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Daily News - BP wants future spill claims limited (Reuters)

Daily News - BP wants future spill claims limited (Reuters) Daily Business News

HOUSTON (Reuters) – BP Plc wants to limit future claims related to its Gulf of Mexico oil spill disaster as the region's economy recovers, the oil company said in a document made public on Friday.

The Gulf economy is strong and "there is no basis to assume that claimants, with very limited exceptions, will incur a future loss related to the oil spill," BP said in a paper filed with the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (GCCF).

Oystermen, whose beds have been destroyed by crude, should be considered for future payments, the British oil company said.

Kenneth Feinberg is the administrator of the $20 billion GCCF fund established at the urging of President Barack Obama to compensate people and businesses for losses related to the BP oil disaster.

BP's deepwater Macondo well ruptured in April 2010, causing a fiery explosion that killed 11 rig workers and spewed more than 4 million barrels of oil into the Gulf. The accident closed waters to fishing, disrupted tourism and caused the government to shut down deepwater exploration for months.

But now, Gulf residents are getting back to work and industries are on the rebound, BP said, citing lodging, fishing and other data.

"The GCCF welcomes any and all input from any interested sources including BP," Feinberg said in an email. "We take all of the submissions 'under advisement.'"

BP supports the payment of legitimate claims and future losses that are substantiated, but the company objects to the GCCF's "practice of assuming futures losses on certain claims," the company said in an email.

At the beginning of July, the GCCF had paid $4.5 billion in claims to 195,000 claimants. There are also about $430 million worth of offers that are under consideration by Gulf residents.

(Reporting by Anna Driver in Houston; editing by Carol Bishopric and Matthew Lewis)

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Daily News - Recipe for a rally? Beat lowered estimates (Reuters)

Daily News - Recipe for a rally? Beat lowered estimates (Reuters) Daily Business News

The outside of the New York Stock Exchange is seen in New York Reuters – The outside of the New York Stock Exchange is seen in New York May 13, 2011. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
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NEW YORK (Reuters) – Wall Street heads into earnings season next week playing a typical game: Worrying about results a lot, and then rallying on pleasant surprises.

Analysts have been lowering earnings estimates of late and nervousness about the U.S. economic picture abounds, especially after Friday's poor June jobs report.

However, profit growth could still be strong in the second quarter -- and that could boost stocks. The Standard & Poor's 500 (.SPX) fell 0.4 percent in the second quarter, but rallied in recent days on hopes for economic improvement.

Over the last month, analysts have revised downward their earnings estimates for S&P 500 companies, with the mean change in earnings estimates a negative 6.4 percent, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine data.

"I think there's going to be a lot of anxiety going into it, and I think companies are going to continue what they've done for the last few quarters: Put out better-than-expected numbers, and guidance should be OK," said Scott Billeaudeau, portfolio manager at Fifth Third Asset Management, in Minneapolis.

S&P 500 components' earnings are expected to have increased an average of 7.3 percent in the second quarter from a year ago, down from first-quarter growth of 18.9 percent, Thomson Reuters data showed.

But the number could jump if most companies beat analysts' forecasts. Early estimates for first-quarter profit growth were at about 13 percent.

"The general economic data is suggesting some softness in the overall economy both globally and in the U.S. ... so that drives somewhat more realistic expectations for companies," said Natalie Trunow, chief investment officer of equities of Calvert Investment Management in Bethesda, Maryland, which manages about $14.8 billion.

In the coming week, the Federal Reserve will release minutes of its June 21-22 policy-making meeting. Among the U.S. economic indicators on tap are June retail sales, June inflation readings from the U.S. Producer Price Index and the U.S. Consumer Price Index, industrial production and capacity utilization for June, and the preliminary July reading on consumer sentiment from the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers.

BANKS UNDER THE GUN

Financial services companies have seen the biggest downward revisions in earnings estimates in the last 30 days, with banks taking some of the biggest hits, including Goldman Sachs (GS.N) and Morgan Stanley (MS.N).

JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) will be the first of the big banks to report, with results due on Thursday. Results from top tech player Google (GOOG.O) also are expected Thursday, while aluminum company Alcoa (AA.N) unofficially starts the season with earnings after the bell on Monday.

The S&P financial index (.GSPF) dropped 6.3 percent in the second quarter as worries escalated about the impact of the euro-zone debt problems on the global economy. The mean change for earnings estimates in the sector in the last 30 days is a negative 34.4 percent, StarMine data showed.

DISASTERS AND DISAPPOINTMENTS

Analysts have also said the aftermath of Japan's earthquake, months of extraordinary weather in the United States, and rising food and commodity prices took a toll on companies in the second quarter.

StarMine analysis showed companies, including Platinum Underwriters Holdings (PTP.N), were likely to disappoint with results because of tornado damage claims.

But companies have kept costs in check and that should support stronger results, while also giving a boost to stock prices, he said.

"I think things underneath the macro, global, political noise continue to percolate," said Mike Jackson, founder of Denver-based investment firm T3 Equity Labs. But "you're going to see higher-quality companies showing the surprises this quarter (versus) last."

Based on his own analysis, he expects industrials and utilities to surprise to the upside, especially for companies involved in "machinery, and roads and rails" and for electric utilities.

On the flip side, he sees a high probability for earnings disappointments in health care, consumer staples and materials sectors.

An S&P health-care index (.GSPA) led gains in the S&P 500 in the first half of the year as the market shifted to defensive shares, with the sector up 14 percent since the start of the year, followed by an S&P energy index (.GSPE), up 11 percent.

The health-care sector may be subject to profit-taking once earnings start after its strong run so far this year, according to Tobias Levkovich, Citigroup's chief U.S. equity strategist, who made the point in a research note.

Some analysts expect total upside surprises to be less than in previous quarters, with the percentage of companies beating expectations likely to fall in the mid-60s percentage range, below the 70-percent range, where it has been.

S&P 500 earnings overall could beat estimates by a "modest" 1 percent to 3 percent, Charles Blood, senior market strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman, wrote in a research note.

"Margins typically rise in the second quarter, but our primary concern and one of the biggest investment debates, is, 'How much room do companies have for further improvement?'" he wrote.

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Jan Paschal)

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Daily News - A year of turmoil, stumbles for NJ capital's mayor (AP)

Daily News - A year of turmoil, stumbles for NJ capital's mayor (AP) Daily Business News

Tony Mack AP – Trenton Mayor Tony Mack answers a question in Trenton, N.J., Thursday, July 7, 2011, after he announced …
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^DJI 12,657.20 -62.29
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TRENTON, N.J. – As the first new mayor of New Jersey's impoverished capital city in two decades, Tony Mack had his work cut out for him. The once-booming industrial town of Trenton is today known more for its troubles — high taxes, crime, poverty and low-performing schools — than its attributes and rich history.

But as his administration has staggered from one crisis to another in his first year, critics in the gritty city say they've had enough. Acknowledging that a recall effort is a long shot, they say it may be the city's only shot at surviving.

Mack's critics say he has used the city's payroll like a personal piggy bank, hiring unqualified friends for key posts and focusing on minor projects like parks and parades as the city struggles with serious problems.

"The city is dying, and any hope I had for it is dying with this administration," said Councilman George Muschal, a retired city policeman who has lived in Trenton's South Ward most of his life. Muschal initially backed Mack but now says City Hall has been corrupted.

"It won't stop until someone takes him out in handcuffs or he's removed by recall," Muschal said.

Among Mack's first moves as mayor of the city of 85,000 was firing the existing department heads, including a deputy city clerk hired by the City Council but escorted from City Hall by police.

The housecleaning opened the door for Mack's staff picks, who quickly turned it into a revolving door as a dozen people came and went. Some ran for the exit; others were pushed out after pressure intensified over their credentials. And some left to face criminal charges.

He blew through a string of business administrators. The first resigned after a month, saying the mayor didn't believe in "good government." Another resigned just ahead of pleading guilty to embezzlement on another job.

His housing director quit after it was learned he had a theft conviction. His chief of staff was arrested trying to buy heroin. His half-brother, whose authority he elevated at the city water plant, was arrested on charges of stealing. Most recently, his law director resigned after arguing with Mack over complying with open-records laws and potential violations of laws prohibiting city contracts to big campaign donors.

"It would be amusing if it weren't so tragic," said Bill Guhl, Mack's first business administrator, who had more than three decades of municipal and state government experience and volunteered his time to help Mack with the transition.

Mack, who took office in July 2010, acknowledges mistakes but says he is optimistic about getting things done in his second year after a steep learning curve in his first.

"I'm concentrating on being the best mayor I can be," he told The Associated Press.

"I don't look at things as regrets. I look at things as learning experiences," said the 45-year-old Mack, who has a master's degree in public policy from Fairleigh Dickinson University and who spent most of his adult life working for municipal government and as an elected county official.

While New Jersey ranks among the nation's wealthiest states, Trenton is one of the nation's poorest state capitals, with about 20 percent of the population living below the poverty line. It also ranks among the country's most dangerous cities and has some of the state's lowest standardized test scores.

Trenton was once a major manufacturing hub for everything from rubber and wire to ceramic and cigars, an accomplishment celebrated with a giant neon sign, "Trenton Makes, the World Takes," which has remained affixed to a steel bridge across the Delaware River even as industry has disappeared.

And it has a prominent role in American history: Trenton was city of George Washington's first military victory — depicted in the painting "Washington Crossing the Delaware" — and briefly served as capital of the United States in 1784.

Various efforts to stem its decline have failed, from an attempt to rebuild the commercial center after devastating race riots in 1968 to a bid by the state to stabilize the city by putting up a warren of new government office buildings.

The city's largest employer is the state, and it has a big footprint; of the city's 7.5 square miles, half are state-occupied property. More than 22,000 employees flood into the city each weekday and leave each night primarily because there is little to keep them in town.

Because New Jersey is so small geographically, lawmakers can all drive home within a few hours and don't have to stay in Trenton, unlike in larger states. Even the governor's mansion is two towns away, in tony Princeton.

"Most state capitals are coveted by their Legislatures," said Doug Palmer, the previous mayor. "The problem is the state has never looked at Trenton as its capital."

Mack's personal history has also been marked by troubles.

His home has been placed in foreclosure several times since taking office, and at one point he owed back taxes on a property he owned and used for campaign headquarters.

Questions have arisen about how he financed his campaign. When reporters asked about his finances at a news conference, he tried to have them removed from the room.

Removing Mack from office would be more difficult than electing him; organizers need to get 10,000 signatures by Nov. 15 — only slightly fewer than the 12,000 who voted in last year's mayoral runoff — before a new election can be held.

Supporters say he has done the best he can with what he was left — a $55 million budget hole, shrinking state aid to fill it and a City Council made up of freshmen.

"Everyone at City Hall was new. We stumbled," said council President Kathy McBride, a Mack supporter. "But we need to move the city forward, not point a finger at an individual."

Mack said he's not worried about a recall, but a Stand By Tony Committee has been formed to defend his record. He also recently announced that he is coming out with a self-published autobiography: "Detours to Destiny: Life Under Construction."

Stand By Tony committee spokesman Orlando La Santa supports Mack, but also worries what would happen if he were ousted: "There are no other true leaders to step up in his place should he get recalled."

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Daily News - Newsmaker: James Murdoch faces biggest test as heir to empire (Reuters)

Daily News - Newsmaker: James Murdoch faces biggest test as heir to empire (Reuters) Daily Business News

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^DJI 12,657.20 -62.29
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LONDON (Reuters) – James Murdoch was not responsible for the phone hacking scandal that has engulfed his father's media empire, but that will matter little if his handling of the case does not improve quickly.

Tipped as heir to the empire, Rupert Murdoch's youngest son is under pressure to show he can muster his father's political touch to contain scandal that is damning the family name and slashing by the day the value of media assets that have been in the business for decades.

So far, analysts say he has been slow to realize the enormity of the situation, or to show genuine humility over an episode in which his newspapers have been seen to harass the families of child murder victims, dead soldiers and bombing victims, all to generate stories.

"This is the most serious political crisis in a generation (for the Murdochs) -- but as a business crisis it is immense and immensely more significant," said Claire Enders, head of the Enders Analysis research group.

By the time James Murdoch took over at News International, News Corp's British newspaper stable, in 2007, the alleged hacking practices were over, but the scandal had hardly begun, and it fell to Murdoch this week to close the 168-year-old paper at the center of the scandal.

At the heart of the problem, Enders says, is a sense that, after years of wielding a peculiar influence over British politics, James Murdoch and the rest of his company do not know how to handle a situation where they are in the wrong.

"This siege mentality is just not right," she said."They have got to accept that other people in the world have got something to tell them. But that is just not a personality trait one has ever seen from them.

"Their attitude is 'We are better, we're different', and I'm afraid the word 'better' is no longer going to apply if these allegations are proven."

HIP-HOP RECORD LABEL

Born in 1972, James Murdoch dropped out of Harvard in 1995to start a hip-hop record label and once billed himself as a professional cartoonist. Few then would have tipped him to overtake his elder siblings to stand in line to inherit News Corp.

Just 12 years later, he took control of the Asian and European operations of News Corp, which wields influence from Hollywood to Hong Kong and owns not only Britain's biggest-selling paper, the Sun, but also the film studio 20th Century Fox, the U.S. cable network Fox, the television network Star TV, publisher Harper Collins and the Wall Street Journal.

Whether he can match Rupert Murdoch's consummate empire-building ability in the long term is yet to be seen, but James has already shown hints of sharing his 80-year-old father's bullish approach to business.

Smart and clean-cut, James is capable of charming interviewers and the public, but inspires fear among many of those who work for him. He keeps a model of the Star Wars villain Darth Vader outside his London office.

"When James was in the building, you could almost hear the Darth Vader music," said a former News International editor.

"He came across on his TV interview this week as a nice, thoughtful guy. And he may be that. But he's a scary man around the office," said the editor, who declined to be named.

When News Corp's Internet business was founded in the early days of the dot-com boom, James became president. But as boom turned to bust, he moved on to Hong Kong-based Star TV before becoming chief executive of BSkyB in 2003.

That move was initially met with accusations of nepotism, but he quickly impressed analysts and investors by broadening the company from a pure pay-TV offering to include broadband and telephony. But like his father, the younger Murdoch has courted controversy. He stirred up a storm in August 2009 when he used a keynote speech at a major TV festival for a blistering attack on Britain's state-owned broadcaster, the BBC, echoing his father Rupert's speech from the same platform 20 years earlier.

James was promoted to run News Corp's international business from New York in March this year, a move seen as confirming his status as heir to the media empire. But he has still not moved from London, where all of his direct reports are based.

TV OVER PRINT MEDIA

The younger Murdoch has always favored the more profitable television and entertainment arms of the business over the traditional print media on which his father founded the empire.

But growing popular and political anger over the voicemail hacking saga has raised the chances of a delay in government approval for News Corp's bid to buy out the 61 percent of BSkyB that it does not already own.

Prime Minister David Cameron's right-of-center government had already given informal blessing to the takeover, despite criticism that it gave Murdoch too much media power.

Before the controversy worsened, formal approval had been expected within weeks. But a decision now seems likely to take months. "James Murdoch has not handled the situation well. He surely did know, certainly by 2008, what was going on," Peter Burden, the author of a book on the News of the World, told Reuters. "The problem is they're all very loyal to each other, the Murdochs and their people," he said, in reference to the company's decision to back Rebekah Brooks, a close confidante and editor of the News of the World at the time many of the offences were alleged to have happened.

"James didn't grasp the enormity of the situation. A few months ago he said 'We've put it in a box now and it's contained', and of course he couldn't have been more wrong."

Beyond pure financial concerns, the Murdochs appear also to have also damaged their once untouchable position in British politics, where leaders of political parties openly courted Rupert Murdoch's support.

Andy Coulson, a former editor of the News of the World who quit in January as spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron, was arrested on Friday over the scandal.

"They don't understand that you can't assume the kind of power they've had in this country without actually behaving as if you're part of the fabric," said Enders.

"And what that means is -- if your employee becomes an employee of the prime minister, you have some responsibility toward that employee being a credit to the prime minister rather than a discredit. They don't get that connection."

James Murdoch needs to show that he does.

(Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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Daily News - Small Companies: The MBA Road Not Taken (BusinessWeek)

Daily News - Small Companies: The MBA Road Not Taken (BusinessWeek) Daily Business News

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For many students and their schools, an MBA stands for Master of Business Administration during the program and then for McKinsey, Bain, and Accenture once the job search begins. So much is made of return on investment when the subject of MBAs is raised that it seems to be an undisputed truth that these programs naturally lead to positions with large, public companies.

In such a context, an MBA program that channels alumni toward small or medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) will probably be seen as unsuccessful or lacking ambition. The same view is likely to be taken of students who choose to take the SME path.

Smaller companies are seldom the sort of household name employers usually linked to MBAs and are likely to evolve in sectors whose managers have to get their hands dirty. However, there is a case to be made for SMEs being the best possible fit for an MBA graduate.

A classic, high-quality MBA program is a general management curriculum designed to equip participants with all the skills needed to run a business. While the structure rests on specific subjects such as finance, strategy and leadership, the overall logic is to meld these blocks of knowledge together. In the vast majority of cases, MBA students shy away from too much specialization, preferring instead to focus on a well-rounded education.

Limited>

Despite the courting of high-profile, multinational recruiters by MBA programs, their emphasis on preparing graduates for high-level management jobs does not always resonate with bigger employers. While a large company can offer a vast range of posts, these are often limited to specific functions that are particularly well-suited to junior MBA graduates. In this way, alumni become directors of marketing, purchasing, or perhaps human resources. Few within a multinational will start their post-MBA career in a general management position.

The same is not true within SMEs, where size alone makes a high-level position all-encompassing. That is not to say that MBA alumni cannot function in classic department-specific roles, but that SMEs provide opportunities to put all these skills and more together in one management role.

In the western world in particular, management jobs are seldom created at the well-known companies for which MBAs would like to work. Today's schools and students need to recognize that it is the smaller companies that are looking to find the right people to help make them capable of competing in an ever-more-international business world. It is no longer the case that only employers with a massive international presence can offer truly international careers. SMEs are increasingly looking to expand beyond their borders and do not always have the management teams to make such change. This is where MBA programs could answer a need and at the same time help alumni find very satisfying careers at companies they might never have looked at in the past.

If there exists a level of misconception among MBA providers, graduates, and students concerning SMEs, there is also a general misunderstanding of MBAs by SMEs themselves. The smaller companies that seem ideally suited to the general-management MBAs coming out of business schools also play an often-subconscious role in keeping the notion alive that no holder of an MBA would want to work in anything less than a huge group. Where the recruitment of MBA alumni is concerned, there seems to be a large dose of self-censorship at work.

Culture>

It appears that for many SMEs, an MBA graduate would risk being more trouble than he or she may be worth. The image is likely to be one of a handsomely paid manager with bags of self-confidence and extremely high standards. Such a mix would be seen as an explosive one by most smaller companies. They seem to feel that the cost and culture shock involved in recruiting someone with an MBA would create a host of problems.

Salary, too, is an aspect that could easily frighten off SMEs. In terms of cost, there is no denying that an MBA listed on a CV means higher wage expectations. This needs to be weighed against the far-reaching leadership and strategic benefits that such a manager can add to a more-compact company. The extra value that can be brought by an MBA graduate is potentially huge.

A manager with an MBA background can offer the sort of long-term vision more common among larger groups allied to the latest management knowledge -- vision that most smaller firms lack the time or resources to implement. As the globalization of markets, manpower, and production puts SMEs increasingly in competition with bigger companies and those active in distant markets, this sort of 360-degree approach can make all the difference. In short, the competitive rules for SMEs are becoming much like those for larger firms. They need to play by the same rules. Here, MBA graduates can prove themselves.

For business schools and their students, larger recruiters will always be a key target. The prestige and certainty of a big salary hike make sense in the traditional terms of career, program marketing, and in some cases, rankings. It could, however, be the case that some old-world assumptions need to evolve. The moment may have come for both SMEs and MBAs to recognize that they could be made for each other.

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Daily News - Earnings schedule for week of 7/11/11 (AP)

Daily News - Earnings schedule for week of 7/11/11 (AP) Daily Business News

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C 42.03 -0.60
GOOG 531.99 -14.61
JPM 40.74 -0.58
MAR 37.17 -0.38

MONDAY, July 11

Alcoa Inc. reports quarterly financial results after the market close.

TUESDAY, July 12

No major announcements expected.

WEDNESDAY, July 13

Marriott International Inc. reports quarterly financial results.

Yum Brands Inc. reports quarterly financial results after the market close.

THURSDAY, July 14

Google Inc. reports quarterly financial results after the market close.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. reports quarterly financial results.

FRIDAY, July 15

Citigroup Inc. reports quarterly financial results.

Mattel Inc. reports quarterly financial results.

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Daily News - Detroit News reporter confirms WH auto czar’s ‘I did this all for the unions’ comment, says it was a joke (Daily Caller)

Daily News - Detroit News reporter confirms WH auto czar’s ‘I did this all for the unions’ comment, says it was a joke (Daily Caller) Daily Business News

President Barack Obama’s auto bailout czar Ron Bloom is under fire from the House Oversight Committee for a pro-union comment he reportedly made in 2009.

David Shepardson, a reporter for The Detroit News, wrote in 2009 that Bloom told a dinner audience “I did this all for the unions.” While testifying under oath an Oversight subcommittee hearing in June, though, Bloom denied making those comments.

Rep. Dan Burton, Indiana Republican, asked Bloom about the comment. Bloom replied that he didn’t say it. So, Burton asked him is he thought he was “misquoted.” Bloom said “that’s correct.”

Burton then said that he was going to call Shepardson and ask him if Bloom said it, and reminded Bloom he was under oath. “I’m fully aware,” Bloom responded.

In an email to The Daily Caller, Shepardson confirmed that Bloom made the comment, but said it was a joke. “Our 2009 story was based on first-hand accounts of mutiple [sic] people who attended the dinner and said Bloom made the comment in jest,” Shepardson said.

Burton and Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa, California Republican, wrote to Bloom late last week offering him the opportunity to clarify his statements to the committee. (Private emails detail Obama admin involvement in cutting non-union worker pensions post-GM bailout)

Shepardson’s news story isn’t the only place Bloom was quoted as saying that. Wall Street figure and key bailout player Steven Rattner quotes Bloom as saying it too in his September 2010 book.

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

Detroit News reporter confirms WH auto czar's ‘I did this all for the unions’ comment, says it was a joke

Economist Veronique de Rugy on debt debate

U.N. says execution of Mexican national in violation of international law

Republicans react furiously to new unemployment numbers

Maher: Republicans like Casey Anthony, GOP voters 'letting them get away with murder'

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