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To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 3:53:18 PM
From: Paul Kern  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
DJ CNBC Anchor: Fed's Bernanke Told Her Markets Got It Wrong



NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told CNBC anchor Maria Bartiromo that markets and the media misinterpreted his comments last Thursday and that he was not giving a dovish signal on interest rates, the CNBC host said Monday.

Speaking on CNBC, Bartiromo said Bernanke told her "over the weekend, the media and the markets got it wrong last week in speculating the Fed is done raising interest rates ... I asked him whether the markets got it right after his congressional testimony and he said, flatly, no."

Bartiromo said Bernanke was not seeking to send a dovish message but was "trying to basically create some flexibility for the Federal Reserve, saying the Fed may pause but the data will really dictate whether more rate hikes will occur at future meetings."

She said that he could follow the example of the European Central Bank, which has been raising rates only gradually in recent months.

She later said Bernanke told her it was "worrisome" that the markets were considering him dovish.


(MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires

05-01-06 1547ET

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.



To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 4:02:51 PM
From: Paul Kern  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
=DJ LATIN BEAT: Oil Majors Face Creeping Nationalization

05/01/2006
Dow Jones News Services
(Copyright © 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)


By Charles Roth
A Dow Jones Newswires Column


NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Soaring oil prices swelling the bottom lines of big oil companies make it hard to feel for the likes of Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM) and Chevron Corp. (CVX), but with the vast majority of the world's crude and natural gas deposits restricted to national oil firms of often inhospitable nations, the good times won't last forever.

This is especially true in Latin America, where regulatory flux has become the rule of thumb from governments trying to extract as much of the earnings from oil and natural gas production as they can.

It's hardly surprising that left-wing populists in Venezuela, Bolivia, Argentina and Ecuador would squeeze Big Oil - many members of the U.S. Congress are again baying for higher taxes on them, too - but the creeping nationalization of oil production underway in these countries won't just mean less future profit for the energy firms, but also less investment and, ultimately, less output. That, in turn, will ensure that pressure on energy prices stays high.

The oil majors invested heavily in the region to begin with because most national companies didn't have the money and technical expertise to effectively develop their reserves, and they still don't. Previous, more pragmatic governments acknowledged as much, and paved the way for foreign investment in the sector in the 1990s.

But the current crop of nationalists in those four countries - not to speak of Mexico and Brazil, where state-run companies still enjoy monopolies on oil production - are turning back the clock.

On Monday, Bolivian President Evo Morales decreed the nationalization of the Andean nation's natural gas industry by ordering foreign companies to turn over their production to state-owned firm Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales Bolivianos for sales and industrialization, or leave the country. "The time has come, the awaited day, a historic day in which Bolivia retakes absolute control of our natural resources," Morales declared.

To underline the point, he ordered the country's military to occupy gas fields and gave foreign companies six months to sign new contracts, the Associated Press reported.

Brazil's Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PBR), or Petrobras, Spain's Repsol YPF (REP), British Gas, Britain's BP (BP) and Total of France (TOT) are all exposed to the move.

Investment has already plummeted in Bolivia, where a year ago a new hydrocarbons law hit the books. The law raised taxes and royalties and mandated that hydrocarbon resources belong to the state. But the country hasn't spelled out how it will work in practice, though perhaps Morales' decree will clear things up. He had said a coming nationalization wouldn't involve asset seizures.

He is also pressing for increases in natural gas prices for customers in neighboring Argentina and Brazil. But given that the two countries represent the only outlets for Bolivia's natural gas, Morales may have much less leverage than he thinks. Brazil, especially, may be willing to play hardball, as Petrobras, which is federally controlled, is the biggest foreign investor in Bolivia.

Morales has clearly taken a page out of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's playbook, which included a hydrocarbons law in 2001 that nearly doubled royalties on private firms making new investments in conventional oil fields and limited the firms to minority stakes. Venezuela recently forced the migration of 32 pre-existing field operating contracts to the new law, and seized two fields without compensation from Total and Italy's Eni SpA (E) when the two firms resisted the newly imposed terms.

After unilaterally raising royalties on production from Venezuela's extra-heavy crude in the country's Orinoco basin from 1% to 16.7% in 2004, the government is now indicating that companies operating the four projects involved in converting the tar-like oil into synthetic crude should also migrate their pre-existing contracts to the new law, implying diminished returns on investment amounting to an estimated $17 billion. ConocoPhillips (COP), Exxon and Total all have significant exposure to this latest grab at their income and assets.

Ecuador also has a newly minted hydrocarbons law that requires private firms to relinquish 50% of extraordinary profits, defined as those coming in above established levels in previously signed contacts. Companies that don't agree, officials say, should leave the country.

This from a nation whose national oil company has seen its production steadily decline for years, and where local residents often take to sabotaging oil infrastructure to press demands for more local investment and spending.

In Argentina, meanwhile, Repsol earlier this year cut its proven reserves by 509.3 million barrels of oil equivalent for technical and accounting reasons, the latter representing the future uncertainty regarding hydrocarbon concessions that expire around 2016. Companies won't simply be able to extend them another decade, but rather will have to negotiate new deals with provincial governments.

Argentina's top producing province, Neuquen, decreed royalty hikes on oil and natural gas production a few months ago. The federal government also imposes heavy oil export taxes and effectively controls domestic fuel prices. Foreign oil companies still interested in major exploration in Argentina will have to look offshore, though a recent requirement forces them to form partnerships with the country's newly established state-oil firm Enarsa, which apparently has just two-dozen employees.

These countries may believe that they have every right to disregard contracts or otherwise put the squeeze on foreign oil producers. But when expropriated profits undermines investment, output volumes will suffer. If that proves supportive of prices, though, populist regimes may not care.

As for Exxon Mobil, Chevron and other oil majors, they likely won't benefit as much from future oil price rises as they do now, especially if U.S. lawmakers join their Latin American counterparts in taxing more and more of their income.


(Charles Roth is assistant managing editor for Dow Jones Newswires' Latin America and New York-based emerging markets groups.)


-By Charles Roth, Dow Jones Newswires; 201 938 2226; charles.roth@dowjones.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

05-01-06 1558ET



To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 4:14:22 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
Japan Urges Transparency In China Military Spending-Kyodo

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NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Japan's Defense Agency Director General Fukushiro Nukaga on Monday called for transparency in China's increasing military spending as Japan and the U.S. agreed to boost defense cooperation and begin realignment of the U.S. military presence in Japan, Kyodo News service reported.

"China's military spending is increasing in line with its economic development, and China needs to make it transparent for its neighboring nations to feel at ease," Kyodo quoted Nukaga as saying in a joint press conference with Japan's Foreign Minister Taro Aso, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

In a joint statement issued after their meeting, the four ministers called for resolving conflicts in the Asia-Pacific region diplomatically and urged for more transparency in the military modernization in the region, Kyodo reported.

They were apparently referring to China, but didn't mention any country specifically, the report said.


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 01, 2006 12:24 ET (16:24 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 12 24 PM EDT 05-01-06



To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 4:14:40 PM
From: shades  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
SEC: May Know In 9-12 Mos If More Hedge Fund Regs Needed

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By Andrew Dowell
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


MINNEAPOLIS (Dow Jones)--The Securities and Exchange Commission is poring over information in registrations filed by hedge fund advisers and should know within a year whether more regulation of the industry is needed, Chairman Christopher Cox said Monday.

"Within nine to 12 months, I expect that we will be able to internalize some of this information and be able to infer" whether further regulation may be needed, Cox said in comments to a gathering of business journalists.

The number of hedge fund advisers registered with the SEC has doubled since the commission made it mandatory for some. The commission is now training staff to inspect advisers, now that they have the authority to do so, Cox said.

The SEC's increasing interest in hedge funds comes as their activity has exploded amid an inrush of funds from pension funds and other institutional investors seeking better returns than those afforded by traditional investments in stocks and bonds.

The registration regulation, which took affect Feb. 1, doesn't require disclosure of any information related to hedge funds' strategies. Cox said the regulation has produced "census information."

On the issue of better disclosure of executive pay, another SEC initiative, Cox said investors need to know how much companies pay some of their non-executive employees. The entertainment industry in particular has complained about an SEC proposal to require such disclosure.

While Cox acknowledged there are good arguments on both sides of the issue and that the SEC is open to revising the proposed rule, he said that without such disclosure, an investor may conclude that "I'm going to have a pretty serious problem trying to understand the whole picture."

Cox also said the SEC is considering whether to routinely disclose more information on its own initiative due to a growing backlog of requests under the Freedom of Information Act. Those requests are being driven by commercial services, cox said.


-By Andrew Dowell, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5175; andrew.dowell@dowjones.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 01, 2006 13:20 ET (17:20 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 01 20 PM EDT 05-01-06



To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 4:15:03 PM
From: shades  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
US Sen Frist Drops Accounting Change From Energy Bill

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WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist on Monday said he plans to drop a proposal for an accounting tax change that would have boosted taxes on oil companies, retailers and manufacturers.

Frist, R-Tenn., had proposed to repeal the "last-in, first-out" accounting method in an energy bill released last week. The repeal was part of an effort to pay for $100 rebate checks to help consumers offset record high gasoline prices.

Frist's proposal to scrap the "LIFO" accounting method had drawn immediate opposition from the oil industry and others since it would have resulted in a multi-billion dollar tax hike and created uncertainty about accounting policies. The change would have affected a wide variety of companies, particularly retailers and manufacturers.

First said after speaking with Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, "we have agreed to withdraw the LIFO repeal proposal from the rebate package."

"He will hold hearings on the LIFO proposal later this year, so the pluses and minuses of the provision can become well known," Frist said in a statement.


(MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires

May 01, 2006 13:19 ET (17:19 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 01 19 PM EDT 05-01-06

US Sen Frist Drops Accounting Change From Energy Bill -2-

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Last-in, first-out accounting appeals to companies when the economy is experiencing high inflation and they face rising inventory costs. It allows goods in inventory to be sold at current prices, which reduces the taxable gain.

A LIFO repeal could adversely affect retailers and manufacturers, industries in which the accounting method can be used. A similar provision was in a Senate tax bill approved in November, but it focused just on large oil companies.

Frist said he intends to bring his energy bill to the Senate floor for a vote, but didn't specify when this would happen.

"We've got to help those who are feeling pain at the pump as quickly as possible," he said. "Families deserve relief, we must increase our domestic supply, our refinery bottleneck must end, and we must move to alternative fuels and advanced technology vehicles."

Frist spokeswoman Amy Call said the energy measure contains other offsetting revenue measures to cover cost of the rebate checks, such as restricting tax breaks for natural gas exploration costs and new revenues generated from opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling. Frist will be looking at other revenue raising provisions as well, Call said.


-By Rob Wells, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9272; Rob.Wells@dowjones.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 01, 2006 13:46 ET (17:46 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 01 46 PM EDT 05-01-06



To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 4:15:54 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
UK PRESS: China Close To Investing Pension Fund Overseas

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NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--China has asked foreign institutions to apply to manage its holdings overseas, bringing closer formal approval for billions of dollars of pension funds to be invested in foreign stocks and bonds after nearly six years of debate on the issue in China, the Financial Times reported Monday on its Web site.

The National Social Security Fund, established in 2000 by the central government as a kind of pension fund of last resort, said in a notice on its Web site that foreign managers could apply for mandates to invest its money by the end of June, the FT reported.

The fund had total assets of $26.5 billion by the end of 2005, with only a small proportion, $1.57 billion, held overseas, the newspaper said.

Much of the NSSF's assets have been raised through a government policy which directs state-owned enterprises listing overseas to set aside 10% of the proceeds to go into the fund's coffers.

Although the NSSF's funds overseas are relatively small at the moment, they are expected to grow gradually in coming years to become a much-sought mandate for investment managers.

According to the FT, the fund has laid out a series of rules for investing its money offshore, stipulating that any approved managers must have had at least $5 billion under management for the past year, a relatively small amount, and have been operational for six years.

For the first time, the rules posted on the NSSF's Web site also lay out in detail the rates of return that the fund expects its managers to achieve through its investments in both stocks and bonds.


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 01, 2006 13:49 ET (17:49 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 01 49 PM EDT 05-01-06



To: Paul Kern who wrote (60031)5/1/2006 4:16:19 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
Tech Cos Unite To Solve Problems Of Science-Data Sharing

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By Carmen Fleetwood
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Some scientists scribble results on paper, others type them into 15-year-old computers. Meanwhile, their technophile colleagues rely on cutting-edge machines.

Individuality is great, but how do you share results from experiments with your colleagues?

That's why Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), of Redmond, Wash., was among the companies to start BioITAlliance, a group which wants to improve the current situation in computational biology. Other members include drug makers, medical device companies, software makers and researchers, including Accelrys Software and Amylin Pharmaceuticals.

In 1665, the Journal des scavans, of France, was the first widely known scientific journal to publish results from physics and chemistry experiments. But with the massive amount of information spawned by recent projects such as mapping out the human genome, the data produced exceeds anything ever known in terms of quantity or complexity.

Don Rule, a platform strategy advisor for Microsoft, said "based upon conversations with customers and analysts, at least 15% of research is redundant because researchers either cannot find prior work that is relevant to them or they cannot interpret the results."

Other scientists and experts agreed that advances in many areas are slowed because of redundancy. The constant repetition means that both money and time are wasted.

Current costs to develop a new drug for the market now exceed $1 billion, compared with about $200 million in the 1990s. That doesn't even guarantee a viable drug. And even if a drug is approved, it could still be a target of a lawsuit, so the pharmaceutical industry is keen to cut costs whenever possible.

In science, "being able to replicate an experiment, is the first step" said Fiona Murray, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, Cambridge, Mass. The second step is then to build on the existing data.

If the duplication can be eliminated by making different software and tools compatible for all researchers, the results would have a wide impact.

"These tools aren't discovery," but they allow us to drive science faster, said Peter Kuhn, professor of Scripps Research Institute, a biomedical non-profit research institute in La Jolla, Calif., and member of the BioIT Alliance.

Right now, Microsoft and Scripps are working on a first project, Collaborative Molecular Environment, which will help manage, archive, annotate and capture molecular data using several software programs such as Microsoft Office. Microsoft expects to have a pre-release version in late May.

Other possible BioIT projects planned include using technology to help compare genome types with clinical data to find out if a certain gene is more susceptible to certain ailments or reactions.

The alliance would like to help reduce the dependancy on recording data on paper by encouraging researchers to keep it electronically on such devices as portable notepads so that annotations and other information better organized.

The creation of a common data exchange format would make it easier to load data from different software into one format that can be widely used, said Anthony R. Kerlavage, a senior director, global service development and support for BioITAlliance member Applied Biosystems Inc. (ABI).

While it's a niche audience at this point, with about 50,000 people worldwide working in the computational biology sector in mostly a research setting, Microsoft sees a potentially lucrative market for its data management software business.

"When you start to see applications moving into the clinical setting, those numbers will grow," Rule said. But the real opportunity will come when you begin to see personalized medicine reaching individual doctors and patients. While we don't have exact numbers, we recognize this market is too large to ignore."

For example, if someone were to develop lung cancer, a test would then reveal what treatment is likely to work best on that specific patient and the drugs would be made with those specifications. The capability to do just that would be across the board.

Charles P. Waite, a general partner, at OVP Venture Partners estimated that this field right now is worth about $500 million annually, but that includes both in-house and outside companies as well as a number of specific fields such as genomic software.

Different segments have various growth rates ranging from 11% to the 50% expected for genomic software, according to Waite.

Other rivals are in the health-care database software business including International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) and Oracle Corp. (ORCL). Contacts for both companies weren't immediately available for comment.

-By Carmen Fleetwood, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5216


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 01, 2006 14:55 ET (18:55 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 02 55 PM EDT 05-01-06