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SMF Blogs > Hot Trends > May 2009

 

 

 

TOKYO (AP) -- Orders in Japan for Toyota's new Prius hybrid have topped a booming 110,000, a major dealership chain said Saturday, in what is turning out to be a rare bright spot in the gloomy auto market.

The third-generation Prius officially rolled out in Japan just two weeks ago. But dealers are already flooded with orders, including some placed weeks in advance, according to the dealership. Toyota Motor Corp., the world's biggest automaker, said two weeks ago that it received 80,000 advance orders, and has not updated that number.

But the Toyota Tokyo Corolla dealer said Saturday that nationwide orders at Toyota dealerships in Japan, including those of rivals, have soared to 110,000. Dealers tally their customer orders differently from the way manufacturers do. But any way you slice it, the Prius is a hit.

Toyota has set its monthly sales target for Japan at 10,000 new Prius cars -- a figure that should make it the top-selling car in the country. As the orders stack up, the company looks on track to meet or even surpass its goal and take that crown -- an astonishing accomplishment for a hybrid, although the Prius is fighting competition from another new hybrid, Honda Motor Co.'s Insight. Hybrids are in demand partly because the Japanese government began offering tax exemptions for the cars to encourage their sales earlier this year.

Parliament gave consumers added incentive Friday when it approved a cash-back rebate for trading in cars 13 years or older for greener cars. Hybrids also promise savings on gas. In Japan, where frequent stop-and-go traffic lowers the fuel efficiency of gas-engine cars but actually raises it in hybrids, the Prius is promising nearly 90 miles per gallon (38 kilometers per liter).

In heavy traffic, hybrids rely on their electric motors and thus burn no gas. The overall Japanese auto market has been languishing for years, with vehicle sales falling to their lowest level in more than three decades last year.

Demand has worsened since the U.S. financial crisis sent this nation into a recession. Toyota, which also makes Lexus luxury models and the Camry sedan, has said it is increasing Prius production to meet demand.

But it is still expecting a 550 billion yen ($5.7 billion) loss for the fiscal year through March 2010, its second straight year in the red, because of the global auto slump and the unfavorable exchange rate in a strong yen. 



 

Prepare yourself for the "New Economy"


 
Posted: 5/30/2009 11:20:37 AM by StockMarketFunding | with 0 comments


 

 

Through out all of 2009, StockMarketFunding.com has been talking to client about the fall of great American icons.

Today's announcement is no different as there is a great deal of American history in the icon name FAO Schwarz. FAO Schwarz was founded in 1862 under the name Toy Bazaar by German immigrant Frederick August Otto Schwarz, in Baltimore.

In 1963 the Schwarz family sold the business to Parent's Magazine. The business was subsequently sold to W.R. Grace in 1970, and to toy retailer Franz Carl Weber International of Zurich, Switzerland in 1974.

However, shortly after its business peak in 2000, the company faced financial failure. Vendex put the 42-store chain up for sale. In 2001, The Right Start Company bought 23 of the 42 stores from Vendex. The other nineteen unsold stores were immediately closed. In December 2003, Right Start itself filed for bankruptcy. It would emerge from bankruptcy in April 2004.

In November 2007, FAO Schwarz acquired premium children's clothing company Best & Co., which has plans to expand.

The New York store was featured in the 1988 Tom Hanks film Big, in which Hanks and Robert Loggia danced "Heart & Soul" and "Chopsticks" on the store's large floor piano. It is said that Robert Loggia's character is based on then-CEO Peter Harris 
  

 

WAYNE, N.J. (AP) -- Toys R Us Inc. announced early Thursday that it had bought troubled high-end retailer FAO Schwarz, which has struggled for years through bankruptcies amid tough competition from discount stores.

"We will work tirelessly to preserve the distinctiveness and integrity of the FAO Schwarz stores and brand as we grow the business and, indeed, take the brand to even greater heights," Jerry Storch, CEO and chairman of Toys R Us, said in a news release.

Toys R Us will operate FAO Schwarz's flagship store in New York City and a second store at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. FAO Schwarz's Web site and catalog will continue to use the company's name.

The company declined to release financial details of the agreement. FAO Schwarz was established in 1862 and immortalized in the 1988 Tom Hanks movie "Big." It's best known for its upscale selection of toys but also began to offer its own branded $20-and-under toys during the 2008 holiday season. It has faced financial difficulty in the past.

The company filed for bankruptcy protection twice in 2003, first in January after a weak 2002 holiday season. It was purchased by D.E. Shaw group in 2004. Toys R Us operates more than 1,500 stores worldwide, including 847 in the United States.  



 

Prepare yourself for the "New Economy"


 
Posted: 5/28/2009 7:03:55 AM by StockMarketFunding | with 0 comments


 

 

 

DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Corp. on Wednesday withdrew its offer to swap bond debt for company stock, saying that too few bondholders agreed to the deal. The move sets the stage for what almost certainly will be a bankruptcy filing.

GM has until Monday to finish restructuring or file for reorganization under Chapter 11. But the company said Wednesday that its offer to exchange $27 billion in unsecured debt for 10 percent of the company's stock had failed. GM has received $19.4 billion in federal loans.

The Monday deadline was set by the government and includes debt reduction, labor cost cuts and plant closures. The automaker said its board will meet to decide its next step. "The principal amount of notes tendered was substantially less than the amount required by GM to satisfy the debt reduction requirement under its loan agreements with the U.S. Department of the Treasury," GM said in a statement issued Wednesday.

The Obama administration has said it would only provide more funds if 90 percent of the bondholders, as well as unionized workers, agreed to concessions that substantially reduced GM's costs.

There was a small hope Tuesday that GM could avoid a bankruptcy filing when the United Auto Workers union disclosed that it would take a 20 percent stake in GM -- down from the original plan of 39 percent. That seemingly freed 19 percent of the Detroit-based company's shares to sweeten the pot for its recalcitrant bondholders. But because the bondholder deal did not go through, the equity freed by the UAW deal now apparently will go to the U.S. government, which may have to commit billions more for GM's restructuring in court.

The government's stake in the company originally was to be 50 percent, according to GM's regulatory filings. But it now could be as high as 69 percent. The Canadian government also could get equity for up to $8 billion in aid for the automaker.

Such an arrangement would leave bondholders back where they started -- and a Chapter 11 filing all but certain. The deadline for GM's bondholders to tender their debt was midnight Tuesday.  



 

Prepare yourself for the "New Economy"


 
Posted: 5/27/2009 7:11:41 AM by StockMarketFunding | with 0 comments


 

 

 

NEW YORK (AP) -- Facebook is getting a $200 million investment from a Russian Internet investor that values the social networking company at $10 billion even though it has yet to turn a profit.

The investment gives Digital Sky Technologies a nearly 2 percent stake in Palo Alto, California-based Facebook's preferred stock. Digital Sky won't get a board seat. The $10 billion valuation for Facebook is less than the $15 billion value implied in 2007, when Microsoft spent $240 million for a 1.6 percent stake in the company -- even though Facebook has substantially grown since then.

However Facebook's own appraisal after the Microsoft deal gave the company a market value of about $3.7 billion, according to details revealed in a legal settlement. The latest investment, in preferred stock, does not necessarily compare with what the company's common shares would be worth on the open market.

That would be determined if the company were to go public, which is likely a ways off. During a conference call Tuesday, Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said an IPO is "not something we are rushing toward." He called the Digital Sky investment a "good cash buffer" to support its growth.

Facebook now counts 200 million users, 70 percent of whom live outside the U.S. As a private company, Facebook does not disclose financial details. It doesn't even have a chief financial officer. Gideon Yu left that post in March and Facebook says it is still searching for a replacement.

The company says it has been profitable by one measure -- earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA -- for the past five quarters. Zuckerberg reiterated Tuesday that the company expects to generate positive cash flow in 2010. Zuckerberg also repeated his claim that Facebook will grow revenue by 70 percent this year.

Debra Aho Williamson, a senior analyst with Internet research firm eMarketer, questions whether that projection is achievable. EMarketer estimates that Facebook's worldwide ad revenue will be $300 million this year, up 20 percent from last year. In other words, to hit 70 percent growth, Facebook might have to ramp up the sale of products or services on the site.

The company has experimented with some ideas, such as letting users send each other tiny virtual "gifts" for $1 each. Yuri Milner, Digital Sky's chief executive, said he is "confident that Facebook has the potential to be one of the most valuable Internet companies globally."

In addition to the $200 million preferred stock investment, Digital Sky also plans to offer to buy least $100 million of Facebook's common shares from the company's existing shareholders.

Based in London and Moscow, Digital Sky also holds a stake in vKontakte, a Russian online social network that is far more popular in that country than Facebook. Its investment brings the total amount that Facebook has raised to more than $600 million since its founding five years ago.  



 

Prepare yourself for the "New Economy"


 
Posted: 5/26/2009 4:51:35 PM by StockMarketFunding | with 0 comments


 

 

 


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal regulators are adopting a new system of special fees paid by U.S. financial institutions that will shift more of the burden to bigger banks to help replenish the deposit insurance fund.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is meeting to approve the new fee system. It is intended to raise $5.6 billion in the face of a cascade of bank failures that has depleted the insurance fund.

The FDIC now expects bank failures will cost the fund around $70 billion through 2013, up from a previous assessment of around $65 billion.

FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair says, "There will be some shifting of the burden (to major banks). The shift is not huge to them. We're asking them to pay more."  



 

Prepare yourself for the "New Economy"


 
Posted: 5/22/2009 12:59:54 PM by StockMarketFunding | with 0 comments


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