Thursday, March 6, 2008

Billionaire dreamlist: helipad and private beach

(Reuters Life!) - Credit crunch? What credit crunch?

More billionaire house hunters than ever are scouring the globe in search of the perfect hideaway.

So how about a Parisian mansion with its own ballroom, a forest-fringed estate in Andalusia complete with helipad or maybe a villa in Anguilla with a "feather-topped beach lapped by deep turquoise waters."

Reveling in the purple prose so beloved by estate agents, the glossy magazine Country Life has picked five of the top properties on the market that even the super-rich dream about.

For $95 million, why not snap up Hillandale, an English country-style estate just 50 miles from Manhattan.

Just four minute's drive from the billionaire's playground of Monaco you could put in a bid for the Domain, a Cote d'Azur mansion with its own stud farm, paddocks and dressage arena.

The credit crunch may have hit big spenders in London's City financial district who once happily invested their huge bonuses in property. But the billionaires are not feeling the chill.
 

Wal-Mart February same-store sales up 2.6 pct

(Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Thursday reported a 2.6 percent rise in sales, excluding fuel, at U.S. stores open at least a year in February.
 
Analysts, on average, were expecting the company to report a rise of 1.1 percent, according to Reuters Estimates, while the company had forecast same-store sales to be between flat and up 2 percent.
 

Credit Swaps Thwart Fed's Ease as Debt Costs Surge

(Bloomberg) -- Credit trading models used by Wall Street have gone haywire, raising company borrowing costs even as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke cuts interest rates.

General Electric Co. is one of five U.S. companies rated AAA by both Standard & Poor's and Moody's Investors Service, making its ability to repay debt unquestioned. Yet when the Fairfield, Connecticut-based company sold 2.25 billion euros ($3.35 billion) of five-year bonds last week, its annual interest payment was $17 million higher than on a sale nine months ago.

Borrowers from investor Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. to Germany's HeidelbergCement AG face the same predicament. Yields on $5.12 trillion of corporate bonds tracked by Merrill Lynch & Co. average 2.05 percentage points more than U.S. Treasuries, the most since at least 1997.

The higher costs are an unintended consequence of securities that allow investors to speculate on corporate creditworthiness. So-called correlation models used to value them have become unreliable in the fallout from the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis. Last month some showed the odds of a default by an investment-grade company spreading to others exceeded 100 percent -- a mathematical impossibility, according to UBS AG.

``The credit-default swap market is completely distorting reality,'' said Henner Boettcher, treasurer of HeidelbergCement in Heidelberg, Germany, the country's biggest cement maker. ``Given what these spreads imply about defaults, we should be in a deep depression, and we are not.''

Hedging Losses

The problem started in the second half of last year when subprime mortgage delinquencies started to rise, causing investors to retreat from complex instruments such as synthetic collateralized debt obligations, or packages of credit-default swaps that became hard to value. The swaps are contracts based on bonds and used to speculate on a company's ability to repay debt.

As values of CDOs began to fall, banks that had sold swaps underlying the securities started to buy indexes based on them instead, a method of hedging their losses on portions of the CDOs they owned. The purchases are driving the cost of the contracts higher, raising the perception that company bonds tied to the swaps are suddenly riskier and leading investors to demand higher yields throughout the corporate debt market.

The Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index, a gauge of credit-default swaps on 125 companies from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to Walt Disney Co., more than doubled since the start of the year to a record 171 basis points on March 4. The index, which dropped to a low of 29 in February last year, was at 170.5 basis points at 7:10 a.m. in New York, according to Deutsche Bank AG.
 

European Stocks, U.S. Index Futures Decline; Asian Shares Rise

 (Bloomberg) -- European stocks fell for the third day this week and U.S. index futures declined on concern credit- market losses will widen at financial companies and record oil prices will curb airline earnings.

UBS AG sank to the lowest since 2003 after JPMorgan Chase & Co. said Europe's biggest bank probably sold $24 billion in holdings of mortgage-backed securities in a ``fire sale.'' Aegon NV, the second-largest Dutch insurer, lost the most in three weeks on a 26 percent drop in earnings. British Airways Plc had its steepest decline in a week, saying its profit margin will drop.

A rally in mining companies helped Asian stocks rise for the first time in six days, while U.S. index futures fell before a report that will probably show contracts to buy previously owned homes slipped in January for a third month.

``News from the financial industry brings a negative wind,'' said Laurent Vallee, who helps oversee $6.1 billion at Richelieu Finance in Paris. ``We remain cautious on financial stocks.''

Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index lost 0.3 percent to 314.62 as of 12:45 p.m. in London. Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index slipped 0.5 percent, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 1.8 percent.

Stocks maintained their losses after the European Central Bank left its key interest rate unchanged. ECB President Jean- Claude Trichet is scheduled to brief reporters at 2:30 p.m. Frankfurt time. The Bank of England earlier kept its benchmark rate on hold.

The Stoxx 600 has lost 14 percent this year on concern the collapse of subprime mortgages and a slowdown in the U.S. economy will curb profit growth in Europe. UBS may have writedowns of about $18 billion after unloading 25 billion Swiss francs of mortgage-backed securities, according to JPMorgan.

Money Markets

Carlyle Capital Corp., which invests in AAA rated mortgage securities, failed to meet margin calls and said today it received a notice of default, while Thornburg Mortgage Inc., a U.S. specialist in adjustable-rate loans too big to be sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, also received a default notice on a $320 million loan.

The cost of borrowing euros for three months rose to the highest level in seven weeks, fueling concern a coordinated effort by central banks to limit the fallout from the U.S. housing slump and revive lending is faltering.

UBS dropped 2 percent to 31.6 francs. Europe's biggest bank by assets ``likely'' sold its 25 billion francs ($24 billion) prime Alt-A portfolio in a ``fire sale,'' JPMorgan said as it lifted its ``credit-crisis'' writedown estimate for the bank to 18.5 billion francs.