Finance Blog number 1

February 21, 2011

AU panel heads to Ivory Coast to solve crisis

Filed under: economics, technology — Tags: , , , — Sun @ 3:28 pm

Members of a high-level delegation sent to resolve the political crisis in Ivory Coast have begun arriving in the country’s commercial hub.

The panel created by the African Union and made up of five African heads of state is awaited by both men who claim to be president of the West African nation, but also by protesters eager to foil their mediation mission.

Hundreds of members of the Young Patriots aligned with the sitting president who is refusing to cede office demonstrated late into the night Sunday in front of Abidjan’s airport. Over the weekend, security forces aligned with incumbent leader Laurent Gbagbo cracked down on opposition neighborhoods where people were attempting to hold meetings.

Witnesses say at least three people were killed in weekend violence.

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January 11, 2011

Stocks end lower amid eurozone jitters

Filed under: online, technology — Tags: , , , — Sun @ 2:08 pm

U.S. stocks came off morning lows but still ended mostly lower Monday following a sell-off in European markets, as investors worried about a possible bailout for Portugal.

The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) closed down 37 points, or 0.3%. Earlier in the session, the blue-chip index dropped 100 points. The S&P 500 (SPX) shed 2 points, or 0.1%. After spending most of the session in the red, the Nasdaq (COMP) managed to turn higher in the afternoon. The tech heavy index added 5 points, or 0.2%.

"There’s a lot of anxiety in the marketplace, with the focus on what’s happening overseas," said Bruce McCain, chief investment strategist at Key Private Bank.

Concerns over European debt problems resurfaced as Germany, France and other eurozone countries pressured Portugal to take a bailout to ease its massive debt crisis.

McCain added that the slump could also be part of a small pullback investors have been anticipating following six consecutive weeks of gains.

"We’ve had a series of very good weeks and now that we’re into January, the market is vulnerable to a pullback for the short-term," McCain said.

Meanwhile, investors digested of a slew of corporate merger deals and geared up for the start of fourth-quarter corporate results.

On Friday, stocks dropped after a court ruled against Wells Fargo (WFC, Fortune 500) and U.S. Bancorp (USB, Fortune 500) in a foreclosure case. The ruling sparked a selloff in bank stocks that rippled through the broader market.

The government’s latest reading on the labor market also dragged markets lower. The U.S. economy added slightly fewer jobs in December than expected, but the unemployment rate edged lower than economists had anticipated.

That disappointment over the jobs number may continue to trickle into trading this week, said David Jones, chief market strategist at IG Markets.

"There’s still an air of caution after the payroll data on Friday," Jones said. "The market had factored in a good number, so anything less than expected is always going to be a disappointment, and shows what a problem U.S. employment really still is going forward."

World markets: European markets fell Monday amid talk that Portugal is being pressured to take a bailout package to stop the spread of eurozone debt. Investors are also preparing for government bond auctions in Portugal, Spain and Italy this week.

"Markets are worrying that the European debt crisis is coming back again," Jones said. "[Portugal] is denying that they need [a bailout], but we saw that with Greece and Ireland as well before they got bailouts."

Britain’s FTSE 100 closed down 0.5%, the DAX in Germany lost 1.2% and France’s CAC 40 dropped 1.5%.

Asian markets ended lower. The Shanghai Composite fell 1.7% and the Hang Seng in Hong Kong slipped 0.7%. Japan’s market was closed for a holiday.

Companies: Shares of Sara Lee (SLE, Fortune 500) jumped 4.5% on reports that Apollo Global Management and other private equity firms are looking into acquiring the food company.

Chemical maker DuPont (DD, Fortune 500) said Sunday it will buy Danisco, a Danish enzyme and food ingredients company, for $5.8 billion in cash. Shares of DuPont slipped 1.5%.

Shares of Progress Energy (PGN, Fortune 500) fell 1.6% after Duke Energy (DUK, Fortune 500) said it will buy the fellow power company for $13.7 billion in stock. Shares of Duke Energy fell 1.2%.

Shares of Standard Microsystems (SMSC) dropped almost 10% after the chip maker announced it is buying rival Conexant (CNXT) for $284 million. Conexant’s stock jumped 14.3%.

Playboy’s (PLA) stock surged more than 17% after founder Hugh Hefner signed an agreement to take his publicly traded company private. Hefner, who already owns a substantial amount of the adult magazine publisher’s shares, has entered an agreement with Icon Acquisition Holdings to pay $6.15 per share for the portion of Playboy Enterprises that he does not own.

Shares of Strayer Education (STRA) sank 23% after the for-profit college said winter new student enrollment dropped 20% from a year ago. For-profit education stocks including Devry (DV), Washington Post (WPO, Fortune 500) and Apollo Group (APOL) were among the biggest losers in the S&P 500.

Shares of General Motors (GM) fell 1% after the plug-in Chevrolet Volt was named North American Car of the Year at the Detroit Auto Show.

Meanwhile, shares of Ford (F, Fortune 500) were up 0.2% after Ford Explorer was voted Truck of the Year, and the automaker announced it will add more than 7,000 new hourly and salaried jobs in the United States over the next two years.

Alcoa (AA, Fortune 500), the first Dow component to report fourth-quarter results, posted its highest quarterly earnings in more than two years and topped forecasts. The aluminum maker earned 21 cents per share during the quarter, on revenue of $5.7 billion. Analysts were expecting 19 cents per share, according to analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

Economy: No major economic reports were scheduled Monday.

Currencies and commodities: The dollar lost ground against the euro, the British pound, and the Japanese yen.

Oil for February delivery edged up $1.22 to settle at $89.25 a barrel.

Gold futures for February delivery rose $5.20 to settle at $1,374.10 an ounce.

Bonds: The price on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury rose, pushing the yield down to 3.30% from 3.33% late Friday.  

Source

January 9, 2011

Shanghai Surpasses Singapore as World’s Busiest Port as Trade Volumes Jump - Bloomberg

Filed under: Crisis, technology — Tags: , , , — Sun @ 11:12 pm

Shanghai surpassed Singapore in container traffic last year, making China’s wealthiest city the world’s busiest port as the country churns out more export goods and boosts trade volumes.

Traffic in 2010 rose to 29.05 million, 20-foot equivalent units, or TEUs, the Shanghai municipal government said in a media release on its website. That’s about 500,000 TEUs more than Singapore, the release said. Shanghai’s cargo volume was about 650 million metric tons last year, it said.

Shanghai’s emergence as the busiest port underscores the impact of China’s sustained economic growth on global trade patterns. The world’s second-largest economy expanded at an average 11.4 percent pace over the past five years, overtaking Germany in 2009 to become the largest exporter. China is also the most populous nation and world’s largest metals consumer.

“This is just one more illustration of the rising importance of the Chinese economy, which is already the world’s largest trading economy,” David Cohen, an economist at Action Economics Ltd. in Singapore, said by phone today. “Still, there’s more than enough business to go around for Shanghai, Singapore and Hong Kong as economies expand.”

Singapore’s Growth

Container traffic in Singapore, the Southeast Asian city- state located at the southern end of the Malacca Strait, rose 9.9 percent to 28.4 million TEUs in 2010, the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore said on Jan. 6. Shanghai’s 2009 volumes totaled 25 million TEUs, the port’s operator said previously.

The increase in Shanghai’s container traffic was driven by the growing domestic economy, the recovery in Europe and the U.S. and the Shanghai 2010 World Expo, the municipal government’s Jan. 5 statement said. China’s central government said in 2009 that it aimed to make Shanghai the world’s shipping center by 2020.

Worldwide trade was likely to expand 13.5 percent in 2010 as the global economy recovered from recession, the World Trade Organization forecast in September. That was higher than the group’s initial projection for an expansion of 10 percent.

China’s economy expanded at about 10 percent in 2010, according to an estimate by Vice Premier Li Keqiang, reported by Xinhua news agency yesterday. China “must continue to expand trade and investment with other countries to ensure further growth,” Li told business people in Spain, according to Xinhua.

Singapore became the world’s busiest container port in 2005 after predecessor Hong Kong lost out to cheaper harbors in southern China. As recently as 2001, Shanghai had moved fewer than half the containers handled by Singapore.

World Expo

Shanghai hosted the World Expo last year during the six months to Oct. 31. The $44 billion event attracted about 73 million visitors, according to its website, surpassing the 64 million people who attended the 1970 expo in Osaka, Japan.

The Shanghai government will press on with a trial of export-tax refunds, and may expand the exercise while improving infrastructure, including building a tunnel, to help improve the port’s road traffic, the media statement said.

Shanghai will develop shipping-price derivatives and study an index of the city’s marine transport, the statement said. The city will also lobby the central government to let luxury cruise agencies register in Shanghai, it said.

–Alfred Cang. Editors: Jake Lloyd-Smith, Jim McDonald

To contact Bloomberg News staff on this story: Alfred Cang in Shanghai at +86-21-6104-7015 or acang@bloomberg.net; Andrea Tan in Singapore at +65-6212-1325 or atan17@bloomberg.net

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January 5, 2011

Factory orders rise 0.7 percent in November

Filed under: business, technology — Tags: , , , — Sun @ 2:17 am

Businesses ordered more factory goods in November, responding to stronger consumer demand for household appliances, computers, and furniture.

The Commerce Department says that total orders increased 0.7 percent in November. That follows a 0.7 percent drop in October.

The overall figure was pulled down by a drop in volatile transportation orders. Excluding aircraft and autos, orders rose 2.4 percent _ the largest jump for that category in eight months.

The November increase left total orders at $424.5 billion. Economists consider that a healthy range for manufacturing activity. It’s 20.4 percent above the recession low, hit in March 2009.

Consumers are coming off the busiest holiday shopping season in four years. Businesses are anticipating stronger economic activity to continue this year, helped by a tax cut that will put more money in consumers pockets.

One category considered a good proxy for business expansion rose 2.6 percent in November.

Manufacturing activity has expanded in every month since the recession officially ended in June 2009.

For November, orders for durable goods dropped 0.3 percent. But the decline was heavily influenced by a 50.6 percent plunge in orders for commercial aircraft. Big-ticket consumer goods showed gains.

And demand for iron and steel rose a sharp 21.7 percent, the raw materials for a raft of goods. That suggests factories are gearing up to produce autos to appliances in the months ahead.

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December 11, 2010

China raises bank reserve levels to curb lending

Filed under: USA, technology — Tags: , , , — Sun @ 6:19 am

China has ordered its banks to hold more money in reserves in a new move to curb surging lending amid efforts to cool inflation.

The order Friday was the third reserve increase in five weeks and came as Beijing tries to restore normal conditions following a flood of stimulus spending and bank lending that helped China rebound from the global crisis cash advances pay day loan.

The central bank told banks to increase their minimum reserves by 0.5 percent of deposits.

Source

December 3, 2010

Federal Reserve May Be `Central Bank of the World’ After UBS, Barclays Aid - Bloomberg

Filed under: lenders, technology — Tags: , , , — Sun @ 3:44 am

Federal Reserve data showing UBS AG and Barclays Plc ranked among the top users of $3.3 trillion from emergency programs is stoking debate on whether U.S. regulators bear responsibility for aiding other nations’ banks.

UBS was the biggest borrower under the Commercial Paper Funding Facility, with $74.5 billion overall, more than twice as much as Citigroup Inc., the top U.S. bank recipient, according to the data released yesterday. London-based Barclays Plc took the biggest single amount under another program that made overnight loans, when it got $47.9 billion on Sept. 18, 2008.

“We’re talking about huge sums of money going to bail out large foreign banks,” said Senator Bernard Sanders, the Vermont independent who wrote the provision in the Dodd-Frank Act that required the Fed disclosures. “Has the Federal Reserve become the central bank of the world? I think that is a question that needs to be examined.”

The first detailed accounting of U.S. efforts to spare European banks may add to scrutiny of the central bank, already at its most intense in three decades. The Fed, which released data on 21,000 transactions, said in a statement that its 11 emergency programs helped stabilize markets and support economic recovery. The Fed said there have been no credit losses on rescue programs that have been closed.

The growth of the U.S. mortgage-backed securities market and the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency enticed overseas banks such as Zurich-based UBS to buy assets in the country before 2008. They paid for the holdings with U.S. dollars, and when funding seized up, the Federal Reserve refused to take the risk that European firms would unload the assets and further depress markets for housing-related investments.

‘Much Worse’

“Things would have been worse if they hadn’t lent to foreigners,” said Perry Mehrling, senior fellow at the Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law at Boston University and author of “The New Lombard Street: How the Fed became the Dealer of Last Resort.” “We’re finally getting to understand the role of the Fed in the world.”

Fed spreadsheets showed the central bank became the world’s lender of last resort as dollars flowed to European banks as well as Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co., among top borrowers from the Term Auction Facility at $45 billion each.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which posted record profit last year, borrowed more than $24 billion from another program. Milwaukee-based Harley-Davidson Inc. and Fairfield, Connecticut- based General Electric Co. sold commercial paper, a form of short-term debt, to the Fed under a program that lent as much as $348.2 billion at its peak.

Sanders, the Vermont senator, said yesterday he plans to investigate whether banks profited by borrowing from the Fed and investing the funds in Treasuries, benefiting from the difference in interest rates.

‘Bailout Protection Act’

U.S. Representative Mike Pence, an Indiana Republican, said he planned to introduce a “European Bailout Protection Act” to restrict the flow of International Monetary Fund loans to European countries. He said he was responding to reports that U.S. officials might bolster a European fund designed to deal with this year’s debt crisis, which has spread from Greece to Ireland.

Edwin Truman, a former Fed official who is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said any push to confine the Fed’s role to U credit score.S. banks would create a “massive exercise in financial protectionism.”

“It would lead to retaliation, so U.S. banks in London or Tokyo would expect the same kind of treatment,” Truman said. William Poole, senior economic adviser to Merk Investments LLC and a former Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis president, said he was surprised by the extent of non-U.S. bank borrowing.

Commercial Paper

“I was under the impression that each country bore the responsibility for supervising the banks headquartered in their borders,” Poole said in an interview.

The $74.5 billion received by UBS through the CPFF, which bought short-term debt, represents total borrowings by UBS over the life of the program. The total outstanding at any point in time never exceeded about half that sum, said Karina Byrne, a UBS spokeswoman.

Byrne said the bank’s tapping the Fed fund “should be seen in the context of our overall desire to maintain flexibility and diversification in our funding sources.”

The loan to a Barclays unit came from the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, created to make sure U.S. securities firms and foreign firms’ U.S. affiliates had cash to satisfy clients’ financing demands.

Barclays took the loan the week in September 2008 that it acquired the U.S. operations of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Mark Lane, a spokesman for Barclays, declined to comment.

‘A Big Operation’

Paris-based Natixis borrowed $27 billion under the commercial paper program. “We’ve got a big operation in the U.S.A.,” Victoria Eideliman, a spokeswoman for the bank said. “It was, for us, natural that we participate in this program like all the banks. When we participated, the liquidity situation was very tense.”

The $182.3 billion rescue of American International Group Inc. spared European banks that traded with the New York-based insurer from having to raise as much as $16 billion in capital, according to a June report from the Congressional Oversight Panel, which reviews bailout spending.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke addressed questions in a 2009 Congressional hearing about why non-U.S. banks benefited from the AIG rescue.

‘The Obligation’

“I would point out that the Europeans have also saved a number of major financial institutions, and the issue of whether those institutions owed American companies money has not come up,” Bernanke said. “So I think that there is a sense that we all have the obligation to address the problems of companies in our own jurisdictions.”

Three of the top seven borrowers under the CPFF program were private firms. New York-based Hudson Castle received $53.3 billion in aggregate, BSN Holdings took $42.8 billion, and Liberty Hampshire Co., a unit of Guggenheim Partners LLC, drew $41.4 billion, Fed data show.

Hudson’s website says it develops “customized debt products.” A person who answered its phone said no one was available to comment. A Guggenheim spokesman didn’t return phone calls.

BSN Capital Partners Ltd., which was associated with BSN Holdings according to a 2006 Standard & Poor’s note, was founded by John Burgess, a former Deutsche Bank AG managing director. Burgess declined to comment.

Source

September 21, 2010

Eastwood opens High Point home design site

Filed under: technology — Tags: , , — Sun @ 11:30 pm

Charlotte-based builder Eastwood Homes has opened a new design center in High Point.

Eastwood’s new state-of-the-art facility is located at 4000 Piedmont Parkway.

The design center will allow buyers to view examples of products used in the construction of their new homes and customize their living space, according to a press release.

“We have been collecting feedback from our buyers, and we are excited to be responding to their requests by offering a number of fantastic new options in a conducive environment,” said Anna Bray, closing coordinator and design center specialist for Eastwood Homes, in a statement. “We are looking forward to providing Eastwood homeowners the opportunity to take the customization of their new homes to a new level.”

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August 16, 2010

HP, IBM seen as source of new HP chief

Filed under: technology — Tags: , , — Sun @ 11:27 pm

A survey of 500 tech and finance industry executives predicts that Mark Hurd's replacement as CEO at Hewlett-Packard Co. with either be an inside candidate or one from International Business Machines Corp.

About 43 percent of respondents said the most qualified replacement for Mark Hurd would come from those two sources, according to the survey by executive search firm Cook Associates which is expected to be published on Monday .

The survey was made available early to the New York Times.

The Times reported that among individuals named for the job Todd Bradley, who runs HP's PC business, and Steve Mills, who runs IBM's software business, tied as the most likely choices.

Hurd actually tied with Ann Livermore, HP's corporate technology chief, for the next best choice, as unlikely as it is that will happen.

The former CEO resigned on August 6 in the wake of sexual harassment charges brought by former actress and HP contractor Jodie Fisher. An internal investigation cleared him of those charges but found that he hadn't lived up to the company's code of conduct.

Hurd has reportedly agreed to pay a settlement to Fisher related to her accusations.

Chief Financial Officer Cathie Lesjak, 51, is acting as CEO on an interim basis. Lesjak is a 24-year veteran of the company who has served as HP’s CFO and as a member of the company’s Executive Council since January 2007.

To read more of the Business Journal's coverage of Mark Hurd's career and sudden resignation click here.

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July 28, 2010

When will unemployment checks be mailed? Not soon

Filed under: technology — Tags: , , — Sun @ 5:48 pm

Kevin Landry had to give up his San Diego apartment because he couldn’t afford the rent after his federal unemployment benefits were cut off in early June.

Since then, Landry and his cocker spaniel, Curley, have been sleeping in his 1991 Dodge Dakota in a church parking lot. He sold his possessions and applied for food stamps in order to survive.

And even though President Obama signed a measure Thursday that extends benefits through November, Landry knows he won’t get his $475 weekly check anytime soon.

The last time Congress allowed the benefits to lapse, it took a month for him to start getting payments again.

"I’ll just have to scrape by," said Landry, who lost his job as a credit manager for K2 Skis in September 2008. "There’s nothing I can do about it. I’ve learned to deal with it."

Though Congress has finally pushed the deadline to file for federal extended insurance through Nov. 30, it could take weeks before the jobless start getting their checks again.

Nearly 2.9 million people ran out of benefits in the nearly two months it took Congress to extend the filing deadline beyond June 2.

But just when the checks start hitting bank accounts and mailboxes again depends on the state.

The long delay wreaked havoc on the state unemployment insurance technology that process the payments. States often have to call in experts to reprogram the computer systems, which are an average of 22 years old.

And state officials have to make sure that the unemployed were eligible to receive benefits during the interim. If the jobless stopped looking for work or earned income during June or July, they may not qualify.

"States will move as quickly as possible to resume [federal unemployment] payments, but it will not happen overnight," said Rich Hobbie, executive director of the National Association of State Workforce Agencies. "Because the program has lapsed for over a month, state workforce agencies need to ensure that claimants qualify for all retroactive payments."

The unemployed should check their state agency’s website for updates or wait for a letter with instructions on restarting their payments and claiming the retroactive sum, said Judy Conti, federal advocacy coordinator at the National Employment Law Project Low fee payday loans.

Some states asked the jobless to continue sending in the forms certifying they were eligible for payments. The unemployed in those places will likely see their checks sooner.

But it will still take time, said Steve Meissner, a spokesman for the Arizona Department of Economic Security, which told its 64,000 claimants who were affected by the lapse to keep filing.

"We will do it as quickly as we can," he said, adding the state is still waiting to receive official guidance from the federal Department of Labor. "There are always some ambiguities because unemployment law is pretty complicated."

The checks, however, can’t come too quickly for the jobless. For many, it’s the only way they can afford housing, utilities, food and car payments, Conti said.

Vicki Wolf of Lebanon, Pa., is anxiously awaiting her $393 weekly check so she can pay her rent and buy essentials, such as shampoo. The former call center supervisor, who continued sending in her forms to the state, is behind on all her bills because she hasn’t had any income since June 5.

Pennsylvania officials said in a statement that those who kept filing their paperwork should receive payment within two weeks. The rest of the more than 200,000 state residents who lost their benefits should submit their claims online as soon as possible.

Wolf, at least, is one of the luckier ones. She starts a new job at a trucking company on Monday, though she won’t see her first paycheck until mid-August. Until then, she’ll have to walk 45 minutes to work from her home.

"I don’t have money to buy gas to put in the car," she said. 

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July 5, 2010

BP could be ripe for takeover

Filed under: technology — Tags: , , — Sun @ 3:05 am

BP’s stock price has fallen far enough for the oil company to become an attractive takeover target for its biggest rivals, according to industry analysts.

BP’s (BP) stock finished at $28.88 Wednesday, a plunge of more than 50% from its close of $60.09 on April 19, the day before its leased oil rig, the Deepwater Horizon, exploded and sank in the Gulf of Mexico.

Fred Lucas of JPMorgan believes that investors have overdone it, making the stock an attractive value for buyers — including other companies.

"In theory, either Exxon Mobil or RD Shell could consider a bid for BP," wrote Lucas in a note to investors. "We focus on these two names because they have similar business models and similar global asset structures. They also bear the lowest political risk to a potential combination with BP."

Lucas said that his idea of a proposed takeover of BP was "prompted by the gap between the current market value of BP and the intrinsic value that we see in BP."

Another oil industry analyst, Douglas Youngson of Arbuthnot Securities, told CNNMoney last month that if BP’s stock dropped below $30 a share, it would become an attractive takeover target.

"If the share price continues to fall, other companies may see this for the bargain it will be," said Youngson on June 2, when BP’s stock closed at $37.66.

Of the various big players in the oil industry — including Gazprom and PetroChina (PTR) — Lucas believes that ExxonMobil (XOM, Fortune 500) is in the best position to be the acquirer.

He wrote that Exxon Mobil "has the largest rating advantage and strongest balance sheet," providing it with enough cash to handle the deal.

"Exxon Mobil has also proven its ability to integrate a very large transaction successfully — its merger with Mobil was a resounding success," added Lucas low fee cash advance. "RD Shell has no large-scale merger integration experience."

Gazprom wouldn’t be a contender because of a "low stock market rating," he said, while PetroChina "would encounter major political barriers given its controlling shareholder - the Chinese government."

BP has been purging itself of cash to try and fix the environmental and economic aftermath of the disaster.

The company said it has paid out $2.65 billion for the clean-up, and another $130 million on 41,000 claims from workers and business owners who lost their livelihoods in the wake of the spill. More than 80,000 claims have been submitted so far. Bowing to pressure from the U.S. government, BP has put $20 billion in escrow to cover damages.

Lucas figures that the leak will stop sometime in July, meaning a finite cap to the liabilities. So this might be a good time for Exxon Mobil to swoop in, especially since the oil giant has had its own experiences with catastrophic oil spills.

Before BP’s environmental disaster in the Gulf, Exxon had the dubious distinction of causing the nation’s worst oil spill, when the Exxon Valdez oil tanker ran aground off the coast of Alaska in 1989.

"In many respects, an accurate valuation of BP today depends less on a valuation of its assets, but more on an accurate value of its potential liabilities," wrote Lucas. "Who knows better how to price potential clean-up costs and associated civil claims than Exxon Mobil?"

Spokesmen for BP and RD Shell declined to comment on this story. Exxon Mobil did not respond to messages from CNNMoney.com. 

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