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Morning News Wednesday July 18th 2007

General News:

–       CPI rose 0.2% and 0.2% core CPI.

–       Breakdown of CPI: Food prices rose 0.5%, housing rose 0.3%, apparel fell 0.6%, public transportation up 0.8%, medical care was up 0.2% and tobacco rose 0.5%.

–       Housing starts rise to 1.467 million as a result of the multi-family sector with permits down 1.406 million, more than expected.

–       Bear Stearns’ troubled hedge funds have shown little value and there is panic that investors may not receive their funds.

–       Southern California home sales hit a 14-year low.

 

Asia/Europe:

 

Asia:

–          According to Japanese government minutes, rate hikes will be gradual and corporate prices are in an uptrend.

–          Honda is expanding operation with new factories in Thailand, Vietnam and Argentina.

–          India’s Tata Motors may make an offer for Jaguar and Land Rover.

 

Europe:

–          There is a 6 to 3 split on rate hikes in the Bank of England.

–          Eurozone construction rose 1.8% in May.

 

Corporate News:

–          Sherwin-Williams Co. (SHW) announced a regular quarterly dividend of 31.5 cents per share. The Cleveland-based company will pay the dividend Sept. 14 to shareholders of record Aug. 24.

–          Bank holding company Venture Financial Group Inc. plans an initial public offering of its common stock, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

–          Regional bank Harleysville Savings Financial Corp. (HARL) said its fiscal third-quarter profit slipped due to interest rate pressure.

–          Quarterly profit at parent company for American Airlines, AMR, falls short of Wall Street’s expectations as revenue sank on weather disruptions.

–          Southwest Airlines (LUV) said that its second-quarter profit fell 17% as rising fuel costs weighed on the discount carrier.

–          JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) reported a 20% jump in second-quarter profit, as the nation’s third-largest bank benefited from a surge in investment banking fees.

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