“Salt” can’t shake “Inception” at box office

July 25 (Reuters) – Angelina Jolie’s new spy thriller “Salt” failed to take the North American box office crown from Leonardo DiCaprio’s “Inception,” which enjoyed a stronger-than-expected hold in its second weekend.

According to studio estimates issued on Sunday, “Inception” earned $43.5 million during the three days beginning on Friday, while “Salt” was at No. 2 with $36.5 million.

Pundits had predicted “Salt” might hit the $40 million range, although distributor Columbia Pictures said the opening was in line with its expectations.

The three-day estimate represents a significant drop from the $50 million openings for each of Jolie’s last big films, “Wanted” and “Mr and Mrs Smith.”

Jolie earned $20 million for “Salt,” a timely thriller about Russian sleeper spies preparing to bring the United States to its knees. The high-energy action role was originally envisaged for Tom Cruise, who went on to make the box office dud “Knight and Day” instead.

“Inception,” starring DiCaprio as a thief who steals secrets from deep within people’s subconscious, raced to $143.7 million after 10 days, thanks to a drop of just 31 percent from last weekend. Movies generally lose about half of their opening-weekend audience.

“It’s driven by word of mouth, it’s driven by repeat business already,” Warner Bros. domestic distribution president Dan Fellman said of the film’s strong hold.

The $160 million project was written and directed by Christopher Nolan, the English filmmaker responsible for the last two “Batman” movies.

Columbia Pictures is a unit of Sony Corp (6758.T)(SNE.N). Warner Bros. Pictures is a unit of Time Warner Inc (TWX.N). (Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

Obama reports wealth of up to $7.7 million

U.S. President Barack Obama’s wealth in 2009 totaled between $2.3 million and $7.7 million, financial disclosure forms showed on Monday.

The records also show the Obama family dog, Bo, is worth $1,600. The Portuguese water dog was a gift to Obama, his wife Michelle and their two children from the late Senator Edward Kennedy.

The records showed the Obamas had some retirement savings accounts with the mutual fund company Vanguard and checking accounts at J.P. Morgan Chase and Northern Trust. The also own Treasury bills and notes.

In addition, the couple have college savings accounts for their daughters Malia, 11, and Sasha, 8.

The figures do not include the value of their home in Chicago.

Much of Obama’s wealth comes from royalties from his two best-selling books — “Dreams from My Father” and “Audacity of Hope” — both of which were published before he became president.

U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden and his wife, Jill, reported wealth excluding their home of $155,000 to $679,000.

Tax returns for the Obamas for 2009, made public in April, showed they earned $5.5 million, mostly from book royalties. The Bidens reported income in 2009 of $333,182.

(Writing by Caren Bohan; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

U.S. plane alert likely sparked by smoking in toilet

A man detained on a United Airlines flight from Washington to Denver was possibly smoking in the lavatory and not trying to set off explosives in his shoes as initially reported, a U.S. official said.

“It looks like the individual in question was perhaps smoking in the lavatory and might have made an unfortunate remark once confronted by airline personnel,” a U.S. official said.

Initial media reports said a Qatari man was subdued by U.S. air marshals after trying to “light his shoes on fire.”

United flight 663 landed safely in Denver and the man was taken into custody, the Transportation Security Administration said.

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

Muslims pray for rain in drought-hit Guyana

Muslims across Guyana prayed for rain on Saturday to end a drought that has battered the tiny South American nation’s rice and sugar exports and caused food shortages in indigenous communities.

The government of the former British colony of about 750,000 people is struggling to irrigate farmland, with water at storage points reaching dangerously low levels.

The Central Islamic Organisation of Guyana (CIOG), which represents Muslims in 145 mosques across the multiethnic nation, organized a day of prayers for rain.

“This activity is consistent with the Sunnah of the Prophet Mohammad beseeching the Creator to cause the rain to descend and alleviate sufferings,” said one CIOG leader, Shaykh Moeenul.

Muslims make up about 7 percent of Guyana’s population, with Hindus at 28 percent and Christians making up most of the rest across various denominations.

Guyana is one of several countries in the region, including neighbouring Venezuela, that have been parched by drought since the end of last year.

“The Amerindian communities are really badly hit,” President Bharrat Jagdeo said on Friday of the indigenous people who make up nearly a 10th of Guyana’s population. “We have been supplying food to some communities but I need to increase that significantly.”

The state-owned Guyana Sugar Corporation said this week that cane growth and development had been affected at five of its eight estates. Replanting had to be cut back on four estates, it said.

Guyana Sugar said the full impact on sugar production would not be known until the end of the second crop of 2010.

Export earnings from sugar fell 10.2 percent in 2009 to $119.8 million from a year earlier and rice export earnings fell 3.3 percent to $114.1 million.

(Reporting by Neil Marks; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

TOPWRAP 9-Obama says rescue working but U.S. data weak

(For full coverage of the financial crisis [nCRISIS])

* Obama says recovery steps working but retail sales fall

* Goldman sells $5 bln in stock after strong results

* Intel beats forecasts but lack of outlook disappoints

* GM overhaul outside bankruptcy less likely – creditors

* U.S. stocks fall more than 1.5 percent (Adds Intel results, reporting dates of major U.S. banks)

By John O’Callaghan

WASHINGTON, April 14 (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama said on Tuesday his economic measures were starting to work but government data showed an unexpected drop in U.S. retail sales in March and U.S. stocks retreated sharply.

Goldman Sachs (GS.N) sold $5 billion of stock a day after the bank sparked confidence with its first-quarter profit, saying it wanted to pay back $10 billion in government bailout money it does not need. For more see [ID:nN14414897].

But a source familiar with the Obama administration’s thinking said the U.S. Treasury was worried Goldman’s repayment could make other banks appear weak. [ID:nWEN7159]

In Europe, disappointing earnings at Dutch electronics giant Philips (PHG.AS) added to evidence the recession was still taking its toll, while Swiss bank UBS (UBSN.VX)(UBS.N) was set to cut more jobs. [ID:nLE496533] [ID:nLE404521].

Intel Corp (INTC.O) beat forecasts with its results and said it believed personal computer sales hit bottom in the first quarter. But the world’s top chipmaker did not give a formal revenue outlook for the current quarter, sending its shares down 4.6 percent in after-hours trade.

Obama said moves to recapitalize banks, strengthen the housing market and rescue the auto sector were “necessary pieces of the recovery puzzle.” [ID:nN14428395]

“And taken together, these actions are starting to generate signs of economic progress,” he said in a speech on the moves taken since he took office. “There is no doubt that times are still tough. By no means are we out of the woods yet.”

Blaming “irresponsibility and poor decision-making that stretched from Wall Street to Washington to Main Street,” Obama appeared to be trying to reassure Americans of better times ahead as his presidency nears the symbolic 100-day mark.

His efforts have support, with a Gallup poll released on Monday showing 71 percent of Americans were confident Obama will manage the economy properly.

BOOSTING ECONOMIES

The steps by Obama’s team to kick-start the world’s largest economy are being closely watched by policy-makers worldwide, although differences persist about how to stimulate growth and look after businesses and workers at home.

In Geneva, envoys to the World Trade Organization agreed there was no imminent threat of tit-for-tat protectionist wars but also that there was no room for complacency.

Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said Moscow may borrow abroad next year for the first time in a decade.

“For us, it will take several years to exit the crisis,” Kudrin told a ministry meeting.

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, who last week fired his economy minister, said Madrid was ready to implement more economic stimulus measures if necessary.

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said there were hopeful signs, including the latest data on home sales, homebuilding and consumer spending, as well as sales of new cars. [ID:nN14413989].

“A leveling out of economic activity is the first step toward recovery,” he said in a speech.

But both Bernanke and White House adviser Christina Romer said the economy was still contracting. [ID:nN14413913]

Investors will get fresh insights on the health of U.S. manufacturers on Wednesday with industrial production data that is expected to show a drop of 1 percent in March, narrower than the 1.5 percent slide in February.

Over the next week or so, heavyweight industrial companies including General Electric (GE.N), United Technologies (UTX.N) and 3M (MMM.N) will report quarterly results that are forecast to feature double-digit falls in profit.

At Caterpillar (CAT.N), the news may be particularly stark, with most analysts predicting the world’s No. 1 maker of building equipment will be the first blue-chip industrial to report a quarterly loss in this downturn.

In the banking sector, Goldman’s results may raise expectations for rivals due to report soon, including JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) on Thursday, Citigroup (C.N) on Friday and Bank of America (BAC.N) and Morgan Stanley (MS.N) next week.

DATA WEIGHS ON U.S. MARKETS

U.S. stocks [.N] ended down more than 1.5 percent as the poor numbers for retail sales and falling producer prices offset better-than-expected quarterly results from healthcare group Johnson and Johnson (JNJ.N). [ID:nN14419657]

General Motors (GM.N) shares fell from earlier highs after the auto giant’s bondholders said completing its restructuring outside bankruptcy was increasingly unlikely. GM, operating with $13.4 billion in emergency federal loans, has until June 1 to win concessions from creditors and the auto workers union.

As rival Chrysler [CBS.UL] pins its hopes on a tie-up with Italy’s Fiat (FIA.MI), sources said its first-lien lenders were preparing a counter-offer for the Treasury that may include equity and cash in exchange for abandoning claims to some $7 billion in debt.

Mexico’s auto production and exports fell in March but at a slower pace than in the previous two months, suggesting the worst may be over for the sector, industry data showed. Mexico exports most of the cars it produces to the United States.

Outside Wall Street, shares rose on the Goldman Sachs results, with European banks especially getting a boost despite the weak U.S. data. [ID:nLE483692]

“People have been seeing some green shoots,” said Georgina Taylor, equity strategist at Legal and General Investment Management in London.

“But there’s absolutely no evidence that final demand is recovering. Equity markets are doing what they typically do — trying to preempt the recovery a couple of quarters ahead.”

The dollar .DXY and yen rose as the U.S. data and caution before the string of corporate earnings boosted safe-haven flows. U.S. Treasury debt prices climbed as investors moved out of riskier investments.

Oil CLc1 fell nearly 1.8 percent to $49.16 a barrel.

In trade-dependent Singapore, gross domestic product fell at a seasonally adjusted annualized pace of 19.7 percent in the first three months of the year, the trade ministry said.

The city-state’s central bank responded to the weak GDP data and soft export figures by easing monetary policy and effectively devaluing the Singapore dollar.

But the rate of decline in Singapore’s non-oil exports slowed from January and February and shipments to China rose for the second straight month. This offered signs that China, the world’s third-largest economy and a major holder of U.S. government debt, may be headed for a recovery.

“It seems that the first quarter will be the worst and things will start to get better,” said David Cohen at Action Economics in Singapore. (Editing by Dan Grebler)

Obama says efforts working but economic fears weigh

By John O’Callaghan and Lincoln Feast

WASHINGTON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Uncertain corporate outlooks and data showing the U.S. economy is still suffering weighed on global stocks on Wednesday, despite claims from President Barack Obama that his remedies were starting to work.

In China, which is rolling out its own $585 billion stimulus plan, gross domestic product probably grew at its slowest annual rate on record in the first quarter, according to a local media report. But the quarter-on-quarter growth might point to a recovery in the world’s third-largest economy.

“China’s annual GDP growth in the first quarter was higher than 6.0 percent, but lower than the 6.8 percent increase in the fourth quarter of 2008,” according to the Shanghai Securities News website (www.cnstock.com). Official data is due for release on Thursday.

Asian shares fell from six-month highs, following losses on Wall Street, amid concerns that the effects of the global financial crisis will linger.

Japan’s Nikkei average .N225 fell 0.8 percent, while MSCI’s measure of stocks elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region .MIAPJ0000PUS fell 1.2 percent.

Overnight, the S and P 500 .SPX fell 2 percent as a surprise fall in U.S. retail sales in March further dented hopes that the recession there was abating and news from companies remained mixed.

Intel Corp (INTC.O) beat forecasts with its results and said it believed personal computer sales hit bottom in the first quarter. But the world’s top chipmaker did not give a formal revenue outlook for the current quarter, sending its shares down 4.6 percent in after-hours trade.

No. 2 U.S. Internet search provider Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O) is preparing to lay off several hundred workers, a source with knowledge of the situation told Reuters.

OBAMA UPBEAT

Mounting job losses, a lack of access to credit and a slump in the value of investments has played havoc with consumer confidence around the globe.

Seeking to reassure Americans, President Obama said moves to recapitalize banks, strengthen the housing market and rescue the auto sector were “necessary pieces of the recovery puzzle.

“And taken together, these actions are starting to generate signs of economic progress,” he said in a speech on the moves taken since he took office. “There is no doubt that times are still tough. By no means are we out of the woods yet.”

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke also said there were hopeful signs, including the latest data on home sales, home-building and consumer spending, as well as sales of new cars.

“A leveling out of economic activity is the first step toward recovery,” he said in a speech.

But both Bernanke and White House adviser Christina Romer said the economy was still contracting.

LINGERING UNCERTAINTY

Global financial conditions could remain tight for several more years, a top official at Australia’s central bank said.

“What happens over the next few years, at least, is highly uncertain,” said Luci Ellis, the head of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s Financial Stability Department, told a conference. “Confidence in the financial system remains fragile.”

Most of the world is experiencing “what has already been a long and severe recession,” making issues of regulatory reform more pressing, another top Federal Reserve official said.

Eric Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, said the current financial crisis highlighted the need for a systemic risk regulator, but a regulator would face “profound challenges” and would need sufficient authority to change financial institutions’ behavior.

“The need for such extensive government intervention on an essentially worldwide basis highlights the importance of a more stable financial infrastructure — and I believe, to have organizations with explicit responsibility for financial stability,” he said in remarks prepared for delivery at the Seoul International Financial Forum.

Thailand, which has been grappling with political instability as well as the global financial turmoil, may increase borrowing and expand its stimulus package, the finance minister told the Financial Times in an interview.

(Writing by Lincoln Feast; Editing by John Chalmers)