Monday, January 28, 2008

PetroChina's 44% Loss Proves BRIC Premium Is Nonsense

(Bloomberg) -- The biggest slide in emerging-market stock valuations in a year and a half is proving that a slowdown in the U.S. economy still matters to Brazil, Russia, India and China.

Shares in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index dropped 12 percent relative to profit this month as the prospect of a U.S. recession pushed two-thirds of the world's equity indexes into so-called bear markets. The last monthly decline as steep was in May 2006, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Even the price-earnings ratio for the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, the benchmark for U.S. stocks, didn't fall as much.

Companies such as PetroChina Co., the country's biggest oil producer, and Russia's OAO Lukoil show the threat of a global slump is shaking the confidence of investors who viewed developing countries as a haven from the U.S. PetroChina's 44 percent plummet since November erased about $400 billion, more than the market value of Microsoft Corp., the No. 1 software maker. Russian stocks are headed for their biggest loss in 19 months after money managers bought an unprecedented amount in 2007.

``The only way they could decouple would be for them to be on another planet,'' said David Dreman, who oversees $20 billion as chief investment officer at Jersey City, New Jersey-based Dreman Value Management LLC. ``We are the biggest buyer of their products and biggest user of their services, so if our economy slows down their growth rate has to slow down. There's no other plausible way.''

Record High

The MSCI index rose to an all-time high in October on expectations economic growth in the so-called BRIC countries, which accounted for half the world's expansion last year, would shield stocks even if the U.S. stumbled.

Last year's surge pushed the valuation for the MSCI above the S&P 500 for the first time since the Internet bubble burst in March 2000. Investors were willing to risk capital on profit growth in developing markets as their governments boosted currency reserves and cut debt.

Now, the price-earnings ratio is 15.35, down from 17.44 at the end of last year and an all-time high of 90.6 in February 1999, Bloomberg data show. Investors pulled a record $10.7 billion from emerging-market stock funds last week, according to data compiled by Cambridge, Massachusetts-based research firm EPFR Global.
 

Verizon Profit Rises on Wireless; Sales Miss Estimate

(Bloomberg) -- Verizon Communications Inc., the second-largest U.S. phone company, said fourth-quarter profit rose 3.9 percent, driven by new wireless subscribers. Sales missed estimates after home-phone users defected to cable rivals.

Net income climbed to $1.07 billion, or 37 cents a share, from $1.03 billion, or 35 cents, a year ago, the New York-based company said today in a statement. Sales rose 5.5 percent to $23.8 billion, below the $24 billion average estimate of analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

Chief Executive Officer Ivan Seidenberg is spending $23 billion over seven years to offer TV service and higher Internet speeds, to compete with cable companies that sell phone plans. Verizon lost 875,000 phone lines in the quarter, an 8.1 percent drop from a year ago, compared with an 8 percent decline in the previous quarter.

``Line losses accelerated again,'' said Todd Rosenbluth, an equity analyst at Standard & Poor's in New York. ``That's a trend we expected, given cable competition.'' He recommends holding the shares.

Profit excluding items such as severance pay for fired workers was 62 cents a share, meeting the average estimate of 21 analysts in the Bloomberg survey. The wireless unit's operating margin, the percentage of sales remaining after deducting the costs of providing the service, expanded to 26.2 percent from 25 percent a year ago.

Verizon fell $1.02, or 2.7 percent, to $36.74 at 9:37 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock was little changed in the 12 months before today.

Job Cuts

The company said it began cutting jobs in the fourth quarter and plans to continue firing workers this year. Spokesman Bob Varettoni declined to say how many positions the company will eliminate.

Verizon's larger rival, AT&T Inc., also reported fourth- quarter revenue that fell short of analysts' estimates. While AT&T blamed the results on shutting off service to nonpaying customers, Verizon pointed to competition from cable companies such as Comcast Corp.

Seidenberg, 61, has been shedding businesses to focus on Verizon's fiber-optic network and wireless unit. Verizon is awaiting regulatory approval for a $2.72 billion deal to hand over about 1.6 million phone lines in the northeastern U.S. to FairPoint Communications Inc.

Spinoff, Sale

Fourth-quarter results last year included expenses of 22 cents a share for taxes on the sale of assets in the Dominican Republic and the cost of spinning off a directories unit.

Verizon added 226,000 TV subscribers to its fiber-optic network, less than the 234,000 projected by UBS AG analyst John Hodulik in New York. The company also recruited 245,000 fiber Internet customers, missing Hodulik's 284,000 estimate.

The fiber-optic network, called FiOS, is available in parts of 16 states. Verizon plans to make it available to 18 million homes by the end of 2010, up from about 9 million last year.

Verizon Wireless, jointly owned by Verizon and Vodafone Group Plc, added 2 million wireless customers, including 1.6 million on long-term contracts. Verizon Wireless took subscribers from smaller rival Sprint Nextel Corp., which lost 683,000 contract customers last quarter. AT&T, owner of the biggest U.S. mobile-phone service, added 2.7 million users in the quarter, including 1.2 million on contracts.