Thursday, June 29, 2017

Warren Buffett is on the verge of becoming Bank of America's top shareholder

Warren Buffett is on the verge of becoming Bank of America's top shareholder

warren buffettLucas Jackson/Reuters
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Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway may be on the verge of becoming Bank of America's largest shareholder after the bank raised its dividend in the wake of a positive assessment of its ability to handle market stresses.
Bank of America on Wednesday boosted its annual dividend 60 percent to 48 cents per share from 30 cents, beginning in the third quarter.
Buffett has said a boost of that size would likely prompt him to swap Berkshire's preferred shares in the second-largest bank into common shares now worth about $16.7 billion.
Berkshire did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
An exchange would made Berkshire the largest shareholder of both Bank of America and Wells Fargo & Co, the third-largest U.S. bank, and more than triple a $5 billion investment made fewer than six years ago.
It would also signal Buffett's confidence in Brian Moynihan, Bank of America's chief executive.
Moynihan has worked to restore investors' confidence in his Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank after it spent more than $70 billion since the global financial crisis to resolve legal and regulatory matters, largely from its purchases of Countrywide Financial Corp and Merrill Lynch & Co.
"Buffett has said he is very happy with what Moynihan's doing, and it's easy work for him to get more dividends," said Bill Smead, whose $1.16 billion Smead Value fund includes shares of both companies. "For Bank of America, it would mean a further endorsement by the most spectacular large-cap stock picker of all time."
Buffett is worth $76.1 billion, Forbes magazine says.
The dividend increase required approval by the Federal Reserve, which conducts annual "stress tests" of big banks' ability to handle tough economic and market conditions.
On Wednesday, the Fed approved capital plans for Bank of America, which also announced a $12 billion stock buyback plan, and 33 other large U.S. banks.

Lender of last resort

Screen Shot 2017 06 28 at 6.17.52 PMMarkets Insider
Buffett had bought $5 billion of Bank of America preferred stock with a 6 percent dividend, or $300 million annually, in August 2011, when investors worried about the bank's capital needs.
The purchase included warrants to acquire 700 million common shares at $7.14 each, less than one-third Wednesday's closing price of $23.88.
In his Feb. 25 letter to Berkshire shareholders, Buffett said he "would anticipate" swapping the preferred stock into common stock if the annual dividend rose above 44 cents per share.
If Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire made the swap now, it would have a $11.7 billion paper profit and begin collecting $336 million of annual dividends, on top of roughly $1.7 billion of dividends already paid.
A swap would also let Berkshire enjoy gains if Bank of America's stock price rose. In contrast, the value of the preferred shares will not change so long as Bank of America does not collapse. Berkshire's warrants expire in September 2021.
Buffett's bet was among more than $25 billion of high-yielding investments he made from 2008 to 2011 in such companies as General Electric Co and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
The investments shored up confidence in the companies and helped give Buffett a reputation as a lender of last resort when times were tough.
Bank of America's largest shareholder is Vanguard Group, whose 652.4 million shares give it a 6.6 percent stake, Reuters data show. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Sandra Maler and Dan Grebler)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2017. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Elon Musk has officially started digging a tunnel under Los Angeles

Elon Musk has officially started digging a tunnel under Los Angeles

boring company photoThe Boring Company is building its own tunnel-boring machine, named Godot. Screenshot
Elon Musk's latest company is officially up and running.
The CEO of Tesla and SpaceX said on Twitter on Wednesday evening that his tunnel-boring machine, dubbed Godot, had begun digging under Los Angeles.
Musk officially launched his tunnel company, aptly named The Boring Company, in April.
"No longer waiting for Godot. It has begun boring and just completed the first segment of tunnel in LA," Musk said.
Musk said in a Bloomberg profile that the company would begin digging in the SpaceX parking lot. The Boring Company, however, needs to secure permits to dig beyond the SpaceX property line.
Musk's ultimate goal is to relieve congestion by building as many as 30 layers of tunnels beneath Interstate 105 in Los Angeles. Musk has said the tunnels would transport cars on an electric skate and could even accommodate a Hyperloop.
Musk said last Monday that he had "promising conversations" with Mayor Eric Garcetti about the project.
Los Angeles is contemplating the addition of an express train that would travel between Los Angeles International Airport and Union Station, a main transit hub that connects Los Angeles to distant suburbs. Garcetti said he was considering using Musk's tunnel to support the rail connection.
The SpaceX parking lot is roughly a five-minute drive from LAX, but securing the necessary permits to dig under the freeway will most likely take time.
Still, Musk is clearly dead serious about making his tunnel network a reality. But he says it will take some more time before Godot can beat his pet snail, Gary.

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

The stock market is sending Janet Yellen a crucial message

The stock market is sending Janet Yellen a crucial message

janet yellen jack lewFed Chair Janet Yellen is relayed a message. REUTERS/William West
If the equity market truly believedthe Federal Reserve's assertion that the economy is strong enough to withstand higher interest rates, it would be fleeing from stocks offering high yields.
It's doing the opposite.
Companies in sectors that serve as bond proxies — telecom, utility, and real estate — were the only ones to see net buying last week, along with industrials, according to client data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Those flows match a broader market rotation into high-yielding stocks, which offer a competitive alternative to bonds — usually by paying dividends — when interest rates just aren't cutting it.
And while BAML finds its clients are increasingly using exchange-traded funds to play the equity market, those that still deal in single stocks are hitting eject on riskier sectors in favor of fixed-income surrogates.
Screen Shot 2017 06 27 at 2.35.07 PMStock investors have been far kinder to bond proxies than cyclical stocks when selling out of holdings.Bank of America Merrill Lynch
This year they have pulled more than $16 billion out of cyclical industries — consumer discretionary, financials, energy, industrials, materials, and tech — but removed only $1.8 billion from bond proxies, according to BAML data. The dynamic was even more exaggerated this past week, as clients put $145 million into bond proxies while pulling $784 million from cyclicals.
"Flow trends for bond proxy sectors relative to other sectors in recent weeks and year-to-date suggest clients may increasingly believe rates are likely to stay low," BAML equity and quantitative strategists led by Jill Carey Hall wrote in a client note on Tuesday.
The ETF market has also gotten in on the action. Over the past 40 days, more than $1.7 billion has flowed into consumer staple and utility funds, according to data compiled by Strategas Research Partners. On the flip side, over $2 billion has been pulled from ETFs tracking tech, industrial, and material stocks over the period.
Yet despite the stock market's yield-hungry stance, Fed Chair Janet Yellen doubled down on her hawkish rhetoric on Tuesday while delivering a speech on the economy. She reiterated that conditions were strong enough to withstand higher interest rates, even with inflation lagging the Fed's target.
In other remarks, Yellen also said it was unlikely that another financial crisis would occur during our lifetime. And judging by an S&P 500 that is sitting just below record highs, that's something the stock market can actually agree with.

YELLEN: I don't believe the next financial crisis will be 'in our lifetimes'

YELLEN: I don't believe the next financial crisis will be 'in our lifetimes'

Federal Reserve Board Chairwoman Janet Yellen holds a news conference after the Fed released its monetary policy decisions in Washington, U.S., June 14, 2017. Federal Reserve Board Chair Yellen holds a news conference after the Fed released its monetary policy decisions in WashingtonThomson Reuters
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said on Tuesday that she does not believe that there will be a run on the banking system at least as long as she lives.
"Would I say there will never, ever be another financial crisis? You know probably that would be going too far but I do think we're much safer and I hope that it will not be in our lifetimes and I don't believe it will be," Yellen said at an event in London.
(Reporting by William Schomberg and Marc Jones in London; Additional reporting by Jason Lange and Lindsay Dunsmuir in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2017. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Here are all the companies and government agencies affected by the cyberattack sweeping the globe

Here are all the companies and government agencies affected by the cyberattack sweeping the globe

FILE PHOTO: A man types on a computer keyboard in front of the displayed cyber code in this illustration picture taken March 1, 2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Man types on a computer keyboard in front of the displayed cyber code in this illustration pictureThomson Reuters
A massive cyberattack swept the globe on Tuesday, hitting Ukraine particularly hard and causing chaos across much of Europe.
Companies and government agencies in Ukraine, Russian, UK, France, and Norway have reported ransomware demanding payment before unlocking their files.
It's unclear at the moment who's behind the attack, which harkens back to the WannaCry virus that affected 150 countries in May, or whether all of the reported issues are related.
The cyberattack continues to spread as more entities report being hit, but here's where we know it's struck so far:

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UKRAINE: Banks, airports, government offices, power grid

UKRAINE: Banks, airports, government offices, power grid
An employee sits next to a payment terminal out of order at a branch of Ukraine's state-owned bank Oschadbank after Ukrainian institutions were hit by a wave of cyber attacks earlier in the day, in Kiev, Ukraine, June 27, 2017.REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
Ukraine has been the hardest hit by the attack, which came one day before the country's Constitution Day. Company and government officials reported major disruption to the Ukrainian power grid, banks, government offices, and airports.
The radiation monitoring system in Chernobyl, the site of a nuclear disaster in 1986, was also affected, AFP reported. "Due to the temporary shutdown of the Windows system, the radiation monitoring of the industrial area is being done manually," the agency said on its website.
Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine's interior minister, wrote in a Facebook postthat the attack was "the largest in the history of Ukraine."

RUSSIA: Banks, oil company, steelmaker

RUSSIA: Banks, oil company, steelmaker
Russia's President Vladimir Putin visits a Rosneft refinery in the Black Sea town of Tuapse in southern Russia on October 11, 2013.Alexei Nikolskyi/RIA Novosti/Kremlin/Reuters
Russia's state-run Rosneft energy company also reported falling victim to hacking, but said oil production wasn't affected. The Russian steelmaker Evraz also said its information systems were under cyberattack, but its output wasn't impacted either.
The central bank of Russia said "computer attacks" had infected some IT systems of Russian banks. Reuters reported that all Russian branches of the Home Credit consumer lender are closed because of an attack, citing an employee of the lender's call center.

FRANCE: Saint Gobain

FRANCE: Saint Gobain
Thomson Reuters
Saint Gobain, a French construction materials company, said it was also the victim of an attack, and a spokesman told Reuters that they were isolating computer systems in order to protect data.

UK: WPP

UK: WPP
WPP founder and CEO Martin Sorrell speaks at the British chambers of Commerce annual conference in London.Thomson Reuters
Britain's WPP, the world's largest advertising company, was also affected, the BBC reported.

NORWAY

NORWAY
Projection of cyber code on hooded man is pictured in this illustration pictureThomson Reuters
Reuters reported that Norway's national security authority said a ransomware attack was taking place at one of the country's company, but didn't name which one.

GERMANY: Deutsche Post, Metro

German postal and logistics company Deutsche Post and wholesale retailer Metro both said their locations in Ukraine were part of the attack, and that they were assessing the impact.

Mondelēz International

Mondelēz International
Logo of Mondelez International is pictured at the company's building in Zurich.Thomson Reuters
The global food company Mondelez International said its employees were experiencing technical "difficulties in various geographies," but weren't sure if they too were the victim of a cyberattack.
"The Mondelēz International network is experiencing a global IT outage," the company said in a statement. "Our global special situations management team is in place, and they are working to resolve the situation as quickly as possible."

DENMARK: Maersk

DENMARK: Maersk
The MV Maersk Mc-Kinney Moller, the world's biggest container ship, arrives at the harbour of Rotterdam August 16, 2013. Reuters
The massive Danish shipping company A.P. Moller-Maersk, which is responsible for one out of seven containers shipped around the world, said every branch of its business was affected.
"We can confirm that Maersk IT systems are down across multiple sites and business units due to a cyber attack. We continue to assess the situation," the company wrote on its website. "The safety of our employees, our operations and customer's business is our top priority. We will update when we have more information."

UNITED STATES: Merck

Pharmaceutical giant Merck was hit, too.

We confirm our company's computer network was compromised today as part of global hack. Other organizations have also been affected (1 of 2)

We are investigating the matter and will provide additional information as we learn more. (2 of 2)

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