Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Brookfield looking to build $21-billion war chest for buying spree

Brookfield looking to build $21-billion war chest for buying spree

brookfield-place
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Brookfield Asset Management Inc., Canada’s largest alternative-asset manager, plans to start raising an additional $10 billion in funds this year after a $15 billion spending spree over the past 12 months, the company’s chief executive officer said in a letter to shareholders.
“We are entering an investment phase which will offer us a number of great opportunities,” CEO Bruce Flatt, 49, said in the letter, adding that the focus will be “acquiring assets in out-of-favour markets, or assets which have been burdened with too much financial leverage.”
Earlier this year, Toronto-based Brookfield began raising money for private funds targeting over $11 billion, bringing the total the company seeks to raise in 2015 and early 2016 to $21 billion. A new area of opportunity is buying holdings discarded by companies under pressure from shareholders to focus on their core businesses, he said.
During the first quarter, Brookfield committed $3 billion in new investments, including oil and gas businesses in Australia, wind facilities in Portugal and U.S. multifamily apartments.
Brookfield has fully invested or committed to invest the capital in the flagship property and private-equity funds, the company said in a statement. Its flagship infrastructure fund is now 70 percent invested.
PROFIT RISES
Assets under management were $207 billion US at the end of the first quarter, the company said. Brookfield reported a 36 percent increase in first-quarter net income to $1.4 billion, or $1.09 a share, compared with a year earlier. Funds from operations for shareholders rose 14 percent to $557 million, or 82 cents a share, the company said.
Brookfield is seeking investments in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Asia and Europe, and to a lesser degree in the U.S., Flatt said.
The biggest opportunities are in oil, he said, with some “very significant” energy infrastructure and private-equity possibilities, he said.
Flatt said capital in Brazil is “even more constrained than it was in the U.S. in 2009,” creating buying opportunities. The firm’s infrastructure arm said this week it seeks to deploy $2 billion in the South American country in the next 6 to 18 months.
BRAZIL OPPORTUNITIES
Asset prices in Brazil have dropped amid projections Latin America’s largest economy will suffer its worst contraction in a quarter century this year as the government struggles to shore up finances and tame inflation to avert a credit-rating downgrade. Fallout from Petroleo Brasileiro SA’s corporate- corruption scandal also has trapped suppliers of the company, known as Petrobras, in a credit squeeze.
“This will result in large-scale, high-quality opportunities,” Flatt said. “Given our scale and platform in Brazil, we are one of the few capable of capitalizing.”
Flatt said adding to its cash supply will give Brookfield the flexibility to take advantage of opportunities. “We will be able to put these funds to work very productively,” he said.

Bank of Canada lays out plan for future bailouts

Bank of Canada lays out plan for future bailouts

BoC
The Bank of Canada is taking advantage of the post-financial crisis calm to shore up its defences against future liquidity emergencies, including the power to bail out provincially regulated institutions, such as Quebec’s Desjardins Group credit union network.
The central bank laid out its plan in two discussion papers, released Tuesday and open for industry comment until early July.
“Should another bout of liquidity turmoil arise, we will be ready,” Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Wilkins vowed in remarks prepared for a speech to the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal.
The various changes, slated for implementation later this year and in 2016, are an effort to ensure the risks of financial transactions are “priced more appropriately” in the market, Ms. Wilkins said.
While the measures would make funding “marginally more expensive,” she suggested it’s a “small price to pay” to avert another crisis.
In her speech, Ms. Wilkins highlighted several emerging financial risks, including the vastly expanded shadow banking sector, diminished liquidity in corporate bond markets and the ability of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and some mutual funds to withstand major shocks.
“The worry is that fund managers may not have enough cash holdings and may be forced to incur large losses as they sell assets to cover redemptions,” she explained. “It’s far from clear that all investors and savers appreciate the liquidity and redemption risks involved in some funds ... Everyone should be aware of all the risks involved in investing, including liquidity risk.”
The changes unveiled Tuesday would also see the bank create a new “contingent term repo facility” available to primary dealers, such as Canada’s big banks, and other institutions, in the event of a “market-wide” liquidity crunch.
As well, the bank is proposing to cut the amount of “benchmark” government bonds it buys and to set up a regular program of term repo operations to better manage its balance sheet.
And the bank is adding mortgages to the list of acceptable collateral financial institutions could put up to get emergency loans.
The Bank of Canada said it intends to put strict conditions on any emergency loans it would make to provincially regulated institutions. Among them, recipients would have to be members of the Canadian Payments Association, the host province would have to backstop any losses incurred by the central bank and the emergency loans would only be made if the stability of the Canadian financial system were at risk.

Loonie is 'world's hardest-working currency': BMO

Loonie is 'world's hardest-working currency': BMO

canadiancoins
Tags: Loonie
The Canadian dollar rode a wave of rebounding oil prices to become the fastest-rising currency in the world in the first three months of 2015, according to the Bank of Montreal.
BMO chief economist Douglas Porter called the loonie "the world's hardest-working currency" in a report to investors on Tuesday, citing unparalleled gains on the U.S. dollar after a shaky start to the year. Porter credited a rise in oil prices, a tame greenback and a "less-dovish" Bank of Canada with helping the loonie recover from tough times.
The Canadian dollar rose by nearly four per cent, far outstripping a two per cent rise by second-place New Zealand's dollar. Those gains came despite a "whopping" nine per cent plunge during a "brutal" January for the Canadian dollar, Porter said.
Despite the strong gains, Porter said the loonie will likely struggle to maintain its momentum.The sharpest climb came in late March, when the loonie gained six per cent from its lowest point in the middle of the month. However, most of the gains were slow and steady.
"The issue now, of course, is whether oil can hold its recent gains, or even build further," Porter said. He also warned the BoC "could re-crank its dovish chatter," and cautioned that the U.S. economy is likely to spring back in the future. In the meantime, Porter advised investors to "enjoy the view" while the loonie remains strong.
Canada, New Zealand, Singapore, Australia, South Korea and Norway all saw their currencies make up ground on the U.S. dollar in the first three months of the year. The value of the British pound fell by a fraction of a per cent, while the euro dropped nearly two per cent. Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, Japan, Mexico, South Africa and Brazil also saw their currency values drop, with the Brazilian real taking the hardest hit at an 11 per cent fall.

BMW Q1 profits beat as SUV sales take off

BMW Q1 profits beat as SUV sales take off


[FRANKFURT] German carmaker BMW AG said its first-quarter operating profit rose by a forecast-beating 20.6 per cent, lifted by strong demand for large offroader luxury cars in Europe and the United States.
Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) came in at 2.52 billion euros (S$3.75 billion), above the 2.191 billion euros forecast in a Reuters poll.
BMW said on Wednesday its automotive EBIT margin was 9.5 per cent in the quarter, remaining at a similar level to the year-earlier quarter and at the upper end of its target range of between 8 per cent and 10 per cent.
By contrast, the quarterly return on sales from ongoing business at rival Mercedes-Benz Cars jumped to 9.2 per cent from 7 per cent a year ago, while Audi's operating margin slipped to 9.7 per cent from 10.1 per cent.


First-quarter BMW brand sales were up 5.4 per cent at 451,576 cars, the Munich-based automaker said, citing continued growth in Europe, North America and China and a 30 per cent jump in deliveries of the X5 sports utility vehicle.
REUTERS

US: Stocks rise at open on big biopharma merger

US: Stocks rise at open on big biopharma merger

[NEW YORK] US stocks opened higher on Wednesday as news of a large biopharmaceutical merger offset lacklustre data on private-sector hiring.
Five minutes into trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was at 18,010.74, up 82.54 points (0.46 per cent).
The broad-based S&P 500 gained 7.35 (0.35 per cent) at 2,096.81, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index advanced 17.36 (0.35 per cent) to 4,956.69.
Alexion Pharmaceuticals announced it would buy Synageva BioPharma for US$8.4 billion, creating a bigger player in treatments for rare diseases.
Payrolls firm ADP estimated the US added just 169,000 private-sector jobs in April, the second month in a row under 200,000, as the petroleum sector downturn continued to pinch the labour market.
Investors are looking ahead to Friday's US Labour Department jobs report for April.
US stocks fell sharply on Tuesday on worries about higher oil prices and the ongoing Greek debt crisis.
AFP

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