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Chủ đề trong 'Thị trường chứng khoán' bởi hocCK, 13/11/2007.

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  1. hocCK

    hocCK Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/04/2006
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    Nhóm G-7 cam kết ổn định hệ thống tài chánh quốc tế

    22/09/2008


    G-7 central bank governors pose for a group photo outside the US Treasury building (11 Apr 2008 file photo)
    Các vị bộ trưởng tài chánh và thống đốc ngân hàng trung ương của nhóm G-7
    Các giới chức hàng đầu về kinh tế của 7 nước giàu nhất thế giới cho biết họ sẽ thực hiện mọi hành động cần thiết để bảo đảm ổn định của hệ thống tài chánh quốc tế.

    Hôm nay, các vị bộ trưởng tài chánh và thống đốc ngân hàng trung ương của nhóm G-7 đã thảo luận về kế hoạch cứu nguy tài chánh của Hoa Kỳ trong một cuộc hội nghị qua điện thoại.

    Cuộc họp vừa kể diễn ra sau khi có tin về kế hoạch cứu nguy trị giá 700 tỉ đô la mà chính phủ của Tổng thống Bush đang yêu cầu quốc hội Mỹ chấp thuận.

    Tổng thống Bush nói rằng ''cả thế giới đang theo dõi'' cách thức ứng phó của Hoa Kỳ đối với vụ khủng hoảng này.

    Ông Bush hối thúc quốc hội đừng có những hành động mang tính chất đảg phải có thể làm cho kế hoạch kém hiệu quả hoặc không được chấp thuận một cách nhanh chóng.

    Những hành động của giới hữu trách ở Washington đã giảm bớt mối lo ngại của giới đầu tư ở các thị trường chứng khoán Á Châu, là nơi mà hầu hết các chỉ số chính đã tăng mạnh trong ngày hôm nay.

    Các chỉ chứng khoán chính ở Châu Âu cũng tăng giá vào giữa trưa thứ hai. Tuy nhiên, chứng khoán ở Mỹ giảm giá vào lúc bắt đầu phiên giao dịch hôm nay.

    Trong một diễn tiến khác, Quĩ Dự trữ Liên bang Hoa Kỳ cho biết hồi tối chúa nhật rằng họ đã phê chuẩn đơn xin trở thành công ty mẹ (holding company) trong ngành ngân hàng của hai ngân hàng đầu tư lớn còn lại ở Mỹ là Goldman Sachs và Morgan Stanley.

    Sự thay đổi này có nghĩa là hai công ty vừa kể sẽ được nhận tiền ký thác và mượn tiền từ ngân hàng trung ương trong trường hợp cần thiết.

    AP
    Congress, Bush team agree on some bailout terms
    Monday September 22, 7:36 pm ET
    By Julie Hirschfeld Davis
    Administration accepts some Dem demands in bailout bill, but haggles over exec compensation

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Scrambling for a swift deal on the $700 billion bailout for failing financial firms, key Democrats and Bush administration officials agreed Monday to include mortgage help for beleaguered homeowners but wrangled over other issues, including "golden parachutes" for executives who benefit from the unprecedented rescue.

    Democrats demanded that the measure limit pay packages for executives of companies helped by the biggest financial rescue since the Great Depression. The administration was balking at that, and also at a proposal by Democrats to let judges rewrite mortgages to lower bankrupt homeowners'' monthly payments.

    President Bush prodded Congress during the day to pass the rescue plan quickly, declaring, "The whole world is watching."

    Rep. Barney Frank, the House Financial Services Committee chairman, said the administration essentially had forced Congress to the negotiating table by creating an expectation in financial markets that a massive bailout was on the way.

    "By the declaration that they made, by sending this proposal, I think we have to recognize the reality that we don''t have a choice now of debating whether this is a good or a bad thing," said Frank, D-Mass, who was leading negotiations with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

    "We have gotten closer," Frank said, but "We''re not there yet."

    Congressional aides said the House could act on a bailout bill as early as Wednesday, but leaders emerged from a closed-door meeting late Monday with no firm timetable for action.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said only that leaders were working to give the markets confidence that "this legislation will pass, and it will pass soon."

    However, Wall Street wasn''t comforted by the progress of the talks. The Dow Jones industrials plummeted 372 points, oil prices soared $25 a barrel at one point and gold prices surged anew as investors searched for a safe place to park their money. And despite encouraging talk on Capitol Hill, lawmakers on both the right and left were already assailing the deal-in-progress.

    The emergency legislation would give the government broad power to buy up devalued assets from troubled financial firms in a bid to unlock the flow of credit and stabilize badly shaken markets in the United States and around the globe.

    In one expansion of its original proposal, the administration is asking for broad power to buy up virtually any kind of bad asset -- including credit card debt or car loans -- from any financial institution in the U.S. or abroad in order to stabilize markets.

    Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., the Banking Committee chairman, has proposed granting that request; Frank said he was working to limit the bailout to mortgage-related investments.

    Differences remained with the administration on Democrats'' proposal that the government take an ownership stake in the troubled companies it bails out so that taxpayers could benefit from future profits. Frank said Paulson had accepted the idea in principle, but several staff aides at work on the plan said there was no agreement yet on how the concept would work.

    Frank said he and Paulson had agreed to create a congressional oversight board as part of the bailout and to mandate that the government come up with a plan to avoid foreclosures on any mortgages it acquires in the rescue. A government official with knowledge of the talks confirmed the administration backs those provisions.

    As for tottering financial firms, there still were divisions on which would be helped and what kind of assets the government could buy as part of the bailout.

    And in a fresh sign of a challenging road ahead, Sen. Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, the top Banking Committee Republican, blasted the emerging plan as "neither workable nor comprehensive."

    "In my judgment, it would be foolish to waste massive sums of taxpayer funds testing an idea that has been hastily crafted and may actually cause the government to revert to an inadequate strategy of ad hoc bailouts," Shelby said.

    Lawmakers on both extremes of the political spectrum assailed the plan as a massive, poorly conceived bailout. Conservative House Republicans and liberal House Democrats both and huddled privately to express their concerns.

    A partisan battle was brewing over the bankruptcy provision for homeowners'' mortgage payments, a key Democratic demand.

    "We''ll see how hard they fight -- it''s something we care about," Frank said.

    Lawmakers in both parties appeared to be coalescing around the idea that executive compensation limits should be part of the bailout, although Paulson is said to be concerned that such curbs would discourage companies from participating.

    "Some element of that has to be in this package," said Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla.

    Investors were uncertain just how successful the administration''s plan would be in unfreezing credit markets, which many businesses depend on to fund day-to-day operations, and for propping up the still-weak housing market.

    Bush said, "Obviously, there will be differences over some details, and we will have to work through them. That is an understandable part of the policymaking process." But he also said, "It would not be understandable if members of Congress sought to use this emergency legislation to pass unrelated provisions, or to insist on provisions that would undermine the effectiveness of the plan."

    Treasury spokeswoman Brookly McLaughlin said, "We are confident that we can get a bill done this week."

    The fast-moving negotiations between the administration and Congress unfolded a day after the government approved a request by investment houses Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to change their status to bank holding companies.

    That change will allow the two venerable institutions to set up commercial banks that will be able to take deposits, significantly bolstering the resources of both institutions. It will also grant them permanent access to emergency loans supplied by the Fed rather than the temporary loan status they have had since last March when the Fed moved to prop up investment banks following the forced sale of Bear Stearns
  2. hocCK

    hocCK Thành viên quen thuộc

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    Sept. 22 (Bloomberg) -- The Wall Street that shaped the financial world for two decades ended last night, when Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley concluded there is no future in remaining investment banks now that investors have determined the model is broken.
    [11:11:58 AM] ngo van minh says: U.S. congress haggles over Treasury bailout plan
    [11:43:40 AM] ngo van minh says: Mon Sep 22, 2008 6:34pm EDT By Kevin Drawbaugh and Richard Cowan

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Bush administration and Congress haggled over the details of a $700 billion Wall Street bailout plan on Monday as U.S. stocks tumbled on worries that even a massive government effort to mop up bad debt may not be enough to revive the economy.

    Congressional Democrats want to add assistance for homeowners, curb executive pay at companies who participate in the plan, have the government take equity stakes in those companies and increase oversight of the asset buybacks.

    Meanwhile, some Republicans and Democrats hardened their stance against the bailout, and there was talk about negotiations on the package extending into next week.

    U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said congressional Democrats accept the need to legislate quickly to stabilize the markets and tackle the housing crisis.

    But the Nevada Democrat called Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson''s plan, unveiled on Saturday, "a starting point."

    "The Bush Administration has called on Congress to rubber stamp its bailout legislation without serious debate or efforts to improve it. That will not happen," said Reid.

    Treasury issued its plan on Saturday to calm markets and attack the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression by buying up mortgage-backed bonds and related securities that are clogging the inner workings of global capital markets.

    In an unprecedented proposal to shift hundreds of billions of dollars of bad debt into a government portfolio using taxpayer money, Treasury asked for broad powers to buy up securities over two years and get credit markets moving again. RATE CUT HINT FROM DEPUTY AT BANK

    Sir John Gieve, the Bank of England deputy governor in charge of financial stability, signalled on Monday he might be prepared to support a cut in UK interest rates later in the autumn. Gieve said the crisis in the financial sector was likely to squeeze the economy even more powerfully than had been expected, but the threat of inflation appeared to be subsiding. Speaking at the Family Offices Leadership Summit, he repeated his call for reform to bank capital and liquidity measures that would put into force counter-cyclical rules.

    STAMP DUTY DITHERING HITS SALES OF HOMES

    A poll conducted by the National Association of Estate Agents has found nine out of 10 estate agents believe government dithering over its position on stamp duty has led to greater uncertainty in the housing market and a further fall in the number of homes sold. Reports early in August that the government was planning a temporary suspension of stamp duty on all house purchases were neither confirmed nor denied. A month later a year-long stamp duty holiday on homes costing less than 175,000 pounds was announced. Chris Brown, NAEA president, has urged the government to offer first-time buyers an additional stamp duty holiday and says that the recent decision had not been enough to affect the market.

    DARLING SPARKS DEBT FEARS AFTER REJECTING TAX RISE

    On Monday, Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said he would not raise taxes now to stem the rise in government borrowing. He said it would be "nonsense" to take money out of the economy in the downturn. Government bonds fell as traders worried that Darling would have to issue more debt to plug the hole in the government''s finances. Darling said the economic outlook was brightening with oil and food prices starting to fall and inflation showing signs of peaking.

    DARLING DEMANDS "URGENT REVIEW" OF BANKING REGULATION

    Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said at the Labour conference on Monday an "urgent review" of banking regulation. The chancellor said he has asked Lord Turner, the new chairman of the Financial Services Authority, to look at the regulatory system and draw lessons from the turmoil that has hit world markets. Darling also confirmed banking legislation would be published when the House of Commons returns on October 6 that would allow the Bank of England to intervene in failing banks. FSA BEGINS REVIEW OF BANK BONUSES

    The Financial Services Authority has started a review of banks'' bonus structures, saying on Monday it had earlier in September begun preliminary "high level" discussions with leading banks. The FSA said, however, that the issue could not be dealt with by a single country but needed international cooperation. The FSA''s review is part its response to a wider regulatory review published in April by the Financial Stability Forum.

    SHELL MAKES MOVE INTO IRAQ

    Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) became the first Western oil major to sign a deal with the Iraqi government since the 2003 US-led invasion. The multi-million dollar deal is for the commercial use of gas currently being flared off in the south of the country. The initial agreement is for a feasibility study and commercial principles for a joint venture between Shell and the Iraqi government. The potential for the deal is large with 700 million cubic feet of gas being burned off in the area covered every day.

    CENTRICA EXPANDS IN GAS STORAGE

    Centrica (CNA.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) is to buy a gas storage facility in Yorkshire from Warwick Energy for 70 million pounds. The depleted gas field at Claythorpe will cost a further 100 million pounds to develop, have a capacity of 7.5 billion cubic feet and will be in operation by 2012. The acquisition comes at a time when there is growing corporate interest in UK gas storage as the country''s dependence on imports grows. In March, Centrica said it would study converting the depleted Bains field off the northwest of England into a 20 billion cubic feet storage facility.

    SURGE IN WAGE AND FUEL COSTS HITS PETER HAMBRO

    Peter Hambro Mining (POG.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said interim pre-tax profits dropped by a third due to rising costs and that its newest project is running behind schedule. Although revenues increased from 93.1 million dollars to 146.4 million dollars on the back of the rising gold price, pre-tax profits declined to 21.1 million dollars in the first-half, from 31.8 million dollars last year. Chairman Peter Hambro said: "We''ve seen much higher costs in wages, in diesel and in consumables. There are no signs of these cost increases abating." Shares closed at 696.5 pence, down 78 pence.

    IF METALS UPBEAT ON PRODUCTION AS PROFITS FORGE AHEAD. High ferrochrome prices and strong Chinese demand have helped International Ferro Metals (IFL.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) report pre-tax profits of 830.4 million rand in the year ended June 30. Revenue increased from 183. 9 million to 1.9 billion rand. The shortage of electricity in South Africa, which contains three-quarters of the world''s chromite, helped double the price of the metal over the past year to historic highs above two dollars a pound. A new plant in Buffelsfontein allowed the company to increase production from 49,400 to 205,600 tonnes last year and the company, now sitting on a cash pile of nearly one billion rand, is considering buying back up to 10 percent of its shares.

    CAPE BENEFITS FROM OVERHAUL

    Cape announced a 9.7 percent rise in pre-tax profits to 14.7 million pounds in the six months to June 30 and said that it would beat full-year forecasts for pre-tax profits of around 43.3 million pounds. The energy and natural resources support services company, which formerly produced asbestos, said it plans to return to the main board of the Stock Exchange in the second quarter of 2009. Shares closed at 228.25 pence, down 3.75 pence.

    Prepared for Reuters by Durrants
  3. hocCK

    hocCK Thành viên quen thuộc

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    23.9
    It was a surreal moment: Senator Christopher Dodd told ABC?Ts ?oGood Morning Americâ? that Treasury Secretary Paulson and Fed Chief Bernanke had just informed Congressional leaders ?oWê?Tre literally days away from a complete meltdown of our financial system.?

    Things got even scarier when he told CNN, ?oThere was dead silence in the room for five to 10 seconds. The oxygen went out of the room.?

    No wonder Congress is falling all over itself to pass the $700-billion bailout bill to buy toxic mortgages!

    Combined with the $25 billion spent to bail out Bear Sterns, $100 billion each for Fannie and Freddie and $85 billion for AIG, Washington has now pledged more than $1 TRILLION to fight this crisis so far ?" and still, it?Ts only the beginning:

    Yesterday, Paulson announced hê?Ts adding another $50 billion to ensure the money market funds ...


    Hê?Ts also expanding the bail-out to include car loans, credit card debt and more ...


    And Democrats in Congress are clamoring for hundreds of billions more for a second economic stimulus package, for a bailout of homeowners at risk for losing their homes and more!
    And still ?" even if Congress gives Paulson everything he asks for and more ?" therê?Ts still one, glaring, ?oinconvenient truth? nobody?Ts talking about ...

    None of these unprecedented actions
    are enough to end this massive debt crisis!

    1. They do little to guarantee that more financial institutions won?Tt fail: Sure ?" Washington is going to buy toxic loans from the institutions that invested in them. But don?Tt think for a moment banks and other companies are going to get top dollar for the poison in their portfolios.

    Although the details of the bailout are still sketchy, it?Ts clear that Washington will pay a deeply discounted price for that bad paper. That means the financial institutions that own those lousy investments are still going to take huge losses.

    And in many cases, those losses are likely to be large enough to push many of these teetering firms over the brink.

    Our forecast: Despite this massive, historic, unprecedented bailout, you will still continue to see a chain reaction of bank failures and corporate bankruptcies.

    2. They do little to slow the explosion in mortgage defaults that caused this mess in the first place: With the economy slowing, unemployment surging, home values still plunging and monthly payments on six million adjustable rate mortgages set to rise, the tidal wave of mortgage delinquencies and defaults wê?Tve seen so far is almost certain to grow larger, not smaller.

    As Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY), chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, told FOX News Sunday, ?oIf you don''t solve the mortgage crisis, you''re not going to solve the financial crisis.?

    3. They do nothing to address the $180-trillion derivatives time bomb at U.S. commercial banks: Thirty years of deregulation have allowed a parallel financial system to arise in America in which more than $180 trillion dollars in derivatives are held and traded by U.S. banks with scant government supervision or accounting.

    The truth is, no one has any idea of the magnitude of the deleveraging ahead or the size of the debts that will ultimately have to be written down!

    4. They do virtually nothing to cause lenders to end the credit drought that?Ts spreading the contagion to other sectors: To survive, banks are desperately raising credit requirements ... slashing lines of credit for corporations and spending limits on credit cards ... turning down all but the most highly qualified borrowers.

    And that?Ts what?Ts causing so much pain at companies making products that consumers buy on credit: Autos, home improvement products, electronics and other high-end merchandise.

    BOTTOM LINE: As massive as it is, the Paulson-Bernanke plan can?Tt even begin to resolve this crisis. In fact ...
  4. hocCK

    hocCK Thành viên quen thuộc

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    Bailout debate mulls making Wall Street pay.
    [12:03:24 PM] ngo van minh says: By Mark Egan

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - The planned $700 billion bailout to shore up the battered U.S. financial system looked set to drag into next week as Washington lawmakers haggled over how exactly they could make Wall Street pay for its rescue.

    Stocks and the U.S. dollar tumbled on Monday as emerging details of the plan left many players skeptical that the rescue, which would give powers to the U.S. Treasury Department to buy up toxic mortgage-related debt from financial groups, would work.

    "The big detail we want to know is how is the government going to buy these securities, and what they will pay, how that reverse auction will work," said Giri Cherukuri, head trader at OakBrook Investments LLC in Lisle, Illinois. "And the big question is, ''Will this bring us out of the woods?''"

    A day after America''s last two big investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, ended Wall Street''s swashbuckling era by securing Federal Reserve approval to become commercial banks, all eyes shifted to Washington.

    U.S. lawmakers and Bush administration officials were hammering out details of a deal they hope will end the worst U.S. financial crisis since the Great Depression.

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke start two-days of congressional hearings on Tuesday to hasten approval of the bailout.

    With the economy the No. 1 issue in a U.S. presidential election that is about six weeks away, lawmakers want a plan in place quickly, fearing delay could send markets reeling again.

    But with one-third of the U.S. Senate and the entire U.S. House of Representatives up for re-election on November 4, lawmakers will want to sound tough on such hot-button issues as the pay of reckless executives.
    [12:04:18 PM] ngo van minh says: "We are not sending a blank check to Wall Street," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said after holding bipartisan talks.

    With so many ideas being floated in Washington on Monday, one congressional aide who asked not to be identified likened the scene to a "Turkish bazaar of public policy ideas."

    The crisis has unsettled world markets, and Group of Seven finance ministers and central bank heads promised "heightened close cooperation" to safeguard the global economy.

    The latest jitters came after the deal late Sunday scrapped the investment bank model synonymous with Wall Street, ensuring Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Morgan Stanley will avoid the fate of rivals that collapsed or were bought in the brutal meltdown of recent weeks.

    Morgan Stanley went a step further, striking a deal with Japan''s largest bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc, on Monday to spend as much as $8.5 billion for about one-fifth of the prestigious 73-year-old investment bank, sending Morgan''s shares higher before closing down.

    ANGER AT BAILOUT

    After Monday''s talks, U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, a top Democrat, said the U.S. government would take equity in the companies seeking a bailout. But the U.S. Treasury is against that idea, sources close to Treasury told Reuters.

    The White House said it agreed to an oversight board to monitor the bailout, which Democrats had pushed for. And Frank said there was also agreement that the plan should minimize the number of Americans who will lose their homes to foreclosure.

    But lawmakers and Treasury officials were at odds on the emotional issue of whether executives at the companies in need of rescue must agree to limits to their compensation.
    [12:04:46 PM] ngo van minh says: With details still in dispute, Frank said the legislation could take until next week to complete.

    Earlier, U.S. President George W. Bush said, "Failure to act would have broad consequences far beyond Wall Street."

    But U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, voiced outrage at the notion of any bailout without a cap on executive pay.

    "The (Bush) administration''s plan ... would enrich the Wall Street executives whose reckless investments caused the financial crisis," the powerful California Democrat said. "The taxpayer is being asked to risk billions to protect the bonuses of investment bankers."

    Even some Republicans came out against the bailout.

    Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, said he feared the bailout was "neither workable nor comprehensive."

    "It would be foolish to waste massive sums of taxpayer funds testing an idea that has been hastily crafted," he said.

    Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Nebraska Republican, told Reuters after a meeting of fellow Senate Banking Committee members, "I suspect there will be opposition. We''re not there. We don''t even have a product yet."

    South Carolina Republican Sen. Jim DeMint called the Bush plan "completely unacceptable."
    [12:05:20 PM] ngo van minh says: The uncertainty caused stocks to lose most of the gains seen on Friday, when word of the plan sparked Wall Street''s best one-day gain since 1987. The S&P 500 index dropped 3.8 percent.

    Buoyed by the dollar''s near 2 percent decline, U.S. crude oil futures soared $16.37 to settle at $120.92, the biggest ever jump in a trading session. At one point, oil was up a stunning $25.45, or 24.3 percent.

    In a crisis that has lurched from issue to issue since the U.S. economy first showed weakness and home prices began to tumble last year, prompting a credit crunch and the collapse of investment banking, some wondered where it would end.

    "The thing that scares me is the breadth of it," said Robert MacMahon, managing director for restructuring at GE Corporate Lending.

    Democrats, who control both chambers of Congress, pushed for changes to the plan on concerns that it could expand the powers of the executive branch without adequate oversight -- a frequent Democratic criticism of the Bush administration.

    GLOBAL CRISIS

    The crisis is threatening global markets. Central banks from Europe to Japan sought to shore up banks by injecting money into the banking system.. Even in the oil-rich Gulf region, the crisis was felt.

    The United Arab Emirates Central Bank launched its first-ever emergency funding facility to help fund banks as global lending between institutions shriveled.

    The Fed''s agreement to convert the once high-flying Goldman and Morgan Stanley investment banks into more conventional depositary institutions was Washington''s latest effort to restore calm to chaotic markets and avoid a deep recession.
    [12:07:45 PM] ngo van minh says: Both Goldman and Morgan will now face a thicket of new regulations, which will bolster their resources but also curb the spectacular profit growth that made investment bankers among the highest paid in the nation.

    The rescue came together after seismic shifts on Wall Street that saw Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc file for bankruptcy, Merrill Lynch & Co Inc agree to sell itself to Bank of America, and the Fed stage an $85 billion rescue of American International Group Inc.

    AIG shares gained 23 percent on Monday on reports its investors were hatching a plan to prevent the insurer from falling into government ownership, by repaying the Fed''s loan.

    Goldman and Morgan Stanley were the last of the big five investment banks that shaped 20 years of Wall Street history after Bear Stearns collapsed earlier this year.

    (Reporting by Nancy Waitz, Tom Ferraro, John Poirier, Kevin Drawbaugh, David Lawder, Richard Cowan, Jeremy Pelofsky and Emily Kaiser in Washington; Kristina Cooke, Bill Rigby, Jason Szep and Richard Leong in New York; Jessica Hall in Philadelphia; Blaise Robinson in London; Editing by John Wallace, Jeffrey Benkoe)
  5. hocCK

    hocCK Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/04/2006
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    Báo cáo tài chính quý 4-2008 của Bibica:

    1. VĐL 154 tỷ, vốn chủ sở hữu 495 tỷ, Bookvalue = 32.000 Đ.

    2. TTS 628 tỷ, nợ 133 tỷ, chủ yếu ngắn hạn (120 tỷ).

    3. Tiền mặt và tiền gửi tiết kiệm: 226 tỷ (thặng dư vốn của Lotte góp vào).

    4. Hàng tồn kho 85 tỷ, như năm 2007. Các khoản phải thu ngắn hạn: 99 tỷ ở các đại lý tiêu thụ.

    5. Doanh thu 550 tỷ, tăng 20% so với năm 2007.

    6. Lợi nhuận 2008 = 21,8 tỷ...ít, do phải trích lập trên 20 tỷ đầu tư chứng (đầu tư chứng khoán trên 40 tỷ). Chú ý Quý 4 lợi nhuận 16 tỷ, rất cố gắng trong hoàn cảnh suy thoái. Tuy nhiên lợi nhuận từ kinh doanh giảm khá, hi vọng 2009 không lỗ

    Nguồn BCTC: http://www.*********.com.vn/tianyon/Index.aspx?ArticleID=103568&ChannelID=36

    Note: Do BBC khá thanh khoản nên Citi vẫn cần mẫn bán để gửi xèng về cho Mama.
  6. hocCK

    hocCK Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/04/2006
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    Không biết bác kiemxengdi bây giờ có còn trên ttvnol nữa hay không nhỉ?

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