Real Estate Daily News – December 13, 2013

Reserve & White house Real Estate Daily NewsReal Estate Daily News Buzz is designed to give news snippets to readers that our (yet to be award winning) editors thought you could use to start your day. They come from various business perspectives, real estate, government, the Fed, local news, and the stock markets to save you time. Here you will find the headlines and what the news buzz for the day will be.

Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 104.10 points, or 0.66%, to close at 15,739.43. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 6.72 points, or 0.38%, at 1,775.50. The NASDAQ composite dropped 5.41 points, or 0.14%, to 3,998.40. Benchmark U.S. oil for January delivery rose 6 cents to close $97.50 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

TRUST LAND PURCHASED TO EXPAND TORTOLITA MOUNTAIN PARK
TUCSON – Pima County acquired 818 acres of state trust land for expansion of Tortolita Mountain Park. Pima County had wanted the parcel for some time and was finally able to use a state Growing Smarter matching-fund grant of $1.2 million dollars, along with some development fees and general-fund dollars, to purchase the parcel at a State Land Department auction. The total cost of the purchase was $2.45 million ($2,995 per acre). Tortolita Mountain Park is located north of Tucson and contains more than 5,600 acres of open space.

ELOY PROPOSES ANNEXATION OF LAND NEAR PHOENIXMART
ELOY – In a regular Eloy City Council meeting on Monday, staff proposed to the council that the city annex 160 acres of land located about one mile from PhoenixMart, a planned global commerce center that broke ground in November. The council meeting also included a public hearing on the proposal, though there were no comments or questions from the public or anyone in the audience on the issue. The property, located at the southeast corner of Florence Boulevard and Toltec Buttes Road, is owned solely by Robson Communities. The land is within the city’s planning area, but also within Casa Grande’s planning area. When questioned by council members, interim city manager and Community Development Director Harvey Krauss said that Casa Grande would not legally be able to initiate an annexation on the property since Eloy has already begun the process. After Monday’s public hearing, the city has one year to obtain the signature of the property owner. According to Krauss, Robson Communities is in favor of annexation of the property into Eloy. In addition, Robson hopes to enter into a pre-annexation development agreement with the city.

EXXON: RISING LIVING STANDARDS PROPELL ENERGY NEEDS
NEW YORK (AP) — Exxon Mobil says the drive for higher living standards around the world will keep demand for electricity and transportation fuels growing even as economies get more efficient and governments put a price on pollution. The company’s annual long-term energy outlook, released Thursday, predicts world energy demand will grow 35 per cent by 2040 as electricity and modern fuels are brought to some of the billions of people in the developing world who currently live without power or burn wood or other biomass for cooking and heating. Those growing needs will be somewhat offset by a slow decline in consumption in the far more energy-hungry economies of the developed world.

LABOR GROUP SEES PROGRESS AT MAJOR APPLE SUPPLIER
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A labor group monitoring three Chinese factories that make iPhones and other Apple products says once-oppressive working conditions have steadily improved in the last 18 months, but more must be done to reduce the amount of overtime that employees work. The audit released Thursday by the Fair Labor Association represents the final assessment in a process that started last year at plants run in China by Apple’s largest supplier, Foxconn. Reports depicting the Foxconn plants as inhumane sweatshops prompted Apple Inc. to hold its foreign contractors to higher standards. The Cupertino, Calif., company joined the Fair Labor Association last year as part of a commitment to improve the situation. The report concluded Foxconn factories in Longhua, Chengdu and Guanlan had reached virtually all the goals set out in a plan adopted last year.

CONSUMERS’ BIG PURCHASES LIFT HOPES FOR US ECONOMY
WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans ramped up spending at retail businesses in November, providing a boost to the economy just in time for the holidays. But traditional retail stores didn’t benefit as much from the latest burst of spending. Consumers bought more cars, electronics, furniture and other big-ticket items. They also did more shopping online. Those trends reflect changes in consumers’ shopping habits and in the broader economy. Total retail sales rose 0.7% in November, the Commerce Department said Thursday. It was the biggest gain in five months. And spending at retail businesses rose 0.6% in October, higher than previously estimated.

FORD PLANS 23 NEW CARS, 11,000 NEW JOBS IN 2014
DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) — Ford Motor Co. says it will hire more than 11,000 people in the U.S. and Asia next year to support an aggressive rollout of new vehicles. Joe Hinrichs, Ford’s president of the Americas, said the company plans to hire 5,000 workers in the U.S. — including 3,300 white-collar staff like engineers — and 6,000 workers in Asia. Many of those hires will work at two new plants that are opening in China. This will be the most people Ford has hired in one year since 2000. 2014 will also be its busiest product year in Ford’s 111-year history, with 23 new vehicles being introduced around the world. Of those, 16 will be sold in the U.S., including a new Mustang sports car, Transit Connect van and Lincoln MKC small utility.

IT’S A SUITE DAY FOR HILTON INVESTORS
Its shares gained 7.5% to close at $21.50 Thursday after the hotelier raised $2.35 billion in the largest hotel IPO ever. Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc. is the world’s largest hotel group with 665,667 rooms across 90 countries and territories. It operates luxury brands such as the Waldorf Astoria and Conrad Hotels & Resorts but has built much of its recent growth on franchise deals. Investor demand for IPOs has been strong recently with 218 IPOs in the U.S. this year, the most since 2000, according to research and investment firm Renaissance Capital. And Hilton’s offering trumped the $2.1 billion generated by Twitter’s IPO last month, as well as proceeds from offerings by its competitors.

HUD RELEASES FINAL RULE DEFINING QUALIFIED MORTGAGE
The Department of Housing and Urban Development on Wednesday released its final rule defining a “qualified mortgage” that is guaranteed or administered by HUD, effective Jan. 10, 2014. The rule will apply to all mortgages with case number assignments on or after that date. HUD proposed a QM definition aligned with the Ability-to-Repay criteria contained in the Truth-in-Lending Act as required by the Dodd-Frank Act and the agency’s mission to promote affordable mortgage financing options for underserved borrowers. The rule builds off of an existing QM rule that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau finalized earlier this year. Under HUD’s QM definition, mortgage loans must require periodic payments without risky features; have terms that don’t exceed 30 years; be insured or guaranteed by FHA/HUD; and limit upfront points and fees to no more than 3% with adjustments to facilitate smaller loans, with certain exceptions.




Real Estate Daily News Buzz – November 26, 2013

Reserve & White house Real Estate Daily NewsReal Estate Daily News Buzz is designed to give news snippets to readers that our (yet to be award winning) editors thought you could use to start your day. They come from various business perspectives, real estate, government, the Fed, local news, and the stock markets to save you time. Here you will find the headlines and what the news buzz for the day will be.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose eight points, or 0.1%, to close at 16,073 Monday. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index eased two points, or 0.1%, to 1,802. The NASDAQ rose 2.92 points to 3,995. Benchmark U.S. crude for January delivery fell 75 cents to close at $94.09 in New York. Wholesale gasoline fell 3.75 cents to $2.67 gallon.

FOXCONN PLANS TO INVEST $40 MILLION IN US MANUFACTURING
TAIPEI — Taiwan tech giant Hon Hai Group known by its trade name Foxconn, said Friday it was planning to invest $40 million in manufacturing and research facilities in the United States. Hon Hai made the announcement as chairman Terry Gou visited the U.S. as part of a delegation of Taiwan business leaders to promote trade and technology cooperation, a company statement said. Hon Hai said it planned to invest $30 million in two years and hire 500 new workers in its subsidiary in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania to build a “high-value manufacturing base” for high-end electronics and other products. It also aimed to invest $10 million in two years in a joint project with the Pittsburgh-based Carnegie Mellon University, a leader in robotics, for automation research and development.

SENATE REPORT URGES RETAILERS ON BANGLADESH UNIONS
WASHINGTON — A U.S. Senate report on Friday urged Walmart, Gap and other retailers to respect labor unions in Bangladesh, saying workers desperately needed greater rights after hundreds died in fires. The staff report from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee‘s Democratic Party majority came as Bangladesh’s government and foreign retailers agreed to start safety inspections on the 3,500 factories in the world’s largest garment maker after China. Senator Robert Menendez, the chairman of the committee, vowed to help give workers “the tools they need to protect themselves “after a factory fire in April killed 1,135 people and a similar disaster in November 2012 left 111 workers dead. “No consumer will want to wear clothing if it’s stained by the blood of innocent workers,” Menendez said. Following the tragedies, more than 100 companies, mostly from Europe, entered an accord on fire safety that includes union representation.

MALL LANDLORDS COME TO AID OF SUPERTYPHOON VICTIMS
Shopping center owners and retailers from around the world are participating in relief efforts as the Philippines recovers from Typhoon Haiyan, by sending cash, volunteers, doctors and other aid. Walmart has no stores in the Philippines, but the company committed $1 million to the Red Cross and Save the Children at the request of its Asia arm. Yum Brands is donating $1.5 million to the cause from its World Hunger Relief fund, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. SM Prime Holdings, the Philippines’ largest developer, has established a P100 million (about $2.3 million) fund that provides aid and helps with reconstruction. SM is also accepting donations at its malls. The company donated P10 million to the Department of Social Welfare and Development and has opened its Manila headquarters up for donations. Robinsons Retail Holdings, a Philippines supermarket and department store owner and operator, organized in-store donation drives and is matching cash donations. The company is collecting emergency supplies and has assembled hundreds of relief boxes. In the U.S., meanwhile, General Growth Properties, Macerich and Simon Property Group are among the landlords aiding relief efforts with Red Cross stations at their malls.

TIGHTER MORTGAGE LENDING PRODUCES BEST LOANS IN 10 YEARS
Stricter mortgage underwriting standards have resulted in a 2013 vintage of mortgages that is the best performing book of loans in the last 10 years, according to CoreLogic’s November The MarketPulse. Mortgage performance has improved as credit has tightened in the last few years, with serious delinquency rates dropping in July 2013 to 5.4% compared to a peak of 8.5% in January 2010. “Through the first six months of 2013, the serious delinquency rate of loans originated in 2013 is a tiny six basis points, down from 10 basis points for loans originated in 2012 and down from 108 basis points for loans originated in 2007, the worst performing year in the 2000s,” CoreLogic finds. “Not only is 2013 a clear improvement from the worst years, it is also shaping up to be the best performing year in a decade.”

PORT OF GUAYMAS SET TO DOUBLE CAPACITY, SEEKS ARIZONA TIES
TUCSON – A multimillion-dollar investment to more than double the capacity of Guaymas’ deep-water seaport is underway and, within two years, an additional nine docks will be built to support ocean vessels hauling everything from coal and grain to durable goods and automobiles. Located in the southwest part of the state of Sonora in northwestern Mexico. The city is located 117 km south of the state capital of Hermisillo, and 242 miles from the U.S. border, and is the principal port for the state. The expansion would make the Port of Guaymas the second largest seaport in Mexico by volume, with capacity for more than 30 million tons of cargo. Officials from Guaymas visited Tucson Friday to present plans to local business and political leaders and to encourage continued cooperation between the two regions. The City of Tucson and the Pima Association of Governments hosted the event.

OLD TUCSON WELCOMES BACK WESTERN FRANCHISE
Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) Once Upon a Dream Productions along with New Deal Studios and Old Tucson are pleased to announce that principal photography for the sequel to “Hot Bath an’ a Stiff Drink” (shot earlier this year in Tucson) began on November 7, 2013 at Old Tucson, Mescal, and surrounding areas. The feature-length Western is being produced and stars Jeffery Patterson by his production company Once Upon A Dream Productions. Mr. Patterson is quickly establishing himself as a producer of classic family films. Before the “Hot Bath an’ a Stiff Drink” franchise, he produced “Finding Harmony” starring Billy Zane and Alison Eastwood. Matthew Gratzner is back to Direct the film. He also serves as a writer and producer along with Producer Shannon Blake Gans. Gratzner is co-founder and creative supervisor of New Deal Studios and has worked on such films as THE DARK KNIGHT, IRON MAN, THE DEPARTED, HUGO, COWBOYS AND ALIENS, SHUTTER ISLAND AND THE AVIATOR, to name a few.

MORE SIGNS INVESTORS LOOKING BEYOND GATEWAY CITIES

WASHINGTON, DC – The way trends are moving, 2014 could well be the year that secondary and tertiary markets come into their own with commercial real estate investors. That, of course, doesn’t mean that primary cities such as Washington DC will see an exodus of investors. But clearly the competitive landscape is changing and high property valuations in these markets can expect to undergo more scrutiny by investors aware they have a growing number of options. Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, was the most recent industry watcher to note the trend to smaller markets by investors, in the NAR’s quarterly forecast. “Investors have been looking for better yields, and have found good potential in smaller commercial properties, notably in secondary and tertiary markets,” he said. “Sales of commercial properties costing less than $2.5 million in the third quarter were 11% above a year ago, while prices for smaller properties were 4% above the third quarter of 2012.” One factor in DC’s favor is that it has among the lowest office vacancy rates in the nation at 9.9%. Only New York City’s is lower, in fact, at 9.8%. The bad news, possibly? Some of those aforementioned secondary and tertiary markets are also posting low vacancy rates: Little Rock is 12% and Nashville is 12.9%. A report co-published by PwCUS and the Urban Land Institute earlier this month also came to similar conclusions about the growing allure of secondary markets.

WET ‘N’ WILD SELLS FOR $33 MILLION
GLENDALE, AZ – CNL Lifestyle Properties Inc. has signed an agreement with Village Roadshow to acquire the Wet ‘n’ Wild waterpark. In addition to buying the real property for $33 million, CNL Lifestyle also acquires the North American rights to the Wet ‘n’ Wild brand name. The theme park at 4243 W. Pinnacle Peak Rd. in Glendale is situated on 35 acres and features 30 water slides and attractions. Thanks to the region’s warm, dry and consistent weather, the park (which opened in 2009) has an extended operating season. Once the transaction closes in late November, Premier Parks LLC will lease Wet ‘n’ Wild Phoenix and Wet ‘n’ Wild Hawaii, which is also owned by CNL Lifestyle Properties and currently operated by Village Roadshow.

JUDGE BLOCKS SALE OF CALIF. HIGH-SPEED RAIL BONDS
SACRAMENTO, Calif. – A Sacramento judge on Monday tore up California’s funding plans for its bullet train project in separate orders that could force the state to spend months or years redrawing its plans for the $68 billion rail line. Judge Michael Kenny rejected a request from the California High-Speed Rail Authority to sell $8 billion of the $10 billion in bonds approved by voters in 2008, saying there was no evidence it was “necessary and desirable” to start selling the bonds when a committee of state officials met last March. He said the committee was supposed to act as “the ultimate ‘keeper of the checkbook’” for taxpayers, but instead relied on a request from the high-speed rail authority to start selling bonds as sufficient evidence to proceed. In a separate lawsuit, Kenny ordered the rail authority to redo its $68 billion funding plan before continuing construction, a process that could take months or years. He had previously ruled that the authority abused its discretion by approving a funding plan that did not comply with the requirements of the law. The judge said the state failed to identify “sources of funds that were more than merely theoretically possible.”

WALMART CEO STEPS DOWN; McMILLON IS SUCCESSOR
BENTONVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Walmart Stores Inc. is ushering in a changing of the guard as the world’s largest retailer confronts slower growth and challenges to its reputation. Doug McMillon, head of Walmart’s international division, will succeed CEO and President Mike Duke when he steps down on Feb 1 after five years in those roles. McMillon will become the fifth CEO since Walmart’s founder Sam Walton. The change is indicative of a recent shift in strategy at the company best known for its cutthroat pricing and big box stores. McMillon, 47, is expected to infuse a youthful spirit into Wal-Mart’s culture as it tries to attract a generation of shoppers who gravitate toward tablets and mobile devices.

IRAN NUKE DEAL COULD PUSH OIL PRICES LOWER
NEW YORK (AP) — Oil prices could be headed lower after the preliminary nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers, even though it does not allow Iran to export more oil. In the short term, the deal may make it easier for Iran to sell the oil it is already allowed to sell under the sanctions, which would increase supplies on the world market. And the new found co-operation between Iran and the West eases tensions that pushed oil prices higher in recent years. But the deal, described by both sides as only a first step, raises the possibility that a more comprehensive agreement would eventually allow Iran to restore oil production to pre-sanctions levels. That could add 1 million barrels per day of oil to world markets — enough to meet the entire global growth in demand for 2014 projected by the International Energy Agency.

TRAVELERS CAST WARY EYE AS STORM MOVES EASTWARD
DALLAS (AP) — A winter storm system blamed for at least 10 fatal accidents in the West and Texas threatens to dampen the Thanksgiving holiday for millions of Americans traveling this week. Nearly 300 American Airlines and American Eagle flights were cancelled in and out of Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport on Monday due to the weather, mirroring disruptions at the air hub a day earlier. Some of the country’s busiest airports — New York, Washington D.C., Philadelphia, Boston and Charlotte, N.C. — could see big delays. And icy roads led to hundreds of accidents and at least 10 deaths, half of them in Texas. On Monday, the storm brought a mix of snow, sleet and freezing rain to parts of Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, southern Kansas and Texas. But as the storm continues east, there are fears of heavy rain along the busy I-95 corridor and sleet, freezing rain and snow away from the coast and at higher elevations.

DUBAI WANTS WORLD EXPO 2020 STIRS WORRIES OF 2ND BUBBLE
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Dubai’s rulers say the city of 2.2 million people is a perfect fit to host the World’s Fair in 2020 and are pushing it at every opportunity. Logos for its bid to host the event are plastered on mountaintops, police cars and more. Countdowns to Wednesday’s decision of who will host the exhibition also appear on one of Dubai’s main highways. Dubai’s rulers say their futuristic city of skyscrapers is ideal to host the event. But their well-oiled public-relations campaign belies a worry among many in the United Arab Emirates city that increased building and real-estate speculation driven by the event could put it on the cusp of another financial crisis.

CONTRACTS TO BUY US HOMES FALL FOR 5th MONTH
WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of Americans who signed contracts to buy homes fell in October for the fifth straight month. Higher mortgage rates, price increases and the 16-day partial government shutdown held back sales. The National Association of Realtors said Monday that its seasonally adjusted pending home sales index dipped 0.6 per cent to 102.1. That’s the lowest level since December. September’s reading was revised slightly higher to 102.7.

FIAT SAYS NO CHRYSLER IPO IN 2013
FLORENCE, Italy (AP) — Chrysler won’t be offering its stock for sale on the public markets this year. Italian automaker Fiat SpA, Chrysler’s majority owner, said in a statement Monday that Chrysler’s board has determined an initial public offering is not practicable in 2013. Instead, Chrysler Group LLC will continue work on the offering so it can happen in the first quarter of next year. Fiat owns 58.5% of Chrysler’s shares, with the remaining 41.5% held by a United Auto Workers union trust fund that pays health care bills for blue-collar retirees. But Sergio Marchionne, CEO of both automakers, has been squabbling with the trust over the price, and so far they haven’t been able to reach agreement. The IPO would consist of shares currently held by the trust.




Real Estate Daily News Buzz – November 12, 2013

Reserve & White house Real Estate Daily NewsReal Estate Daily News Buzz is designed to give news snippets to readers that our (yet to be award winning) editors thought you could use to start your day. They come from various business perspectives, real estate, government, the Fed, local news, and the stock markets to save you time. Here you will find the headlines and what the news buzz for the day will be.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 21.32 points, or 0.1%, to 15,783.10 on Monday. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index gained 1.28 points, or 0.1%, to 1,771.89. The NASDAQ composite rose 0.56 points, less than 0.1%, to 3,919.79. Benchmark U.S. crude for December delivery rose 54 cents to $95.14 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

FOXCONN MULLING OVER BUILDING TVS, DISPLAY PANELS IN ARIZONA
Aiming to produce more electronics with the “Made in USA” label, Foxconn Technology Group said Saturday it was considering setting up a factory in Arizona to possibly build TVs, display panels and product casings. The company’s CEO Terry Gou announced his interest in building the facilities when the state’s governor Janice Brewer visited him in Taiwan. Both Foxconn and Arizona have been in talks about an investment for about the last two years, the company said in an email. The Taiwanese manufacturer is best known for building Apple’s iPad and iPhone, but it also assembles products for other U.S. leading tech firms including Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, and Dell. Many of those factories are in China, where Foxconn employs over 1 million people, where they pay wages of about $300 to $500 per month.

FRANCE’S CREDIT RATING LOWERED — 2ND TIME IN 2 YEARS
Standard and Poor’s (S&P) cut France’s credit rating to AA from AA+ on Friday. The move comes almost two years after the country lost its top-rated AAA status. S&P said it downgraded France because the high unemployment in the country was making it hard for the government to make important reforms which would boost growth. Unemployment is currently 11.1% which makes more reforms nearly impossible. The French government responded by saying that its debt rating was one of the safest in the eurozone. S&P said it expected government debt to hit 86% of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2015 and unemployment to remain above 10% until 2016. The country’s Finance Minister, Pierre Moscovici, said S&P had made “critical and inexact judgements”. Since taking office in 2012, President Francois Hollande has passed some economic reforms, such as making the labor market more flexible and changing the pension system, but many economists say the changes are too incremental to improve the situation. In theory, a lower credit rating makes borrowing more expensive. The return for investors buying French debt indeed did rise after the announcement. The yield on French government 10-year bonds rose more than 20 basis points to 2.389% from 2.158%.

CFPB ORDERS MORTGAGE COMPANY TO PAY $13 MILLION
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has taken action against a mortgage company for steering borrowers into costlier mortgages, the agency announced last week. The CFPB has proposed a consent order in its enforcement action of Utah-based Castle & Cooke that would order the company to pay $9 million in restitution and $4 million in civil penalties for alleged payment of illegal bonuses to loan originators. According to the complaint, the company’s president, Matthew Pineda and senior vice president of capital markets, Buck Hawkins, violated loan origination compensation law by paying loan officers quarterly bonuses that were dependent upon the interest rates offered to borrowers. Castle & Cooke originated $1.3 billion in loans in 2012, according to the CFPB’s research. It has 45 branches and does business in 22 states. Castle & Cooke has agreed to the consent order, but admits no wrongdoing in the case.

WORLD ECONOMY BEING SUSTAINED BY EXTRAORDINARY AID
WASHINGTON (AP) — Five years after a global financial crisis erupted, the world’s biggest economies still need to be propped up. They’re growing and hiring a little faster and creating more jobs, but only with extraordinary aid from central banks or government spending. And economists say major countries may need help for years more. From the United States to Europe to Japan, central banks are pumping cash into economies and keeping loan rates near record lows. Even fast-growing China has rebounded from an uncharacteristic slump with the help of government money that’s poured into projects and made loans easily available from state-owned banks. For now, thanks in part to the intervention, the world economy is improving. The International Monetary Fund expects global growth to rise to 3.6% in 2014 from 2.9% this year.

LONG SILENT, CHINA’S ENTREPRENEURS PUSH FOR CHANGE
BEIJING (AP) — As Chinese career trajectories go, wealthy businesswoman Wang Ying’s has taken an unusual turn. She quit her job as head of a private equity fund to become a full-time political critic. Wang, who was a low-profile member of China’s business elite for years, is now a leading voice among entrepreneurs troubled by the growing ranks of business owners who have suffered under the government’s authoritarian excesses and by signs Beijing wants to further tighten its controls on society. As China’s ruling party holds a major economic planning meeting this week, it faces rising demands for change from entrepreneurs who feel a simmering anger at a system that extends privileges such as cheap credit and monopolies to politically-favored state companies. Entrepreneurs complain they are denied a say in how society is run even as their businesses create jobs, wealth and tax revenue. Worse, some have endured arrest, torture and confiscation of their businesses at the whim of local officials.

US, EUROPE RESUME TALKS ON NEW TRADE PACT
BRUSSELS (AP) — The United States and the European Union sought Monday to get past a rough patch in diplomatic relations to resume talks on a free trade deal that would grow what is already the world’s biggest business relationship. Negotiators for the Obama administration and the EU say an agreement would create jobs and boost growth in the two economies, which represent almost half of global output but are still not fully recovered from recession. The trade volume in goods and services between the two economies totalled 800 billion euros ($1.08 trillion) last year. The negotiations, however, are taking place against the backdrop of European pique over reported U.S. electronic espionage of EU citizens, including high-profile leaders like Germany’s Angela Merkel. The Greens in the European Parliament on Monday became the latest political group to call for the trade talks to be frozen in response.

TARGET TO OPEN EARLIER ON THANKSGIVING
NEW YORK (AP) — Target Corp. is the latest retailer to open earlier on Thanksgiving this year. The Minneapolis-based discounter said it will open at 8 p.m. on the holiday — an hour earlier than last year. Stores will remain open throughout the night and close at 11 p.m. on the day after Thanksgiving known as Black Friday. Target also will offer hundreds of deals online on Thanksgiving morning that will include almost all deals that will be available in stores. In addition, Target said it will feature 15 online-only daily discounts for two weeks beginning on the Sunday before Thanksgiving.

AMAZON, US POSTAL SERVICE WILL DELIVER ON SUNDAYS
NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon is teaming up with the U.S. Postal Service to deliver packages on Sundays. The Seattle company says Sunday delivery will be available this week to customers in the New York and Los Angeles metropolitan areas. Amazon and the Postal Service plan to roll out service to “a large portion of the U.S. population” next year, including the cities of Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, and Phoenix. Amazon expects Sunday delivery to be popular with members of its Prime service, which costs $79 a year and comes with free two-day shipping on many items on the site as well as access to Amazon’s TV and movie streaming service. But Sunday delivery will be available to all Amazon customers.

TRANSOCEAN AGREES TO DEAL WITH ICAHN
NEW YORK (AP) — Oil driller Transocean has agreed to a deal with billionaire investor Carl Icahn after a months-long proxy fight. The company said Monday that it has agreed to support a dividend of $3 per share and reduce the size of its board. It is also looking to boost margins by $800 million through cost-cutting efforts and other measures. The stock climbed in premarket trading. Icahn, a minority shareholder in Transocean Ltd., had previously pushed for a $4 per share dividend but Transocean’s shareholders rejected it. Icahn, known for shaking up companies in which he invests, had also wanted several board changes.

SHIRE BUYS VIROPHARMA IN $4.2 BILLION DEAL
LONDON (AP) — The drugmaker Shire PLC plans to strengthen its rare disease treatment portfolio by spending $4.2 billion in cash to buy the biopharmaceutical company ViroPharma Inc. The Dublin-based drugmaker said Monday it will pay $50 for each share of ViroPharma, which is based in Exton, Pa. That represents a 27 per cent premium on the U.S. company’s closing price Friday, the last trading day before the deal was announced. ViroPharma focuses on serious diseases with few, if any, available therapies. Its products include Cinryze, which is used to prevent and treat attacks of hereditary angioedema, a rare genetic disorder that can cause dangerous swelling of the throat or larynx.