MARKET TALK: Williams Cos. Out Of Indonesia Bidding
27 Feb 12:54
Edited by Thomas Granahan Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES (Call Us: 201 938-5299; All Times Eastern) MARKET TALK can be found using code N/DJMT 12:53 (Dow Jones) Interesting news out of Asia last night: Williams Cos.
(WMB) pulled out of a consortium bidding for a stake in a pipeline that will bring $9 billion of natural gas from Indonesia to Singapore, saying it didn't meet its investment requirements. Williams' exit may hurt the consortium's bid - led by PowerGas Ltd. - for Transco 1, which will operate the pipeline. Other consortia bidding for the Transco 1 stake are Unocal (UCL) in partnership with El Paso Corp. (EP); Korea Gas along with U.S. investment firm AIDEC Management; and a group led by Malaysia's Petronas. (CRW) 12:41 (Dow Jones) "Enronitis," or excess off-balance sheet debt, apparently isn't afflicting the restaurant stocks he tracks, Morgan Keegan analyst Robert Derrington reports. After capitalizing operating leases of eight casual-dining chains, he found that the average pro-forma return on invested capital declined only modestly. Similarly, interest coverage (ratio of profits before payment of interest and taxes to interest on bonds and other contractual long-term debt) remained "solid" on Applebee's International (APPB), CBRL Group (CBRL), CEC Entertainment (CEC), O'Charley's (CHUX), Darden Restaurants (DRI), Outback Steakhouse (OSI), Panera Bread (PNRA) and Ruby Tuesday (RI), Derrington said.
(RLG) 12:29 (Dow Jones) The General Accounting Office released a report today arguing for government intervention in the property terrorism insurance market.
"The report shows a detailed knowledge of the current terrorism insurance situation and renews our expectations that the issue is too important to the economy not to be resolved," Salomon Smith Barney says. (JSX) 12:21 (Dow Jones) Outspoken shareholder activist Evelyn Davis, who once warned Morgan Stanley (MWD) that her ghost would appear at annual meetings, may cross the Atlantic for this year's event. Very much alive, Davis says she's considering attending the meeting, even though it's in London. She said she won't make the final decision until a few days before the event. It's not the money she's worried about, she said, but the hardships associated with traveling there from Washington, D.C. She skipped Morgan Stanley' meeting last year due to illness. (CWM) 12:06 (Dow Jones) Congress is in the process of voting on the Tauzin-Dingell bill, which would in effect reverse much of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 that required the nation's dominant local phone carriers to open their networks to lease to competitors, spawning dozens of now-bankrupt startup phone companies. Verizon (VZ), SBC (SBC), BellSouth (BLS) and Qwest (Q) have lobbied for the bill, which is expected to be approved by the House. Senate approval isn't seen any time soon. (CBN) 11:59 (Dow Jones) After a powwow with Citigroup (C) CFO Todd Thomson, analyst Andrew Collins of U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray says the company's capital market activity is off to a slow start, while fixed income is seasonally strong. Citi also has very few surprises in terms of bad telecom loans, he added, since it used "derivatives and the secondary markets to mitigate risks." Meanwhile, the company doesn't have a problem with having to potentially move its "off-balance sheet" items back onto the books. And don't assume Citi's low stock price will preclude it from buying anything: with plenty of cash on hand, the behemoth is interested in global consumer finance businesses, as well as emerging markets and wealth management. (TAS) 11:47 (Dow Jones) Tiger Woods now holds yet another "honor": top taxpayer in the prosperous Chinese city of Shenzhen. The world's No. 1 golfer paid 4.2 million yuan (about $500,000) in taxes on his fee for a November appearance, as some folks ponied up $18,000 each to play a hole against him. (CRW) 11:36 (Dow Jones) The news out of eBay (EBAY) was good on both counts Tuesday, says WR Hambrecht. The acquisition of NeoCom extends eBay's global footprint into Taiwan, and the decision to withdraw from Japan is not surprising and shows management is finally taking aggressive steps to address an obvious deficiency in its franchise. Keeps strong buy rating, $75 target.
EBAY off 4% at $51.13. (TG) 11:27 (Dow Jones) Activities at this week's Singapore air show backs his view that '02 and '03 will be down years for the commercial aircraft market, says Pierre Chao of Credit Suisse First Boston. He doesn't expect jet deliveries to pick up until '04-'05. One bright spot: business-jet makers such as General Dynamics' (GD) Gulfstream are making sales, indicating that Asia could become a major market for such jets. (SON) 11:15 (Dow Jones) Greenspan says that while "clearly what is going on in Japan is negative to the outside world," it won't be able to arrest a U.S.
recovery "which is now under way." This is in line with the administration's apparent view that while Japan's economic stagnation might be a hurdle for a recovery here, it's a dead weight on the global economy in general. (GMM) 11:11 (Dow Jones) An update from the VIX watch: The CBOE's market volatility index has eased 1.13 to 22.44 with stocks ahead, helped by Greenspan's cautiously optimistic stance. This options fear gauge is now once again approaching the 22 mark, which recently has preceded short-term stock-market corrections. Since mid-November, VIX - which measures S&P 100 index option prices to gauge investor sentiment - has flitted largely between 22 and 28; over the past three months, VIX has edged back up (and stocks down) each time VIX falls near the 22 mark. Many are watching to see if this trend holds. (KT) 11:03 (Dow Jones) Slumping retailer Gap's (GPS) $1 billion offering of seven-year convertible notes are expected to have a coupon between 6% and 6 1/2% and a conversion premium between 22% and 25%. Announced Tuesday, the deal is expected to price today. GPS off 4.2% at $12.98. (JD) (END) DOW JONES NEWS 02-27-02 12:54 PM |