Oct 18, 2011

Pens, podiums and parity at candidates’ debate


Good debate performances can boost or break a candidate’s White House chances so staffers fret over every detail — not just whether their candidate is ready for tough questions but also which tie will look best against the backdrop.When they take the stage at a Las Vegas casino hotel, seven Republicans vying for their party’s nomination to challenge President Barack Obama in the November 2012 election will be at identical podiums, placed to correspond precisely to their standing in national opinion polls.The candidates with the highest average percentages in public opinion surveys since September 1 will be in the center and the laggards in the polls will speak from the ends of the line. Their audience will be 1,200 delegates to the Western Republican Leadership Conference, the debate co-sponsor with CNN.”The candidates will have at their podium a pad of paper supplied by CNN, a pen supplied by CNN, a bottle of water supplied by CNN and an empty glass provided by CNN,” said Sam Feist, executive producer of the Las Vegas debate for CNN.”At all of our debates we ask the candidates not to bring any notes into the debate hall but they’re welcome to write anything they like on their pads of paper and all the podiums are set up in exactly the same way,” he said.The questions, which will come from journalists and voters, have been pored over by the network’s political team. Candidates pick their own outfits, CNN the makeup artists.Each debater is meant to get same number of questions. But front-runners tend to spend more time on the air, because they are more often the subject of attacks by their competitors. Some candidates also just choose to speak more than others.GAFFES ‘REPLAYED AND REPLAYED’Candidates are quick to point fingers if they feel they do not receive their fair share of attention. Supporters of Texas congressman Ron Paul lashed out after earlier debates for what they deem deliberate neglect.”Clearly he’s not getting his fair share,” said Jesse Benton, national chairman of Paul’s campaign. “You’re looking at a guy who is number three in polling and he’s dead last in air time. And that’s a travesty.”Few events on the U.S. political calendar are as fraught as televised debates, starting with the first between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon back in 1960. Radio listeners thought the vice president defeated Kennedy but television viewers said the handsome young senator won.”Press coverage and talk about (debates) is entirely influential,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center. “There’s a press consensus after each debate of who did and did not do well and if you’ve done something that is foolish or inept, it’s replayed and replayed and replayed.”This year, Texas Governor Rick Perry’s poll numbers slumped after a string of unimpressive debates. Conversely, businessman Herman Cain, an experienced radio host, leaped in the polls after strong debate performances.Candidates prepare differently. Some hire coaches and hold mock debates with staffers. Paul, 76, always exercises. “He’ll get in a bike ride tomorrow,” Benton said.Preparation consumes an enormous amount of time and distracts from more traditional campaign activity like formulating policy proposals, said Republican strategist Ford O’Connell, a veteran of John McCain’s 2008 campaign.This year, with so many debates, the final “winner” might merely be the last man standing, not necessarily the best candidate to defeat Obama, he said.”It has really become politics’ version of the reality TV show ‘Survivor,’” O’Connell said.

Oct 17, 2011

UPDATE 1-Crocs cuts Q3 outlook, shares dive


* Shares down 36 pct after-mktOct 17 (Reuters) - Shoe maker Crocs Inc lowered its third-quarter forecast hurt by softness in sales at its direct-to-consumer outlets and lower-than-expected margins, sending its shares down 36 percent in after-market trade.The company expects July-September earnings of 31-33 cents a share, down from its previous forecast of 40 cents a share.Crocs, known for its colorful clogs, projected revenue of $273.0-$275.0 million, compared with its prior outlook of $280 million.Analysts, on average, were expecting earnings of 40 cents a share on revenue of $280.5 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.Shares of Niwot, Colorado-based Crocs were down 36 percent at $17.11 on Monday in extended trading. They closed at $26.64 on Nasdaq.

Oct 14, 2011

Singapore university seeks to break hold of credit-rating goliaths


* Run on not-for-profit basisBy Rachel ArmstrongSINGAPORE, Oct 14 (Reuters) - In a small lab, tucked away in the depths of a Singapore university campus, a team of researchers and their computers calculate the credit ratings of about 50,000 companies.Relying just on public data and stock price movements for their analysis, the project’s founder, professor Jin-Chuan Duan, is confident their system can provide a more reliable guide to a company’s credit risks than the commercial rating agencies.A confident claim, but a growing number of the system’s 800 users are banks and fund managers, utilizing it to help guide their own internal credit risk systems.”It offers a very transparent and objective approach to estimating the credit rating of companies,” said Benjamin Wong, a senior risk analyst at a UK bank.”I’m not sure a single bank could do what they’ve done in terms of collecting the data, assembling the research capabilities, and having the technology to do the calculations on such a large volume of companies.”BORN OUT OF FRUSTRATIONThe idea was born in March 2009, out of frustration at the debate surrounding credit rating agencies in the wake of the financial crisis.”It occurred to me that just criticizing the rating industry and going about the conventional way of regulatory reform is never going to go anywhere, so I was asking myself is there something more constructive I could do?,” said Duan, the director of the National University of Singapore’s Risk Management Institute.An evangelist for revolutionising the way credit rating agencies operate, Duan believes the private sector model, where agencies are paid by the issuers to rate their products, is flawed.”Credit ratings should be viewed as a public good and part of infrastructure,” he said.”The natural way to achieve this is for a knowledge enterprise to do it.”So that’s what Duan did, allocating S$7 million ($5.5 million), part of a grant provided to his institute by Singapore’s central bank, to fund a free-to-use credit rating service for four years.He and his team of around 30 researchers built the system using data from Reuters and Bloomberg terminals on companies listed across Asia, Europe and America.They designed models to calculate the probability of a company reneging on its debts, shaped by analysis of previous corporate defaults.NO MORE AAAsRather than issuing the well known alphabetic ratings like AAA, the system produces a numerical probability instead. For example it estimates that the recently rescued Franco-Belgian lender Dexia SA has a 3.4 percent probability of defaulting in the next two years — low but still five times the European financial sector’s average probability of 0.7 percent.The big-three credit rating agencies — Moody’s , Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings — have defended their lettering system as a useful shorthand understood across the finance industry.But Duan is among the many critics who believe debt should be assigned a more precise credit rating.”In the political polling sphere during election time we tell people the points and margin of error in a poll and TV viewers don’t have a problem understanding, so it should be possible in the financial sphere,” he said.COMPETITIONIt’s not the first time someone has tried to give the big three agencies and several local players a run for their money. Following the financial crisis, Wall Street analyst Meredith Whitney, entrepreneur Jules Kroll and research firm Morningstar Inc are among those who have ventured into the ratings space.What distinguishes the university’s offering is it’s not out to make money and welcomes outside contributions that will improve its model.”As we are not for profit, we are happy to invite people to participate with us in a Wikipedia-type spirit of development,” said Duan, adding that they don’t register intellectual property rights for the project, nor do they take corporate donations.It’s this approach that is one of the big winners with the industry. With banks under more pressure than ever from the regulators to provide a thorough explanation of their approach to risk management, they need a credit rating system with a public methodology they can test for themselves.”They (the institute) are transparent in their methodology and in disclosing the performance of their ratings,” said Wong at the UK bank.”For the credit rating agencies, a rating decision is made based on a committee approach, so it can be quite subjective.”That’s not to say the system’s not got its limitations — it can only rate publicly listed companies and lacks the access to issuers that the big rating agencies have.But Duan believes their system, based as it is on quantitative analysis of previous defaults, will provide a scientific benchmark for banks and regulators to test other credit rating systems against.Asked what the commercial players have made of their offering, he says they have initially been rather defensive but come round once they realise they are not facing financial competitors.”Once we’ve made it clear we’re here to create scientific competition, we’re not here to create business competition they start to feel a bit more comfortable with it,” said Duan.

Oct 12, 2011

Dutch FinMin: Greece’s debt must be sustainable


He declined to say whether the Netherlands was open to the idea of a bigger haircut on Greek debt than the 21 percent agreed in July, reiterating that the Netherlands would wait for the troika report.Euro zone officials said on Wednesday that losses for private investors on Greek debt in the second financing package for Athens were likely to be between 30 and 50 percent, rather than the earlier agreed 21 percent.

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