporters Wednesday at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments expressed similar worries. “The industrial base is not like Wal-Mart, where you can count on things being on the shelves when you walk in,” said Andrew Krepinevich, CSBA’s president. “The industrial base is a strategic asset, a weapon” that imposes enormous planning problems on potential enemies, he added, noting the British allowed their air and maritime industrial base to decline in the 1930s and again in the 1990s. “These companies trade on Wall Street, and eventually the money will go somewhere else.”

Todd Harrison, a senior fellow in budget studies at CSBA, said the number of prime defense contractors has shrunk from about 30 in the 1990s to five or so today, creating a near-monopoly in the industry. He predicted that severe cuts would prompt some companies to “get out of the defense business or consolidate, and you may see a reduction in capacity, in the number of factories.”

Kendall stressed the importance of leadership to create a cost-conscious acquisition workforce. But both defense analysts said they were skeptical that the Pentagon will succeed in its goals of achieving $60 billion over 10 years in savings through “efficiencies” in areas such as operations and maintenance. “It’s long been tried, but they don’t end up getting anywhere near what they’d hope for,” Krepinevich said.

The Pentagon’s initiative to insource more contractor work and build up the acquisition workforce, Harrison said, was a priority of former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, and might well become unworkable because of coming budget cuts. “We’re likely to see significant reductions in the DoD civilian workforce,” he said. “It’s hard to bring contractor expertise in-house when contractors have higher paying jobs.”

DENVER – The Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a settlement with former Qwest Communications International Inc. Chief Financial Officer Robert Woodruff over its civil fraud lawsuit.

Woodruff agreed to settle without admitting or denying allegations that he and others gave investors a skewed impression of the company’s performance between 1999 and 2002, according to court documents. He would be ordered to pay a disgorgement of $1.7 million, interest of about $640,000, and a $300,000 fine under terms of a proposed final judgment.

The SEC also has agreed to dismiss similar claims against former Qwest accountant Frank Noyes, with the parties bearing their own legal costs over years of litigation.

“Mr. Woodruff is happy to put this matter behind him,” his attorneys John Carroll and Steven Glaser said in a written statement Friday.

“After six long years, Mr. Noyes has been vindicated. Vindicated at last. This is how it should have ended,” Noyes’ attorney, Forrest Lewis, said in an email.

A phone message left at the SEC office in Denver wasn’t immediately returned.

Woodruff and Noyes were the last remaining defendants in a lawsuit the SEC filed in 2005 accusing former Qwest executives and employees of fraud or insider trading. Some defendants had claims against them dismissed while others, including former Qwest CEO Joseph Nacchio, reached settlements.

The lawsuit was filed months after Qwest agreed to pay $250 million to settle SEC allegations of “massive financial fraud.”

Nacchio settled with the SEC after he was sentenced to five years and 10 months in prison for insider trading convictions in a criminal case. His criminal sentence also ordered him to pay $63.6 million in fines and forfeitures.

The SEC had alleged Woodruff misled investors by not specifying how much of the company’s revenues were from one-time sales and how much was recurring.

Noyes was accused of helping Qwest improperly record revenue for a quarterly period ending Sept. 30, 2001, by backdating a contract that was signed Oct. 1, 2001. Noyes’ attorney had said the deal was essentially done late Sept. 30, 2001, but was signed a few hours after midnight.

CenturyTel Inc. completed its purchase of Qwest last year.

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ATHENS (NEWS.GNOM.ES) – Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos faces a critical task of convincing international lenders and political party leaders on Sunday to agree to the stringent terms of a 130 billion euro ($171 billion) rescue plan to stave off looming default.

Greece on Saturday warned it had just one day left to clinch the bailout plan with political leaders and impatient lenders who accuse it of dragging its feet on promised reforms.

“There is great impatience and great pressure not only from the three institutions that make up the troika but also from euro zone member states,” said Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos on Saturday after what he called a “very difficult” conference call with euro zone counterparts.

“The moment is very crucial. Everything should be concluded by tomorrow night.”

Papademos, who failed to resolve all issues in talks with lenders on Saturday, is due to call in the socialist, conservative and far-right party leaders in his coalition on Sunday to seek their blessing for reforms in the bailout.

Athens has wrangled without success for weeks with lenders and private bondholders on the bailout package and a debt restructuring plan, putting itself dangerously close to bankruptcy as 14.5 billion euros of debt falls due in mid-March.

In an apparent warning to Greek political leaders opposing key reforms, Venizelos said the patience of European partners and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) footing the bill for Greece’s bailout was wearing thin.

Euro zone finance ministers told Greece on Saturday it could not go ahead with an agreed deal to restructure privately held debt until it guaranteed it would implement reforms needed to secure a second financing package from the euro zone and the IMF.

STICKING POINTS

Venizelos said Athens had made progress by agreeing a plan to recapitalize Greek banks and details on privatization. A senior banker told NEWS.GNOM.ES the recapitalization would occur mainly via common shares with restricted voting rights.

But far bigger sticking points on wages and spending cuts remain unresolved, and Venizelos warned that the stakes were rising as time ran out.

“We are on a knife-edge,” he told reporters. “The distance between the successful completion of the procedures and an impasse which could happen by accident or because of a misunderstanding is very small.”

Euro zone officials said ministers had bluntly said they would not sign off on a planned debt swap until Athens guaranteed it would implement promised reforms.

“There was a very clear message … to the Greeks that enough is enough,” one euro zone official said. “There is a great sense of frustration that they are dragging their feet.”

Athens’ talks with its international lenders have stumbled over their demands, which include cutting labor costs by axing holiday bonuses and lowering the minimum wage – proposals vehemently opposed by Greek political party chiefs.

Greek officials have described the negotiations as tough, with the troika of European Central Bank, European Union and IMF lenders unwilling to yield an inch from their demands.

The talks have moved slowly also because the troika wants agreement on all parts of the complex Greek rescue deal — including any contribution by public creditors like the ECB — before approving the bailout, a source close to the talks said.

Athens also wants public creditors like the ECB to take part in the bond swap deal, under which banks and insurers will take real losses of about 70 percent on the Greek debt they hold in a bid to ease Greece’s debt burden by 100 billion euros.

The bond swap talks were now the easier part of the overall process to save Greece, said Venizelos. Representatives for the banks and insurers were expected to continue talks in Athens over the weekend.

The debt swap and bailout was designed to bring Greece’s debt down to the targeted 120 pct of GDP level by 2020, but with Greece’s economic prospects deteriorating, fears have grown that European partners will need to stump up more money.

EU sources say euro zone governments may now have to cough up an extra 15 billion euros on top of the 130 billion already agreed.

The lenders have demanded extra spending cuts worth about 1 percent of GDP – or just above 2 billion euros – this year, including big cuts in defense and health spending.

They also want all Greek political leaders – who are keen not to be linked directly with the painful reforms as they gear up for elections expected in April – to endorse the measures, irrespective of the outcome at the polls.

In the latest sign that coaxing political leaders into backing the reforms will be anything but easy, the leader of the far-right LAOS party, George Karatzaferis, rejected Venizelos’ “ultimatum” to strike a deal by Sunday.

(Additional reporting by Angeliki Koutantou and Ingrid Melander in Athens, Jan Strupczewski in Brussels,; Writing by Deepa Babington; Editing by Sophie Hares)

All investment offerings in the Thrift Savings Plan finished January in the black, including significant gains in the troubled I Fund, which posted negative gains in December and in 2011 overall.

The I Fund, invested in international stocks, grew 5.36 percent in January. The S Fund, which invests in small and midsize companies and tracks the Dow Jones Wilshire 4500 Index, fell in December but posted a 7.59 percent gain in the first month of 2012.

The C Fund, invested in common stocks on Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, rose 4.5 percent. The fixed income bond (F) and government securities (G) funds grew slower in January, at a rate of 0.88 percent and 0.13 percent, respectively.

TSP’s life-cycle funds, designed to move participants to less risky portfolios as they inch closer to retirement, all posted positive gains in January, growing significantly more than they did in December. The L Income Fund for federal employees who have reached their target retirement date and have started withdrawing money, rose 1.18 percent in January.

L 2020 increased 3.03 percent in January; L 2030 gained 3.77 percent; and L 2040 rose 4.34 percent in January, compared to 0.07 percent growth in December.

ATHENS, Greece – Unions and employers are to resume talks in Greece as the country scrambles to push through more cost-cutting reforms and conclude massive debt deals with private and rescue creditors.

The talks are due to start at 2:00 p.m. (1200GMT) Thursday, with debt inspectors from the European Union and International Monetary Fund pressing Greece to slash labor costs in the private sector.

Greece is hoping to clinch an agreement for a second bailout worth euro130 billion ($172 billion) in the coming days with eurozone countries and the IMF, and a related deal with private creditors to write off euro100 billion from the national debt.

Without those agreements, Greece faces bankruptcy next month as it is unable to cover a euro14.5 billion bond repayment due on March 20.

State’s New Power Source

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Fledgling diplomatic bureau plays energy and economic development role on the international stage.

Slot-machine maker International Game Technology (NYSE: IGTNews) looks poised to jump on the bandwagon of companies that are increasing their stake in online gaming. The company plans to acquire Double Down Interactive, one of the biggest virtual casino operators on Facebook.

What’s it all about?
Under this deal, IGT will pay $250 million in cash and $85 million in retention payments over the next two years. Additionally, IGT will pay up to $165 million to Double Down, depending on the latter’s performance in the next three years.

All in all, this looks like a large amount to pay for a company the size of Double Down, but it’s not as if IGT can’t afford it. IGT generated over $400 million in free cash flow over the last year.

So is the cash worth it?
This deal will certainly broaden IGT’s scope of operations. Already a seller of gaming equipment to casinos, it will now be able to sell virtual products to virtual casinos as well. Being the third-largest social gaming application, Double Down may well provide IGT with a valuable foothold in casino-style social gaming.

Double Down has significantly increased its user count, to 4.7 million now from 3.3 million in October last year, as it capitalizes on the rapidly growing online gaming industry. The industry in itself is expected to grow to $30 billion in 2012 from $20 billion in 2010. What I do like about the deal, however, is the exposure to a new and complementary set of gamers, which is sure to drive IGT’s fiscal 2012 earnings. But there’s another, larger aspect to it.

What’s the catch?
The Double Down deal would mean that IGT is investing around $100 for each one of the former’s roughly 5 million users. Now that’s a lot of money, something that can be justified only if we consider the potential big bucks IGT can earn if online gambling is legalized. In fact, legalization of online poker would be a dream come true for the casino and gaming industries, something that may be fast becoming a reality as the Justice Department considers doing away with the ban on online gambling.

However, IGT isn’t alone. Facebook game maker Zynga (Nasdaq: ZNGANews) has about 30 million players for its online poker game and could be a great partner for a big branded casino. Industry titan MGM (NYSE: MGMNews) has already partnered with Bwin.Party, and Boyd Gaming and is likely putting pressure on other operators to get a foothold in the space while they still can. IGT could be in for a lot of trouble if an operator inks a deal with Zynga.

Stakes in online gambling will be lower than those at real casinos. Nevertheless, the company’s exposure to a widespread online audience should create abundant volumes to push up revenue. Looking at it from that aspect, $500 million doesn’t seem particularly extravagant to me, after all.

The Foolish bottom line
This deal could very well be IGT’s royal flush. The company seems to be banking on potential revenue based on the expectations that online poker will be legalized. Till then, let’s keep our fingers crossed on this one.

Stay tuned for more on this company’s fortune. Add International Game Technology to your Watchlist: Click here.

Navjot Kaur does not own shares of any of the companies mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool owns shares of International Game Technology. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

WASHINGTON – The International Monetary Fund’s managing director and top global finance officials are urging the world’s political leaders to avoid budget cuts that would hinder economic growth.

Christine Lagarde said in a statement Friday that government spending cuts and other fiscal austerity measures should “promote rather than reduce prospects for growth and employment.”

World Bank President Robert Zoellick and Director-General Pascal Lamy of the World Trade Organization signed onto the statement.

The leaders said they spoke for themselves, not their institutions.

“We worry about decelerating global growth and rising uncertainty,” they said.

The Global Issues Group issued the statement. The Global Issues Group is part of the World Economic Forum, which is meeting next week in Davos, Switzerland.

ATHENS, Greece – International debt inspectors arrived in Athens on Friday to assess whether Greece is doing enough to get crucial bailout cash, while talks with private creditors continued on a bond swap deal needed to avoid default.

Officials from the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund met Friday with Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos. They will scrutinize Greece’s public finances to make sure it is on track with painful austerity reforms needed to keep tapping rescue loans.

Later in the day, Venizelos will start a third day of talks with private creditors, who are being asked to agree to a euro100 billion ($129 billion) writedown on their Greek bondholdings.

A deal is necessary if Greece is to get the next batch of bailout cash that would prevent a devastating debt default — Greece does not have enough money to cover a euro14.5 billion bond repayment in March.

Under the proposed deal, private creditors would cancel 50 percent of their Greek debt in exchange of a cash payment and new bonds with a longer maturity.

But the negotiations stalled last week over a disagreement on the interest rate those new bonds would have.

The two sides are now considering a proposal to set an interest rate of below 4 percent that would gradually increase until 2020, according to European officials.

Louka Katseli, a minister in the previous Socialist government, said the talks were being complicated by the involvement of a large number of parties with a stake in the debt deal.

“This does not only involve Greece and the creditors,” Katseli told private Skai television.

Heavily involved behind the scenes are countries like Germany, which is paying the bulk of Greece’s rescue loans, and the IMF, which is also involved in the bailouts. There are also the individual bond holders, like hedge funds which have bought Greek bonds but at the same time also hold default insurance, Katseli said.

Private creditors are being represented by Charles Dallara and Jean Lemierre, top officials at the New York-based Institute of International Finance.

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