Pew Report Finds Credit Cards More Transparent, Yet Problems Remain

WASHINGTON, July 22 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Most of the practices deemed “unfair” or “deceptive” by the Federal Reserve have disappeared from new credit card offers since federal passage of the Credit CARD Act last year, according to a new report by the Pew Health Group’s Safe Credit Cards Project. Yet new trends have emerged that could cost cardholders significantly.

The report finds that issuers have eliminated practices such as “hair trigger” penalty rate increases (disproportionate charges for minor account violations), unfair payment allocation, and raising interest rates on existing balances. However, Pew’s research also highlights a sharp rise in cash advance fees, continued widespread use of other penalty interest rates and an emerging trend of credit card companies failing to disclose penalty interest rates in their online terms and conditions.

“While it’s been less than a year since passage of the Credit CARD Act, the new law appears to be working for millions of Americans who have credit cards,” said Shelley A. Hearne, managing director of the Pew Health Group. “The elimination of most of the ‘unfair’ or ‘deceptive’ practices of the credit industry since we last surveyed the marketplace marks a major milestone in the move to make credit cards safer, transparent and more fair for consumers. Most of the news is good, but we are seeing the rise of new harmful behavior.”

The study, Two Steps Forward: After the Credit CARD Act, Cards Are Safer and More Transparent—But Challenges Remain, is the latest in a series of reports from the Pew Safe Credit Cards Project that has examined all consumer credit cards offered online by the nation’s 12 largest banks and 12 largest credit unions. Together these institutions control more than 90 percent of the nation’s outstanding credit card debt. For this latest report, which measures how the industry has changed since the passage of the Credit CARD Act, Pew gathered data in March 2010 on nearly 450 cards. Full details, including previous research, can be found at www.pewtrusts.org/creditcards.

Key findings show:

* Many of the most troublesome practices of the credit card industry have been eliminated. A credit card issuer can no longer unilaterally decide to raise interest rates on existing balances. Likewise, practices including “hair trigger” penalty rate increases, unfair payment allocation, and overlimit fees without prior consent are a thing of the past. Earlier Pew research found that before the implementation of the law, 100 percent of the credit cards surveyed included at least one of these practices.
* Beyond the requirements of the new law, there are new practices that benefit consumers. Less than 25 percent of all cards examined had an overlimit fee, which is down from more than 80 percent of cards in July 2009. Additionally, mandatory arbitration clauses, which can limit a consumer’s right to settle disputes in court, are now found in 10 percent of cards compared to 68 percent in July 2009.
* Predictions that legislation would spawn the growth of new fees have yet to materialize. There was minimal change in the number of cards that include an annual fee (down 1 percentage point from July 2009 to March 2010). During that period, the median size of these fees increased from $50 to $59 for banks and from $15 to $25 for credit unions.
* Some disclosures stopped including the size of penalty interest rates even as issuers reserved the right to impose them. At least 94 percent of bank cards and 46 percent of credit union cards came with interest rates that could go up as a penalty for late payments or other violations. But nearly half these warnings failed to inform the consumer of the actual penalty interest rate or how high it could climb.

“Although we applaud changes by the card industry to create a fairer and more transparent marketplace, our research shows that some challenges remain,” said Nick Bourke, director of Pew’s Safe Credit Cards Project and report co-author. “For the first time, we have seen credit card disclosures warning consumers that interest rates could go up as a penalty for certain actions, but not stating how high those rates could go. Federal regulators should pay attention to this problematic new trend. When issuers withhold vital pricing information, it leaves cardholders in the dark and puts their financial security at risk, which is why federal regulations have long required issuers to disclose their rates and fees up front.”

Two Steps Forward includes a number of policy recommendations to address new challenges, including:

* Federal bank regulators should enforce existing regulations that require companies to disclose full and reliable credit card penalty rate information.
* The Federal Reserve should prohibit issuers from charging penalty interest rates that are higher than initially disclosed when the consumer opened the card account.

The report also shows that surcharge fees for cash advances rose sharply between July 2009 and March 2010. Bank cash advance and balance transfer fees increased on average by one-third during this period, from 3 percent of each transaction to 4 percent. Credit union cash advance fees went up by one quarter, from 2 percent to 2.5 percent.

Other pricing data is also included in the report, showing recent increases in a variety of credit card interest rates and fees.

About the Pew Health Group

The Pew Health Group is the health and consumer-product safety arm of The Pew Charitable Trusts, a nonprofit organization that applies a rigorous, analytical approach to improve public policy, inform the public and stimulate civic life. www.pewtrusts.org/creditcards

Retail banks making less from customers

(Reuters) – Retail banks are making less profit on average from customers since the financial crisis as price-sensitive consumers shop around and become more demanding, according to a report released on Monday.

The study by consultancy Accenture found that nearly half of top global retail banks had seen the average profit from customers fall between 5 and 15 percent. A further 11 percent said they had seen bigger declines.

Of the 46 executives interviewed for the study, more than half said customer loyalty had decreased. Most expected the lack of customer loyalty to continue in the long term.

“Consumers (are) more skeptical of their bank brands, more price conscious, and more willing to move away from institutions that provide poor service,” said co-author Noel Gordon, global managing director of Accenture’s banking industry practice.

“For the banks, traditional profit-recovery strategies — rate and fee increases, conventional cross-selling and organic growth — will not readily fix the problem,” he said.

(Reporting by Kenneth Grierson, editing by Will Waterman)

Retail banks making less from customers -study

July 19 (Reuters) – Retail banks are making less profit on average from customers since the financial crisis as price-sensitive consumers shop around and become more demanding, according to a report released on Monday.

The study by consultancy Accenture found that nearly half of top global retail banks had seen the average profit from customers fall between 5 and 15 percent. A further 11 percent said they had seen bigger declines.

Of the 46 executives interviewed for the study, more than half said customer loyalty had decreased. Most expected the lack of customer loyalty to continue in the long term.

“Consumers (are) more sceptical of their bank brands, more price conscious, and more willing to move away from institutions that provide poor service,” said co-author Noel Gordon, global managing director of Accenture’s banking industry practice.

“For the banks, traditional profit-recovery strategies — rate and fee increases, conventional cross-selling and organic growth — will not readily fix the problem,” he said. (Reporting by Kenneth Grierson, editing by Will Waterman)

Seoul shares cut gains; Hynix, Ssangyong decline

Institutions sold a net 86 billion won worth of shares and
retail investors offloaded a net 317.2 billion won worth.

Decliners outnumbered advancers 391 to 389 and 97 issues
ended flat.

Trading volume stood at 406.6 million shares worth 5.5
trillion won, compared with 340 million shares worth 4.6 trillion
won in the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 Sept futures index KSc1 ended up 0.15 points
at 226.45, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 gained 0.28
points to 226.14.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.22 percent higher at
497.79.

Move on day +0.06 percent

12-month high 1,757.76 26 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,377.60 14 JULY 2009

Change on yr +3.11 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981
(Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Seoul shares rise on airlines, battery makers

Institutions bought a net 47.4 billion won worth of shares
and retail investors sold a net 336 billion won worth.

Advancers outnumbered decliners 437 to 341 and 99 issues
ended flat.

Trading volume stood at 340 million shares worth 4.6 trillion
won, compared with 464 million shares worth 5.5 trillion won in
the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 Sept futures index KSc1 ended up 1.0 points
at 226.30, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 gained 1.42
points to 225.86.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.92 percent higher at
496.70.

Move on day +0.64 percent

12-month high 1,757.76 26 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,377.60 14 JULY 2009

Change on yr +3.05 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981

Seoul shares rise as investors welcome rate hike

Foreign investors were buyers of a net 314.5 billion won
($260.3 million) worth of stocks.

Institutions bought a net 118 billion won worth of shares and
retail investors sold a net 484 billion won worth.

Advancers outnumbered decliners 461 to 316 and 91 issues
ended flat.

Trading volume stood at 464 million shares worth 5.5 trillion
won, compared with 324.8 million shares worth 5 trillion won in
the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 Sept futures index KSc1 ended up 3.50 points
at 225.30, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 gained 3.66
points to 224.44.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.65 percent higher at
492.15.

Move on day +1.43 percent

12-month high 1,757.76 26 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,377.60 14 JULY 2009

Change on yr -2.4 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981
(Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

China stocks slide over 4 pct as AgBank IPO nears

June 29 (Reuters) – China’s key stock index tumbled more than 4 percent to a 14-month low on Tuesday as money flew out of existing shares to subscribe to a major initial public offering by Agricultural Bank of China [ABC.UL].

The Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC dropped to 2,430.3 points, its lowest since April 2009, heading for a quarterly loss of about 22 percent.

Institutions will start subscribing to the Shanghai portion of AgBank’s IPO on Thursday, while retail subscriptions are scheduled for early next week.

“The market is short of funding,” said Wen Lijun, analyst at Nanjing Securities. ($1 = 6.83 yuan) (Reporting by Farah Master; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

RPT-Godrej Consumer launches $87 mln via QIP -sources

June 29 (Reuters) – Personal care products maker Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GOCP.BO) on Tuesday launched a $87 million share sale to institutions, two sources with direct knowledge told Reuters.

The issue has an option to be raised to $130 million, they said.

Godrej is selling shares to institutions at 345 rupees per share, sources said adding that the issue is likely to be closed by evening.

Kotak Mahindra Bank (KTKM.BO) and HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA.L) are the bankers to the issue. (Reporting by Nandita Bose and Indulal P.M.; Editing by Surojit Gupta) ((nandita.bose@thomsonreuters.com; tel: 91 22 6636 7374; Reuters Messaging: nandita.bose.reuters.com@reuters.net)) (If you have a query or comment on this story, send an email to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

China stocks fall 2.6 percent to 14-month low on AgBank IPO

(Reuters) – China’s key stock index dropped 2.6 percent to a 14-month low on Tuesday afternoon as investors started pulling funds from the market to prepare for a major initial public offering by Agricultural Bank of China ABC.UL.

Asian Markets

The Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC dropped to 2,468.8 points, its lowest intraday level since April 2009, heading for a quarterly loss of more than 20 percent.

Institutions will start subscribing for AgBank’s IPO on Thursday, while retail subscriptions are scheduled for early next week.

(Reporting by Lu Jianxin and Edmund Klamann)

Seoul shares fall 0.6 pct on econ jitters

Institutions picked up a net 118.5 billion won worth of
stocks, and retail investors purchased a net 51.3 billion won.

Decliners outnumbered advancers 481 to 310 and 94 issues
ended flat.

Trading volume stood at 297 million shares worth 4.6 trillion
won, compared with 307 million shares worth 4.3 trillion won in
the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 Sept futures index KSc1 ended down 1.90
points at 226.50, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 retreated
1.82 points to 225.63.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.2 percent lower at
498.12.

Move on day -0.58 percent

12-month high 1,757.76 26 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,366.78 25 JUNE 2009

Change on yr +2.80 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981
(Editing by Chris Lewis)

Seoul shares climb to 8-week closing high

Institutions were the main buyers on the KOSPI, picking up
189 billion won ($159 million) worth of stocks. Individuals sold
a net 134 billion won, while foreigner investors were net sellers
of 4 billion won worth.

Gainers led decliners 515 to 283, with 85 counters unchanged.

Trading volume was 307 million shares worth 4.3 trillion won,
down from Wednesday’s 347 million shares worth 4.7 trillion won.

The KOSPI 200 September futures index KSc1 rose 2.00 points
to 228.40 and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 added 1.86 points
to 227.45.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.85 percent higher at
499.14.

Move on day +0.81 percent

12-month high 1,757.76 26 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,350.31 24 JUNE 2009

Change on yr +3.39 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981
($1=1187.0 Won)

Seoul shares slip 0.5 pct as China yuan hope wanes

Institutions sold a net 146.8 billion won worth of stocks,
and retail investors picked up a net 195.1 billion won.

Decliners outnumbered advancers 459 to 336 and 84 issues
ended flat.

Trading volume stood at 395 million shares worth 5.2
trillion won, compared with 385.4 million shares worth 5.9
trillion won in the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 Sept futures index KSc1 ended down 0.60
points at 227.65, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200
retreated 1.24 points to 226.45.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.34 percent lower at
496.65.

Move on day -0.47 percent

12-month high 1,757.76 26 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,350.31 24 JUNE 2009

Change on yr +2.89 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981

Taliban threat forces shutdown of Baloch schools

Islamabad, May 15 (IANS) The Pakistani Taliban has sent threatening letters to schools in Balochistan province, bordering Iran and Afghanistan, which has forced the institutions to shut down, a media report said Saturday.

A number of schools, including two girls’ schools, have closed in Balochistan provincial capital Quetta after the school managements received threatening letters, sent by the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Balochistan chapter, Dawn.com reported.

The letters threatened that if ‘purdah’ was not observed in schools, then teachers and administrative heads will have to bear the consequences. The militant outfit said there were many TTP informants among the students and staffers and warned the school authorities of dire consequences in case of non-compliance.

Similar letters threatening action against wearing ‘western clothes’ were sent to schools in Mastung district.

Seoul shares extend gains on Moody’s upgrade

Institutions were buyers of a net 95.7 billion won worth of
stocks and retail investors were sellers of a net 179.8 billion
won worth.

Advancers outnumbered decliners 524 to 276, with 88 issues
ending flat.

Trading volume stood at 424.7 million shares worth 5.7
trillion won, compared with 360 million shares worth 4.3 trillion
won in the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 June futures index KSc1 ended up 2.90 points
at 228.55, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 rose 3.39 points
to 228.08.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.62 percent higher to
close at 509.69.

Move on day +1.45 percent

12-month high 1,737.45 9 APRIL 2010

12-month low 1,298.86 28 APRIL 2009

Change on yr +3.12 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981

Rothschild Mideast exec to join BarCap – sources

DUBAI, April 5 (Reuters) – Barclays Capital (BARC.L) has poached the co-head of Rothschild’s investment banking division in the Middle East and North Africa to head the UK bank’s regional financial institutions coverage, sources said on Monday.

Financials

Michael Helou, 37, set up Rothschild’s Dubai office in 2006. At Barclays he will be driving the so-called FIG coverage, which includes mergers and acquisitions advice, as well as capital markets coverage for financial institutions. Helou is expected to start in his new role in the middle of May, one source close to the matter said. Following its purchase of the U.S. business of Lehman Brothers, Barclays has completed a number of high profile hires in an effort to become a leading full-service investment bank.

In September 2009, Barcap named Rothschild [ROT.UL] veteran Stefano Marsaglia as chairman of the bank’s FIG division. [ID:nL7638476]

During his 10-year career at Rothschild, Helou advised on the still-to-be completed merger between troubled Islamic mortgage companies Tamweel TAML.DU and Amlak AMLK.DU, as well as the sale of Dubai Holding’s stake in Malaysia’s Bank Islam.

BarCap declined to comment. (Reporting by Nicolas Parasie; Editing by Hans Peters)

No quick yuan move despite easing rifts: China economist

(Reuters) – The U.S. decision to delay a ruling on whether China manipulates its currency showed easing tensions over the yuan, but it is too early for China to change its currency policy, a government economist said on Monday.

China

“I believe this is a positive signal. At least the U.S. side has created some room for further consultations and negotiations,” said Huo Jianguo, head of the Commerce Ministry’s think-thank.

“But I don’t think there will be a yuan adjustment in the near-term. We need to see whether China’s export recovery will be sustained and need to see whether companies can cope with a stronger yuan,” he told Reuters.

The ministry’s repeated warnings that many firms would be ruined and millions of jobs lost if the yuan strengthened stand in contrast to the central bank’s signals that it would welcome a more flexible currency and its dampening effect on inflation.

Analysts believe, however, the two institutions will eventually reach a compromise, possibly as soon as mid-2010.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Saturday he was delaying an April 15 report on whether China manipulates its currency but pledged to press for a more flexible yuan policy.

The decision follows Thursday’s announcement that Chinese President Hu Jintao will attend a nuclear security summit meeting in Washington April 12-13 and seems to be a move to keep tensions over currency in check.

Huo said many Chinese exporters oppose a stronger currency out of fear that their thin profit margins could be wiped out.

Any yuan policy change would ultimately depend on China’s own economic interests, although the impact on other countries would also be taken into account, he said.

China’s exports jumped 45.7 percent in February from a year earlier but the growth may have been exaggerated by the low base, while imports were growing at a faster clip due to robust domestic, slashing the trade surplus, he said.

Huo echoed recent official forecasts that that China could post a small trade deficit in March, the first since 2004.

“This may help ease upward pressure on the yuan. We need to watch whether the trade deficit is short-lived or it’s a turning point,” Huo said.

ANALYSIS – N.Korea’s Kim: Mentored, paid, “betrayed” by China

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il first went to China as a child for safety during the Korean War. He may soon be heading back for a trip seeking to shore up the support that keeps his destitute and derelict state alive.

The North has a long, deep and troubled relationship with China that some experts liken to a marriage of convenience, where both parties must endure the pain of being together because they would be worse off apart.

“China’s food and energy assistance can be seen as an insurance premium that Beijing remits regularly to avoid paying the higher economic, political and national security cost of a North Korean collapse, a war on the peninsula, or subsuming of the North into the South,” the U.S. Congressional Research Service said in a report earlier this year.

Kim’s expected trip will likely lead to a return to stalled international talks hosted by Beijing on ending Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions, analysts said, while he will try to win sweeteners from China for heading back to the table.

Kim may also be taking his youngest son Jong-un, the likely heir to the family dynasty that has ruled the North for more than 60 years, to introduce him to Beijing’s leaders and win their understanding for his succession plans, they said.

TWO ROADS DIVERGED

North Korea and China began an alliance as Leninist-socialist brothers that was forged in blood when they fought together during the 1950-53 Korean War and strengthened by numerous visits Kim made to learn from Beijing’s leaders while he being groomed to take over the state founded by his father Kim Il-sung.

For Kim Jong-il, China also represents the road not taken in economic reforms. For decades, China’s leaders had encouraged the two Kims to open up their economy and form their own brand of socialism that had room for markets.

“Kim has become very interested in the China model for development and expressed admiration for it but we have seen that North Korea’s leaders are not willing to take the course that China has taken,” said Peter Beck a researcher at Stanford University who is a specialist in Korean affairs.

The rift over economic openness began in the 1980s and led Kim Jong-il and the North’s media to question whether China was betraying socialist ideals.

In 1992, when an emerging China forged formal diplomatic ties with a surging South Korea, the North lashed and against “the unfaithful actions of some traitors of the revolution”.

North Korea’s economy, meanwhile, turned into a basket case following the collapse of the Soviet Union, its main benefactor.

But Kim has painted himself into a corner. Any economic reforms would open his isolated state to the outside world and could undermine his “military first” ideology, which justifies economic hardships at home to build an military strong enough to prevent foreign invaders from attacking.

“They made a critical decision that the market was a threat to the regime and not an opportunity. That is a source of frustration for China that North Korea has not been able to break free of the ideology that they left behind,” Beck said.

Late last year, Kim attacked a burgeoning merchant class with a currency revaluation designed to knock out their cash holdings. It also banned their foreign exchange transactions and set up state institutions to take over their private business.

The moves led to rare civil unrest and raised questions about the stability of the Kim regime.

“There should be no doubt that the North Korean economy has basically collapsed,” said Zhu Feng, a Peking University international studies professor, at a seminar in Seoul last week.

“The big question is whether increasing economic hardship will cause social unrest and political disorder.”

STABILITY ON THE BORDER

China supports Kim because it is worried what could happen if Kim family rule collapses, which could brings chaos to its 1,416-km (880 miles) border and a flood of refugees.

It is also worried about the South taking over the North and bringing its U.S. military ally to the Chinese border.

Kim will likely try to seek Chinese investment during his trip. Beijing may be willing to help, seeing it as money spent to buy stability for its border provinces, experts said.

In 2009, bilateral trade between China and North Korea, with an estimated GDP of $17 billion, was worth $2.7 billion. As the North’s economy has grown weaker since Kim took over power in 1994, China has supplied more food, oil and goods that serve as a lifeline for his broken state.

Kim, knowing that he will receive aid even if he defies his neighbour, has not bent to many of China’s wishes, particularly to end his boycott of six-country nuclear disarmament talks.

“However unpredictable and annoying the North Korean government may be to Beijing, any conceivable scenario other than maintaining the status quo could seriously damage China’s interests,” the Congressional Research Service report said.

(Additional reporting by Christine Kim in Seoul and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Seoul shares at 21-mth closing high on techs, autos

Institutions sold a net 202.3 billion won worth of stocks,
and retail investors offloaded a net 57.9 billion won worth.

Decliners outnumbered advancers 470 to 315, with 85 issues
ending flat.

Trading volume stood at 343 million shares worth 6 trillion
won, compared with 290 million shares worth 5.7 trillion won in
the previous session.

The KOSPI 200 June futures index KSc1 ended up 1.15
points at 227.05, and the KOSPI 200 spot index .KS200 rose
1.22 points at 226.69.

The junior Kosdaq market .KQ11 ended 0.82 percent lower
to close at 514.95.

Move on day +0.25 percent

12-month high 1,723.22 19 JAN 2010

12-month low 1,249.94 1 APRIL 2009

Change on yr +2.42 percent

All-time high 2,085.45 1 NOV 2007

All-time low 93.10 6 JAN 1981

Bligh wants updated rules about technology in ParliamentBligh wants updated rules about technology in Parliament

The Queensland Opposition says Ministers should be able to answer questions in Parliament without being updated via mobile phone.

The Opposition this morning objected to Transport Minister Rachel Nolan reading from her phone.

Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek described her as a “ventriloquist’s dummy”.

“It’s inappropriate for a Minister of the Crown to be receiving information from someone outside whilst they’re on their feet for an answer that they’re supposed to provide to the house,” he said.

“Let’s get the real person who’s … providing the information.”

Premier Anna Bligh says she supports the Opposition’s call for updated rules to include new technology.

“Every Minister comes into the Parliament, in every Parliament of Australia, on all sides of politics, with documentary material that will assist them to answer questions, nothing unusual about that,” she said.

“What’s unusual here is that the technology has advanced beyond the standing orders of the Parliament which are very old institutions.”

Gunns investors exit after profit slump

A financial analyst says up to a quarter of Gunns’ shares have changed hands since the timber company announced its 98 per cent half-yearly profit tumble.

Last month the company revealed its profit after tax was $400,000, down from $33.6 million for the same time last year.

Matthew Torenius told ABC Local Radio 10 million Gunns’ shares were traded yesterday before the market opened.

“Since the announcement of the profit downgrade last month, we’ve probably seen 20 to 25 per cent of the shares change hands in the company,” he said.

“A lot of that is to and fro, and smaller players coming in and out, but there’s definitely been some quite large lines of stock being traded in Gunns.

“The major shareholders that were on the books at the time of that profit downgrade are very, very dirty at the way the whole profit downgrade was handled.”

“There’ve been a number of the institutions selling out of the stock.

“My gut feeling is, given the asset base of Gunns and the view from a number of punters, that the assets are worth more than where the stock’s trading at the moment.

“I wouldn’t be surprised to see some pretty heavy-hitting hedge funds starting to move up the registry,” he said.