Category: Insurance News


NEW YORK – A surge in U.S. hiring lifted oil prices for the first time in a week. As more Americans commute to work and the economy picks up, demand for energy is expected to rise.

U.S. benchmark crude increased by $1.48 on Friday to end the week at $97.84 per barrel. It was the first time since Jan. 26 that the price of crude ended the day higher. Brent, used to price international varieties of crude, rose by $2.51 to finish at $114.58 per barrel.

Prices rose after the government reported that the U.S. economy added 243,000 jobs in January. That was the biggest increase since April of last year, when 251,000 jobs were created. The unemployment rate fell to 8.3 percent — the lowest in three years.

The positive U.S. jobs data added to evidence that the world’s largest economy — and biggest user of gasoline — is growing stronger. Manufacturing grew in January at the fastest pace in seven months. Factory orders rose in December by 1.1 percent, driven higher by big increases in spending on industrial machinery and autos.

The U.S. economic reports suggest the, “economy is in recovery with fewer jobless claims, more people on payrolls, higher equities prices, brisk car sales, and high travel bookings,” said Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service.

Oil prices had fallen 3 percent during the first four days of the week. They were pushed lower on reports that U.S. fuel demand continues to fall behind where it was last year. The 4-week average for gasoline demand is down 7.3 percent. Last year, American drivers used nearly 3 percent less gasoline than they did in 2010.

Friday’s employment report led investors to believe that gasoline demand could eventually rebound. Gasoline futures, which gauge where traders think prices are headed, rose by 4.55 cents to end at $2.9144 per gallon.

At the pump, regular unleaded gasoline is already at the highest ever for this time of year, reflecting surging energy demand in other parts of the world like China. A gallon of gas cost an average of $3.467 — 17.9 cents more than a month ago and 35.1 cents more than a year ago, according to auto club AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service.

Prices are expected to rise in coming months as the economy improves and as refineries crank up production of more expensive warm-weather gasoline blends. Analysts say prices could reach $4 per gallon by the spring.

In other energy trading, heating oil added 6.15 cents to end at $3.1144 per gallon and natural gas fell by 5.5 cents to finish the week at $2.499 per 1,000 cubic feet.

LONDON – Stocks spiked sharply higher on Friday after forecast-busting U.S. jobs figures reinforced hopes that the recovery in the world’s largest economy is gathering pace at a time when other regions, notably Europe, may be heading back into recession.

Figures from the Labor Department showed that employers in the U.S. added 243,000 jobs in January. As well as being the highest in nine months, the gain was around 100,000 more than anticipated.

The advance also contributed to a fifth straight fall in the U.S. unemployment rate. At 8.3 percent, it’s the lowest in three years.

The January jobs report was filled with other encouraging data and revisions. Hiring was widespread across many high-paying industries and pay increased, too.

“In terms of the broader outlook, one report does not a trend make but there is little doubt that U.S. economic data continues to surprise on the upside,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist at BTIG.

“We’ll have to wait until February’s report to see if this continues but for now, the risk rally is clearly on and from an economic perspective, it is most certainly warranted,” Greenhaus added.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was up 1.4 percent at 5,875 while Germany’s DAX rose 1.3 percent to 6,743. The CAC-40 in France was 0.8 percent higher at 3,405.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was up 0.9 percent at 12,819 while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 1 percent to 1,338.

The dollar also garnered some strength from the jobs figures as traders scaled back their expectations that the Federal Reserve would be pumping more money into the economy, evidenced also by a fall in Treasuries. The euro was trading 0.3 percent lower at $1.3097 while the dollar was 0.6 percent higher at 76.61 yen.

Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co., said the Fed would need more evidence before it is comfortable about the durability of the U.S. recovery, especially with the housing market still in a fragile state.

“It will take a series of repeat reports like today’s to deliver meaningful improvements to the unemployment rate before the Fed will feel confident that any improvement in employment prospects will replace the need for it to massage yields lower,” Wilkinson said.

Market sentiment has been fairly upbeat so far in 2012, partly on the back of a run of fairly strong U.S. economic data, which has convinced investors that the U.S. economy is over its soft patch from last summer.

The state of the U.S. economy contrasts with that of Europe, which appears headed for recession.

Official figures showed retail sales in the 17-nation eurozone dropped 0.4 percent during December, in contrast to expectations for an increase of the same amount.The data reinforced expectations that the eurozone contracted during the fourth quarter of the year. Eurostat is due to publish its first estimate for the quarter on Feb. 15.

The focus on the U.S. has proved a welcome diversion for some traders from monitoring the daily grind of Europe’s debt crisis, where much hinges on whether Greece can secure a deal with its private creditors, as is anticipated. A deal is expected soon, though that has been the official line for a few weeks.

Earlier in Asia, the picture was mixed.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 index fell 0.5 percent to close at 8,831.93 but Hong Kong’s Hang Seng ended marginally higher at 20,756.98.

Mainland Chinese shares extended gains fueled by news of fresh support for the farming and small-business sectors, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rising 0.8 percent to 2,330.41 while the Shenzhen Composite Index added 1.5 percent to 878.29.

Oil markets were relatively subdued. Benchmark oil for March delivery was up 39 cents at $96.75 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

____

Pamela Sampson in Bangkok contributed to this report.

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)

The job market is treating men better than women, reducing the job losses that men suffered during the Great Recession. And twenty-somethings and retirees are benefiting slightly more than middle-age workers. Over the past 12 months, the proportion of people with jobs has risen faster for those ages 20 to 24 and those 65 or older than for workers as a whole, according to Labor Department data released Friday. Unemployment for middle-age workers fell sharply over the past year. But that was largely because many of them gave up looking for work. Once people stop looking for jobs, they’re no longer counted as unemployed. Unemployment among teenagers is still rising. In the past 12 months, unemployment for men has dropped six times as fast as for women — from 9.6 percent to 8.3 percent. Unemployment for women dropped only slightly, from 8.5 percent to 8.3 percent. Many male-dominated industries, including manufacturing and construction, were struck especially hard by the recession. Some employers in those industries have begun to rehire men. But other men who worked in those fields have found jobs in lower-paying, female-dominated occupations in health care and retail. Young adults and retirees fared slightly better than the middle-aged over the past 12 months, in part by taking lower-paying jobs. Updated Census Bureau data increased the civilian population by more than 1.5 million for December. Sharp increases occurred among retirees and people ages 16 to 24. Unemployment rate (in percentages) January 2012 January 2011 Total 8.3% 9.1% 16 to 17 years old 28.1% 26.5% 18 to 19 years old 22.4% 26.3% 20 to 24 years old 14.2% 16.3% 25 to 34 years old 9.6% 10.1% 35 to 44 years old 7.5% 8.1% 45 to 54 years old 6.9% 7.9% 55 to 64 years old 6.4% 7.4% 65 years and over 6.2% 6.9% Men 8.3% 9.6% Women 8.3% 8.5%

WE CAME HERE FOR THIS? Stocks traded in a narrow range all day and finished mixed and nearly unchanged. Only the Nasdaq moved more than a tenth of a percent.

SO FAR: Stocks are off to a strong start this year. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index is up 5.4 percent. The Dow Jones industrial average is up 4 percent.

WHAT’S NEXT: Friday job numbers. The government is due to release the number of jobs created last month and the unemployment rate. In December, the country added 200,000 jobs, and the rate was 8.5 percent.

BERLIN – Premier Mario Monti says he considers Italy a “safe place” amid market turbulence after his government embarked on a reform drive.

Monti was quoted in an interview Saturday with German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung as pressing for Europe to channel its energy into generating growth rather than more “particularly original ideas for budget discipline.”

He spoke before a planned appearance Saturday at the Munich Security Conference, an annual gathering of security officials tinged this year by concern over the eurozone debt crisis.

Monti’s government has been trying to regain investor confidence by cutting public spending and reforming a sluggish economy.

Italy’s struggle with high borrowing costs is a cause for concern because the country is considered too big to rescue if it gets into deeper trouble.

SAN FRANCISCO — In a pleasant surprise, the Department of Labor has reported an another increase in total nonfarm employment. The U.S. added 243,000 jobs in January, ticking the unemployment rate to 8.3 percent.

Yet, according to a recent Gallup poll, more than two-thirds of new workers in the U.S. are “unengaged” in their workplaces, leading to unfulfilled productivity.

Adam Pisoni, CTO of Yammer, thinks his team has the key to unlocking this cache of unused productivity.

Yammer, whose eponymous product is at the leading edge of social media for business, is now poised to expand rapidly in the wake of the coming Facebook IPO.

In a recent interview, Pisoni described a board meeting when he first realized that Yammer had created something more than just another piece of software. Yammer was about to start a revolution that would change the way people work, forever.

“We were going to talk about the new software we were releasing,” Pisoni told me, his voice laced with anticipation.

The CEO and founder of Yammer, David Sacks, entered the meeting clearly ready to try something different. An untested move might be risky considering the audience. Yammer’s board is stacked with some of the biggest names in tech, including Sean Parker of Napster and Facebook fame.

When Sacks came into the room, he turned on the wall monitor and “created a page in the Yammer network.” He titled the virtual page simply, “Why I like working at Yammer.”

Much like posting on a Facebook wall, Sacks then wrote a live message to his employees so they could all see the page he had created. “Hey, I’m in a board meeting. I’m curious why people like working at Yammer?”

Pisoni, who is also co-founder of Yammer, was incredulous. “Literally within seconds,” he said, “all these people started joining this page and simultaneously writing the things they like about Yammer.”

Sacks minimized the page and returned his attention to the board meeting.

“Not more than two minutes later,” Pisoni said excitedly, “David clicked back to the page and there were five pages of material written, of new material.” The content had gone “viral within the company.”

What’s the key to unlocking that unused two-thirds of productivity in U.S. companies?

For some companies, like the French tech concern, Atos, the answer to increasing efficiency will come from banning in-house emails.

For Adam Pisoni, self-forming teams on Yammer’s egalitarian network make employees happier and more engaged, and therefore more productive.

Sounds like a revolution worth yammering about.

President Obama will nominate Joseph Jordan, a senior Office of Management and Budget official, to head the Office of Federal Procurement Policy, the White House announced Friday.

The post has been vacant since Dan Gordon left the administration in November.

Jordan has been a senior adviser to OMB Acting Director Jeffrey Zients since December 2011. Before that, he was associate administrator for government contracting and business development at the Small Business Administration. Prior to serving in government, he worked at management consulting firm McKinsey & Co.

From 1998 to 2000, Jordan was an associate producer on MSNBC’s Hardball with Chris Matthews

Observers had speculated Jordan might be slated for the procurement post after he joined OMB late last year. But the agency has been mum on who would fill the position in Gordon’s absence.

Gordon left the OFPP job  to become associate dean for government contracts law at the George Washington University Law School.

Some recent high-profile stock offerings on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq:

NYSE:

Pandora Media, $234 million, June 15.

LinkedIn Corp., $353 million, May 19.

HCA Holdings Inc., $4.3 billion, March 10.

Kinder Morgan, $3.3 billion, Feb. 11.

Nielsen Holdings, $1.9 billion, Jan. 26.

Nasdaq:

Zynga Inc., $1 billion, Dec. 16.

Jive Software, Inc., $161 million, Dec. 13.

Groupon, Inc., $700 million, Nov. 4.

Dunkin’ Brands Group, Inc., $422 million, July 27.

Yandex NV, $1.3 billion, May 24.

Some recent high-profile stock offerings on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq:

NYSE:

Pandora Media, $234 million, June 15.

LinkedIn Corp., $353 million, May 19.

HCA Holdings Inc., $4.3 billion, March 10.

Kinder Morgan, $3.3 billion, Feb. 11.

Nielsen Holdings, $1.9 billion, Jan. 26.

Nasdaq:

Zynga Inc., $1 billion, Dec. 16.

Jive Software, Inc., $161 million, Dec. 13.

Groupon, Inc., $700 million, Nov. 4.

Dunkin’ Brands Group, Inc., $422 million, July 27.

Yandex NV, $1.3 billion, May 24.

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