Tag Archives: BBB

Health Care REIT Announces Ratings Upgrade from Standard & Poor's Ratings Services

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Health Care REIT Announces Ratings Upgrade from Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services

TOLEDO, Ohio–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Health Care REIT, Inc. (NYSE: HCN) today announced that Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services has raised the company’s corporate credit rating to BBB from BBB– with a stable outlook. The report cites the company’s diversified and quality portfolio, ability to generate steady cash flow growth and improving credit metrics for the upgrade.

“S&P’s upgrade validates our business model of building a diverse portfolio of high-quality assets with the best operators that will generate predictable, resilient returns,” said George L. Chapman, Health Care REIT’s Chairman and CEO.


About Health Care REIT, Inc.

Health Care REIT, Inc., an S&P 500 company with headquarters in Toledo, Ohio, is a real estate investment trust that invests across the full spectrum of seniors housing and health care real estate. The company also provides an extensive array of property management and development services. As of December 31, 2012, the company’s broadly diversified portfolio consisted of 1,025 properties in 46 states, the United Kingdom, and Canada. More information is available on the company’s website at www.hcreit.com.

Health Care REIT, Inc.
Scott Estes, 419-247-2800
Jay Morgan, 419-247-2800

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  Ohio

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The article Health Care REIT Announces Ratings Upgrade from Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services originally appeared on Fool.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

M&amp;A Rumors Rear Again for Vodafone

By Sam Robson, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — Having seen its share price return to former glory after six months of darkness, management at Vodafone has reiterated that it isn’t under pressure to sell its stake in Verizon Wireless.

This announcement follows a speech by chief executive Andy Halford at a private Citigroup-organized conference held on Tuesday, in which he declared that the company would be willing to accept a lower debt rating if circumstances arose for a merger or acquisition. Shares in Vodafone slipped to 185.5 pence in morning trade from a previous close of 188 pence.

Vodafone is on an “A-” ranking by Standard & Poor’s, although CEO Halford revealed that the telecommunications company would be willing to take a “BBB+” rating. Debt of about 7 billion pounds would take Vodafone one investment grade below its current one and could finance an acquisition — it’s worth noting that the previous reports of a potential takeover of German cable operator Kabel Deutschland were priced between 5 billion pounds and 8.5 billion pounds…

Intriguingly, however, Citigroup analysts upgraded Vodafone on Monday from neutral to buy, lifting the shares up to a six-month high of 188 pence, commenting: “We see a number of advantages supporting a decision to exit the U.S. now. The low interest rate environment, a strong operating performance from Verizon Wireless, improved balance sheet flexibility, a stronger dollar relative to sterling and the increase in U.S. telecoms valuations are all favorable factors.”

It seems this story is far from over, then; almost-daily newsbytes on a Verizon Communications buyout of Vodafone’s stake in their joint-venture and reinvigorated rumors of a Kabel Deutschland takeover are swinging the share price back and forth. As a shareholder, I recently reduced my holding in the company in order to finance a buying opportunity I felt I couldn’t miss, but it remains a significant position in my budding portfolio due to the strength of its yield.

If you already hold Vodafone shares as well and are looking for a stock on a similar yield, then you may wish to read this exclusive, free in-depth report. The FTSE 100 company in question offers a 5.7% income and might be worth 850 pence versus a current price of around 735 pence. Just click here to download the report — it’s absolutely free.

The article M&A Rumors Rear Again for Vodafone originally appeared on Fool.com.


Sam Robson owns shares in Vodafone. The Motley Fool recommends Vodafone. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

BBB expels largest bureau over pay-to-play charges

The Better Business Bureau said Tuesday that it expelled a Southern California chapter after an investigation into an apparent pay-to-play scandal.

BBB of the Southland, the nation’s largest bureau, lost its right to use the name, logo and trademarks of the famous consumer protection group, according to a statement from the governing Council of Better Business Bureaus, based in Arlington, Va.

Many consumers use BBB rankings as guides to the trustworthiness of thousands of businesses. They also file complaints to the bureaus.

“We hold businesses to high standards for honesty, transparency, fairness and integrity, and we hold ourselves to those same standards,” said a statement from Carrie A. Hurt, the national group’s president and chief executive officer. “Over a period of more than two years, BBB of the Southland failed to resolve concerns about compliance with several standards required of BBBs, including standards relating to accreditation, reporting on businesses, and handling complaints.”

The BBB will continue to serve the Los Angeles-are market online and the estimated 18,000 local businesses can maintain their local accreditation while the council attempts to rebuild the bureau, council officials said.

The governing body investigated after an ABC-TV report in 2010 found that the Los Angeles-based group had granted an A-minus standard to a business named Hamas — the same name as the Islamic militant group and an A-plus to a white supremacy group.

Both names were for fictional businesses. They were submitted by a blogger who paid hundreds of dollars in memberships, ABC-TV reported.

The same report also cited other business owners, including celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck, as saying they were told they must become members to receive high marks. One of Puck’s non-BBB restaurants received an F grade, the report said.

In several cases, small businesses with C grades were bumped up to A grades a day after enrolling, the report said.

In a letter to the governing body dated last Friday, Southland bureau Chairman Jerry Dominguez denied there were any widespread problems and said the chapter had resigned from the organization.

“Our board has endured repeated, unjustified criticism that we haven’t been exercising our governance responsibilities as the auditors believe we should,” he wrote.

The Los Angeles-area group issued a statement Tuesday that said it simply followed a BBB policy of “only awarding A-plus grades to accredited businesses.”

“It is ironic that the BBB accuses us of failing to follow organizational policy on the one hand, and then labels us a `bad apple’ when we do,” the statement said. “The reality is very simple: the pay-for-play policy was the BBB‘s, not ours.”

“That’s simply not true,” BBB council spokeswoman Katherine Hutt said. “The service place where I take my car is A-plus and it’s not a BBB member.”

It is absolutely based on merit…There absolutely is no pay-for-play policy in place,” she said.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

How the Dow Chalked Up Another Win

By Jeremy Bowman, The Motley Fool

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Stocks gained for the seventh day in a row, and the S&P 500 closed 10 points shy of its all-time high just a week after the Dow Jones Industrial Average set a record of its own. The Dow gained another 50 points, or 0.35%, to finish at 14,447.

Despite some bearish news out of Europe and China, the momentum from last week’s jobs report and record-setting optimism seemed to carry over. First, in China, inflation grew much faster than expected in February as the Consumer Price Index jumped 3.2% from a year ago, and industrial production and retail sales fell sharply. The jump in inflation was driven by a 6% increase in the food prices, which now rival prices Americans pay in the supermarket. Food inflation has surged because of the country’s urbanization, leaving farmland and labor in shorter supply, and a ban on beef imports from all but three countries, because of mad-cow disease, has only exacerbated the problem.

Meanwhile, in Italy, which roiled markets just two weeks after its elections pointed to what will probably be a weak coalition government, investors were confronted with more bad news. On Friday, Fitch downgraded Italy‘s credit rating to BBB+ with a negative outlook, and today, the country reported that its GDP shrank by 2.8% in the fourth quarter over a year ago. Based on yields, Italian bonds are now as risky as Spanish treasuries.

On the Dow today, Boeing led all components with a 2.1% gain as investors reacted to statements from one executive who said the company’s solution to the Dreamliner battery fires will be a “permanent fix.” The airplane maker also said it will increase its production rates of commercial planes to keep up with rising demand. Production of its 737 jets, for instance, will go from 38 a month this year to 42 a month in 2014.

General Electric was the index’s biggest laggard today, falling 0.6%, as CEO Jeffrey Immelt cited political uncertainty and regulatory constraint as reasons that may limit corporate spending this year. The company plans to continue focusing on dividend increases and share buybacks and nominated former SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro to the board. GE also said it will explore the possibility of expanding its cleanup of an area of the Upper Hudson River, which was designated as a Superfund site.

Late in the session, a judge in New York overruled Mayor Bloomberg‘s soda ban, which had been set to go into effect tomorrow. The ban would have fined any vendors selling cups of soda larger than 16 ounces. Today’s suit was brought in part by the American Beverage Association and is a win for beverage companies, symbolically and financially. Stocks of companies that stand to benefit, however, such as Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and McDonald’s, were mostly unaffected.

With great opportunity comes great responsibility. For Boeing, which operates as a major player in a multitrillion-dollar market, the opportunity is absolutely massive. However, the company’s execution …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

New Elections In Italy Could Spark Bond Crisis Mario Draghi And The EU Can't Stop

By Agustino Fontevecchia, Forbes Staff

European markets have been surprisingly quiet over the past several months, with the so-called “Draghi put” keeping bond vigilantes in check.  The recent inconclusive Italian elections did send jitters through the market, which led Fitch to cut its sovereign credit rating on the Eurozone’s third largest economy to BBB+ from A-, while keeping a negative outlook.  With a new round of elections looking increasingly likely, and against a backdrop of “acute economic weakness,” a new flare up of Europe’s sovereign debt crisis may be right around the corner as risk is accurately re-priced, Nomura’s research team suggests. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Fitch Upgrades Ecopetrol's Rating Outlook

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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Columbia’s largest company, Ecopetrol , said this morning that Fitch Ratings maintained its international ratings for  the company’s local and foreign currency at BBB and BBB-, respectively, and has revised the rating outlook from “stable” to “positive.” The action occurred on Friday.

The rating action affects approximately $1.5 billion of notes outstanding.

The government of Colombia owns 88.5% of Ecopetrol’s business. Fitch recently upgraded Colombia‘s ratings, so this helped lead to its upgrade to “positive” on the company, which Fitch said also has a strong financial profile and improving production levels.

Fitch expects Colombia to become a net sovereign external creditor in 2013 because of its continued international reserve accumulation. Moreover, the government‘s debt burden continues to decline as “fiscal consolidation and economic growth” work in tandem to allow debt to fall to an estimated 36.3% of GDP in 2012, said Fitch, in line with its estimates.

As a result, Fitch affirmed Ecopetrol’s foreign currency and local currency issuer default ratings that affect approximately $1.5 billion of notes outstanding. Fitch has also affirmed Ecopetrol’s national short- and long-term issuer default ratings at F1+ and AAA, respectively.

Fitch says further upgrades could result from an upgrade of Colombia‘s ratings coupled with continued strong operating and financial performance, though a downgrade is possible if Colombia‘s sovereign ratings are downgraded or conditions otherwise deteriorate.

Ecopetrol is one of the 50 largest oil companies in the world.

link

The article Fitch Upgrades Ecopetrol’s Rating Outlook originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Rich Duprey has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Fitch downgrades Italy on election uncertainty

Fitch Ratings Agency has downgraded Italy‘s credit rating to BBB+ from A- with a warning of a further downgrade, citing the uncertainty created by February’s inconclusive elections.

Fitch on Friday said the failure to come up with a clear winner made “it unlikely that a stable new government can be formed in the next few weeks,” thereby harming prospects of further reforms.

The rating agency said Italy‘s recession was one of the deepest in Europe, with an expected contraction of 1.8 percent in 2013. Fitch added that the size of the country’s debt as a proportion of its economy is expected to peak at 130 percent this year, higher than an earlier estimate of 125 percent.

Talks on forming a new government aren’t expected to begin before March 20.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Fitch Downgrades Italy: Tourism, Shoes &amp; Purses Not Enough

By 24/7 Wall St.

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Fitch Ratings this morning cut its rating on Italian debt one notch from ‘A-‘ to ‘BBB+’ with a negative outlook. And the ratings firm gave a long list of reasons for the cut.

The recent indecisive Italian parliamentary elections lead the list, followed by increased risk that the country’s ongoing recession can be turned around. Fitch expects Italy’s GDP to contract by 1.8% in 2013, better than the 2.7% contraction in 2012, but evidence that the recession in the country is “one of the deepest in Europe.” Italian debt is expected to rise to near 130% of GDP this year, worse than the 125% level Fitch forecast last summer.

And about that government:

The inconclusive results of the Italian parliamentary elections on 24-25 February make it unlikely that a stable new government can be formed in the next few weeks. The increased political uncertainty and non-conducive backdrop for further structural reform measures constitute a further adverse shock to the real economy amidst the deep recession. … A weak government could be slower and less able to respond to domestic or external economic shocks.

It’s no secret that defeated prime minister Mario Monti was a favorite of the eurozone crowd because he was, after all, a technocrat just like they are. His electoral loss throws into question whether or not the country’s new leaders will want or be able to impose further austerity. Fitch has not yet placed its bet on how that will work out, but it is pretty clearly expecting the structural corrections (austerity) that it hopes for not to materialize under whatever new government is finally formed.

The Fitch Ratings press release is available here.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Economy, International Markets Tagged: featured

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Summary report csv file

By inMyZone35

Hello,

I have 2 csv files with 4 columns each.

file1.csv
A, AA, AAA, AAAA
B, BB, BBB, BBBB

file2.csv
C, CC, CCC, CCCC
D, DD, DDD, DDDD

I would like to use shell commands (sed, awk…) to copy the content of the 2 files (2×4 columns) into a final csv template file.

Expected result:
final.csv
A, AA, AAA, AAAA, C, CC, CCC, CCCC
B, BB, BBB, BBBB, D, DD, DDD, DDDD

Thank you guys for your help.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums

Script to find difference between 2 files by column

By shakthi666

Hi , i am newbie to shell scripting and am trying to do the below job,

A shell script to be run with a command like

sh Compare.ksh file1.txt file2.txt 1 2 > file3.txt

1 2-are the key columns
Consider the delimiter would be Tab or comma

File 1:

SK TEST NAME MATHS PHYSICS
21 1 AAA 45 65
21 2 AAA 48 66
22 1 BBB 46 64
22 2 BBB 47 65
23 1 CCC 58 85
23 2 CCC 59 88

File 2:

SK TEST NAME MATHS PHYSICS
21 1 AAA 45 65
21 2 AAA 48 66
22 1 BBB 46 6
22 2 BBB 47 65
23 1 CCC 58 85
23 2 CC 59 88
And return result like,

File 3:

FILE SK TEST NAME PHYSICS
file1.txt 22 1 BBB 64
file2.txt 22 1 BBB 6
file1.txt 23 2 CCC
file2.txt 23 2 CC

Any expert help for this student? 🙂

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums