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    Kraft makes $16.4 billion hostile takeover bid for Cabdury

    By AP | Filed Under: ,

    CadburyKraft Foods Inc. (KFT) has made a 9.8 billion pound ($16.4 billion) cash-and-stock offer for British candy maker Cadbury PLC (CBY).

    Monday's hostile offer values each Cadbury share at 717 pence, lower than Kraft's previous rebuffed approach of 745 pence.

    Kraft says the price "represents a substantial premium to the unaffected share price of Cadbury," referring to a surge in the British company's stock since Kraft's previous bid was made public in September.

    Goldman Sachs CEO Blankfein says firm is doing 'God's work'

    By Douglas McIntyre | Filed Under: , ,

    Lloyd Blankfein, the CEO of Goldman Sachs (GS), has put an unusual spin on the bank's activities. He says his firm is doing "God's work." This may seem like an audacious statement coming from a man whose company has been harshly criticized for planning to give many of its employees multi-million pay packages just a bit more than a year after the collapse of the credit markets.

    Blankfein told The Times of London, "We help companies to grow by helping them to raise capital. Companies that grow create wealth. This, in turn, allows people to have jobs that create more growth and more wealth. We have a social purpose." That is, of course, a social purpose that comes at a very steep price; it charges huge fees for raising money and handling M&A transactions, even if they eventually fail.

    Why 10% jobless rate means misery for many, buying opportunity for some

    By Matthew Scott | Filed Under: ,

    As news broke that the U.S. jobless rate crossed the dreaded 10 percent mark, many investors braced for the market's reaction. The response to word that unemployment reached levels not seen since 1983? The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 17.46 points to 10,023.42 and the S&P 500 ended the day at 1,069.30, up 2.67 points. Not exactly a sell-off.

    So did news on Friday of 10.2 percent unemployment represent a buying opportunity? For those who follow market trends, it did.

    Michael Mauboussin's 'Think Twice': A cautionary tale for investors

    By Vishesh Kumar | Filed Under: , ,

    Whether it's the "irrational exuberance" of the last decade or the apocalyptic view that prevailed last winter, investor psychology tends to be shortsighted and veer toward extremes. But investors need to overcome myopia and getting lost in the moment, Michael Mauboussin, the chief investment strategist of mutual fund giant Legg Masson Asset Management argues. And in his new book Think Twice: Harnessing the Power of Counterintution (Harvard Business School Press), he attempts to outline how all decision-makers can be aware of and counter their own biases.

    Investors need to test the worldview that spirals out of a situation -- what Mauboussin calls the "inside view" -- with a broader perspective that takes factors like history and statistics into account.

    Nokia recalls 14 million cell phone chargers due to shock risk

    By AP | Filed Under: , ,

    nokiaNokia Corp. (NOK) announced Monday that some 14 million mobile phone chargers could be dangerous for users and said it will replace them free of charge.

    The chargers, bearing Nokia's name and made by Chinese battery and auto part maker BYD Co., are models AC-3E and AC-3U, made between June 15 and Aug. 9 this year; and AC-4U, manufactured between April 13 and Oct. 25, 2009. They were mostly sold in Europe and North America.

    Alternative energy down on the farm: A still-untapped resource

    By Alex Salkever | Filed Under: , ,

    As the federal government hands out billions of dollars to subsidize, push, prod and canoodle companies into jump-starting a green revolution in the U.S., one segment of the economy has been more or less left out. That would be farmers. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has gotten only a few tens of millions of dollars to underwrite grants and programs to promote rural alternative energy projects.

    Still, acccording to the AP, the ranks of farmers who are producing their own power is increasing. But what's even more striking is how few now do so, considering the nature of their business and their access to precious energy commodities such as large acreage needed for solar panels and steady winds needed for wind-power generation. According to U.S. government figures collected in 2007, just over 1 percent of the 2 million U.S. farms are producing their own electricity, reported Cleantech.

    In a Congress of millionaires, Republican Anh Cao voted for poor New Orleans

    By Sam Gustin | Filed Under: ,

    The single House Republican who voted for the Democrats' health-care legislation is a first-term congressman from a strongly Democratic -- and very poor -- district comprising most of New Orleans. Rep. Anh "Joseph" Cao's vote is significant, not because it was politically motivated -- and it was -- but because it highlights the disparity between lower- and middle-class people throughout the country and many of their representatives in Washington, D.C.

    Among the 535 elected representatives deciding the future shape of the American health care system, some 44% are millionaires, according to a new study by the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP), a nonpartisan reseach group that tracks the effect of money in U.S. politics and policy. Rep. Cao is not among them. Neither are his constituents.

    Why the coming natural gas boom isn't all it's 'fracced' up to be

    By Charles Hugh Smith | Filed Under:

    the-coming-natural-gas-boom-is-not-all-its-fracced-up-to-bePlease pardon my poor punning, and let me explain: "Fraccing" (rhymes with "cracking") is the oil and natural gas industry's an informal contraction for the technology called hydraulic fracturing, in which water (and in some cases, a chemical mixture) is pumped deep underground to fracture shale and rock and thus free up trapped oil and gas deposits.

    The financial media has been buzzing with stories proclaiming a new era for America's natural gas industry as new fraccing technology has enabled the tapping of vast dispersed fields in the Eastern U.S. and the "oil patch" states of Oklahoma and Texas. These advances have caused analysts to raise their estimates of America's natural gas reserves to an astounding 1.8 trillion cubic feet, the equivalent of about 320 billion barrels of oil -- far more than Saudi Arabia's proven reserves of around 260 billion barrels of oil.

    The Crash of 2008: It's the Panic of 1825 all over again (also 1837, 1847, 1866 ... )

    By Charles Hugh Smith | Filed Under:

    the-crash-of-2008-its-the-panic-of-1825-all-over-againA freeze in lending triggers a panic in a Western financial capital which then spreads around the globe, eventually tipping several South American countries into default. In a desperate attempt to stem the panic, the central bank steps in as "the lender of last resort" and unleashes a flood of new money into the palpitating financial system.

    Gee, was that 1998, or 2008? Neither -- try 1825 London.

    You might think an era of gas lighting, slow sailing ships and horse-drawn carriages has little to teach us about modern finance, but much of what we consider advanced capitalism has been in place since the 1500s: stock markets, portfolio insurance, options, commercial paper and global banking.

    The week in preview: Earnings from Walmart, Macy's, and other retailers

    By Trey Thoelcke | Filed Under: , , , ,

    The conventional wisdom is that consumer spending is what drives the U.S. economy. And consumer spending arises out of consumer confidence. Unfortunately, the signals along the road to economic recovery are mixed, what with the rising GDP growth and the dismal unemployment numbers. Its enough to leave investors scratching their heads. What barometers of consumer confidence will the coming week bring?

    The TIPP Economic Optimism Index for November is scheduled for Tuesday, and the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for November is due out Friday.

    Cruise wars: To lure tourists, companies vie to launch biggest ship

    By Eric Wahlgren | Filed Under: ,

    There's a battle brewing at sea, but you won't hear a lick about it from the Pentagon. That's because it involves passenger ships, not battleships.

    Cruise lines are fighting for customers by launching their biggest boats ever. It's no warship, but the largest boat to date -- Royal Caribbean International's (RCL) Oasis of the Seas (pictured) -- is, at 1,181 feet, 89 feet longer than the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier, one of the world's biggest battleships. And the second-largest cruise ship plying the ocean blue, Carnival's (CCL) 1,004-foot Carnival Dream, is just two feet shorter than the Chrysler Building is tall.
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