Greeks in Brussels
The Greeks have departed for Brussels, where they will plead with the European Union, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank for the money needed to cover the nation’s financial needs next month. The parties have until February 15 to reach a settlement. The Greeks say they have given in to all austerity requests but have no deal to cut some government-controlled pensions. So, after all of the negotiations, that single issue may drive Greece into default.
Luxury Car Sales
At least some rich people around the world do not think their wealth will be entirely stripped away by taxes. Daimler said it had a 39% increase in fourth-quarter profits. It said the primary driver was an upswing in sales of high-end Mercedes, particularly the car company’s M-Class SUV. Daimler is not alone. BMW posted similarly impressive earnings, as did Volkwagen’s Audi division.
Yahoo! and Alibaba
Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO) may finally get some tangible value from its 39% holding in large China e-commerce company Alibaba. Rumors suggest that Alibaba is close to securing bank loans of as much as $3 billion. Wall St. thinks the Alibaba stake is worth closer to $5 billion, so the firm may have to use some of its own money. Now, investors will have to wait to see what Yahoo! does with the cash. There is almost no optimism that Yahoo! has the management and prospects to use the billions to rebuild its troubled businesses. Yet, with a new CEO and newly constituted board, a turnaround is at least a long shot.
Douglas A. McIntyre