Petroleum Geo-Services ASA: Second Quarter Presentation

OSLO, NORWAY, Jul 29 (MARKET WIRE) —

The second quarter presentation can be downloaded at www.newsweb.no or
www.pgs.com

FOR DETAILS, CONTACT:

Tore Langballe, SVP Corporate
Communications
Phone: +47 67 51 43 75
Mobile: +47 90 77 78 41

Bard Stenberg, Investor Relations Manager
Phone: +47 67 51 43 16

Mobile: +47 99 24 52 35

US Investor Services
Phone: +1 281 509 8712

This information is
subject of the disclosure requirements acc. to Section 5- 12 vphl
(Norwegian Securities Trading Act)

[HUG#1434696]

Q2 2010
Presentation: http://hugin.info/115/R/1434696/380258.pdf

This
announcement is distributed by Thomson Reuters on behalf of

Thomson Reuters clients. The owner of this announcement warrants that:

(i) the releases contained herein are protected by copyright and

other applicable laws; and

(ii) they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and

originality of the information contained therein.

Source: Petroleum
Geo-Services ASA via Thomson Reuters ONE

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

UPDATE 1-Methanex Q2 profit misses estimates

July 29 (Reuters) – Methanex (MX.TO), the world’s largest producer of methanol, posted a lower-than-expected quarterly profit late Wednesday, hurt by a lower price environment and a two-month outage at its Atlas plant in Trinidad.

For the second quarter, the company earned net income of $11.7 million, or 13 cents a share, compared with a loss of $5.7 million, or 6 cents a share in the year-ago period.

Analysts were expecting a profit of 17 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

While revenue jumped 83 percent to $448.5 million, cost of sales and operating expenses also rose 78 percent to $391.9 million. Average realized price per tonne fell to $284 from $305 in the first quarter.

The company said its produced product inventories at the end of the second quarter was lower by 135,000 tonnes compared to the first quarter due to the 60-day outage at its Atlas facility.

This will likely lead to lower sales volumes of produced product and higher cost of sales in the third quarter compared with the second quarter, the company said.

Shares of Methanex closed at C$23.55 Wednesday on Toronto Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Jennifer Robin Raj in Bangalore; Editing by Valerie Lee)

Samsung SDI Q2 profit rises on increased demand

July 27 (Reuters) – Samsung SDI Co Ltd 006400, the world’s No. 2 rechargeable battery maker, said on Tuesday its second quarter profit rose 33 percent, boosted by increasing demand for its component products.

The maker of lithium-ion batteries for mobile phones and plasma display panels for TVs reported a 68.4 billion won ($57.4 million) net profit for the three months ended June, compared with a 51.4 billion won net profit a year earlier.

The company had been expected to report a net profit of 66.2 billion won based on averaged estimates from 13 analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

(Reporting by Suh Kyung-min, editing by Ken Wills)

UPDATE 1-Horizon Lines Q2 profit beats Wall Street

July 23 (Reuters) – Container shipping company Horizon Lines Inc’s (HRZ.N) quarterly profit handily beat analysts’ estimates, helped by better results from its Alaska tradelane, terminal services and logistics.

For the full year, however, Horizon expects adjusted EBITDA performance to be in the range of 2009 results.

For the second quarter, net income was $3.7 million, or 12 cents a share, compared with net loss of $31.1 million, or $1.02 a share, last year.

Excluding certain items, the company earned 15 cents a share.

Revenue rose 10 percent to $305.6 million.

Analysts on average were expecting the company to post earnings of 9 cents a share, excluding items, on revenue of $308 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Shares of the company closed at $4.06 Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan in Bangalore; Editing by Don Sebastian)

UPDATE 1-United Bankshares Q2 profit beats Street view

July 23 (Reuters) – United Bankshares Inc (UBSI.O) posted a better-than-expected quarterly profit, helped by a 72 percent drop in provision for credit losses.

For the second quarter, the bank posted net income of $17.9 million, or 41 cents a share, compared with $8.2 million, or 19 cents a share, a year ago.

Analysts on average were expecting the company to report earnings of 40 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Provision for credit losses decreased to $6.4 million from $23.2 million in the year-ago quarter. The second quarter of 2009 included a credit loss provision of $17.6 million for fraudulent loans made to a commercial customer.

Net interest income decreased to 3 percent to $60.2 million.

Net charge-offs fell to $5.4 million from $21.4 million.

Shares of the company closed at $24.83 on Thursday on Nasdaq. (Reporting by Rachel Chitra in Bangalore; Editing by Anne Pallivathuckal)

Nufarm slashes FY profit forecast, ups debt estimate

July 14 (Reuters) – Nufarm (NUF.AX), an Australian farm chemicals group one-fifth owned by Japan’s Sumitomo Chemical (4005.T), axed its full year profit forecast on Wednesday, blaming bad weather in North America and Europe hitting demand.

Nufarm also raised its forecast for net debt for the year to July 31, 2010.

It is now expecting a full-year profit around A$55 million to A$65 million, down from an earlier forecast between A$80 million and A$100 million.

The group’s shares, down 50 percent so far this year, were on a trading halt pending the performance update.

The new forecast was as much as 43 percent below analysts’ estimates around A$95.7 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S, even following a slew of broker downgrades over the past three weeks. (Reporting by Sonali Paul; editing by Balazs Koranyi)

UPDATE 1-Low & Bonar profit rises; keeps upbeat FY view

July 13 (Reuters) – British specialist materials group Low & Bonar Plc (LWB.L) posted a 31 percent rise in adjusted first-half pretax profit, helped by growth in transport and leisure sectors, and kept an upbeat full-year trading outlook.

The company, which supplies yarn, fabric and fibre to end-markets like civil engineering, transport, sport and leisure, said it would pay an interim dividend of 0.5 pence.

“The much improved sales pattern established throughout the second quarter, has continued into the start of the second half,” Chief Executive Steve Good said in a statement.

In June, the company had forecast full-year trading ahead of its own expectations.

Analysts on average expect Low & Bonar to post a full-year pretax profit of 18 million pounds ($27.1 million) on revenue of 329.4 million pounds, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

For the six months to end-May, the company reported a pretax profit of 6.7 million pounds before amortisation and one-time items, compared with 5.1 million pounds a year ago.

Revenue rose 11.7 percent to 155.8 million pounds.

Low & Bonar lowered its net debt by almost 32 percent to 67.4 million pounds at the end of the period.

Shares of the company closed at 43 pence on Monday on the London Stock Exchange. ($1=.6655 Pound) (Reporting by Aditi Samajpati in Bangalore; Editing by Roshni Menon)

UPDATE 1-KSK Power posts higher profit

July 12 (Reuters) – KSK Power Ventur Plc (KSK.L) posted a higher full-year pretax profit, driven mainly by forex gains, and said it remained on course to meet market expectations in 2011.

Analysts on average are expecting a pretax profit of $78.1 million on revenue of $186.4 million for fiscal 2011, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

KSK, which operates power projects in India, said the pretax profit included a forex gain of $31.8 million, mainly due to a restatement of its foreign currency facilities.

For the year ended March 31, the company posted a pretax profit of $76.9 million, compared with $8.6 million in the year-ago period.

Operating profit increased nearly 118 percent to $23.1 million, while revenue was nearly flat at $52.9 million.

Shares of KSK were up 3.1 percent to 500 pence at 0715 GMT on Monday on the London Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore; Editing by Roshni Menon)

Taiwan’s Powerchip returns to profit in Q2

July 6 (Reuters) – Powerchip (5346.TWO), Taiwan’s top DRAM chipmaker, returned to profit in the second quarter after PC sales and chip prices rebounded from last year’s slump.

The company reported on Tuesday a second quarter net profit of T$6.77 billion ($210 million), compared with a loss of T$11.73 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Powerchip was expected to earn T$2.51 billion in the second quarter, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. (Reporting by Baker Li, Editing by Jonathan Standing)

Seven & I Q1 operating profit falls 10.6 pct

July 1 (Reuters) – Japan’s largest retailer Seven & I (3382.T) posted a 10.6 percent fall in first-quarter operating profit on Thursday as sales continued to slide, and kept a full-year forecast for moderate growth.

Seven & I, which has more than 12,000 Seven-Eleven convenience stores in Japan and licenses thousands more overseas, said its March-May operating profit was 52.4 billion yen ($592.9 million), down from 58.6 billion yen in the same period a year earlier.

Japanese retailers have been suffering from weak consumer spending amid a period of prolonged deflation, boosting efforts to cut costs.

For the full year to February, Seven & I kept its forecast for an operating profit of 240 billion yen, up 5.9 percent from a year earlier, in line with a mean estimate in a poll of 13 analysts by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Seven & I shares have fallen about 11 percent in the past 12 months, underperforming a decline of around 6 percent in the benchmark Nikkei average .N225. ($1=88.38 Yen) (Reporting by Taiga Uranaka; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe)

Jussi Ollila appointed Senior Vice President, Communications of Metso

HELSINKI, FINLAND, Jun 22 (MARKET WIRE) —

Metso Corporation’s press release on June 22, 2010 at 10:45 a.m. local
time

Jussi Ollila, M.Sc. (Pol), has been appointed Senior Vice President,
Communications for the Metso Group. He will start in his new position on
or about September 1, 2010. Jussi will report to Jorma Eloranta,
President and CEO.

Jussi will join Metso from SRV Group, a construction company, where he has
worked as SVP, Communications & Marketing.

Metso is a global supplier of sustainable technology and services for
mining, construction, power generation, automation, recycling and the
pulp and paper industries. We have about 27,000 employees in more than 50
countries. www.metso.com

Further information, please contact:

Jorma Eloranta, President and CEO, Metso Corporation, tel. +358 204 84
3000

[HUG#1426031]

This announcement is distributed by Thomson
Reuters on behalf of Thomson Reuters clients.

The owner of this announcement warrants that:

(i) the releases contained herein are protected by copyright and other
applicable laws; and

(ii) they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and
originality of the information contained therein.

All reproduction for further distribution is prohibited.

Source: Metso Corporation via Thomson Reuters ONE

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

UPDATE 1-MDS posts wider Q2 loss on charges

(Reuters) – Canadian health sciences company MDS Inc (MDS.TO) reported a wider second-quarter loss from continuing operations, hurt by a restructuring charge and foreign exchange revaluation losses.

The company — which recently completed the sale of its analytical technologies and pharma services businesses — posted a loss of $52 million, or 51 cents a basic share, compared with a loss of $6 million, or 6 cents a share, a year ago.

It said the latest quarter’s loss includes a $14 million corporate restructuring charge and a $27 million non-cash foreign exchange revaluation loss.

Revenue for the quarter dropped 13 percent to $56 million, hurt by foreign exchange valuation.

Analysts, on average, were looking for a loss of 4 cents a share, before items, on revenue of $47.6 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Ottawa-based MDS’ shares closed down 1 percent on Monday on the Toronto Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Antonita Madonna Devotta in Bangalore; Editing by Anshuman Daga) )

Shiseido cuts forecast by 5 pct on acquisition costs

June 8 (Reuters) – Shiseido Co Ltd (4911.T), Japan’s largest cosmetics firm, on Tuesday cut its annual operating profit forecast by about 5 percent to reflect costs related to its acquisition of U.S. firm Bare Escentuals.

Non-Cyclical Consumer Goods

Shiseido bought the U.S. cosmetics company in March for $1.7 billion as part of an effort to expand overseas, but the firm’s forecast for this financial year issued in April did not factor in the acquisition.

The maker of “Tsubaki” shampoo and the “Maquillage” line of makeup now expects an operating profit of 50.5 billion yen ($552 million) for the year ending in March 2011, down from 53 billion yen in its previous forecast. [ID:nT840S5T8T]

The figure is below a mean estimate of 57.1 billion yen in a poll of 11 analysts by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Shiseido said the downward revision came as it plans to book some costs in connection with the acquisition, including 4 billion yen in goodwill amortisation.

Shares of Shiseido were up 2.6 percent at 1,802 yen, outperforming a 0.4 percent gain in the Nikkei average .N225. ($1=91.47 Yen) (Reporting by Taiga Uranaka; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

UPDATE 1-G-III posts narrower-than-expected Q1 loss

June 7 (Reuters) – G-III Apparel Group Ltd (GIII.O) posted a quarterly loss significantly narrower than expected, helped by strong spring business in its dress and sportswear categories, and forecast full-year earnings above market estimates.

For fiscal 2011, G-III sees earnings of $2.20 to $2.30 a share on revenue of $950 million.

Analysts on average expect earnings of $2.17 a share on revenue of $891.8 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

For the first quarter ended April 30, the company posted a net loss of $1.4 million, or 7 cents a share, compared with net loss of $6.8 million, or 41 cents a share, a year ago.

Revenue rose 43 percent to $154.3 million.

Analysts on average had expected loss of 19 cents per share on revenue of $134.8 million.

Shares of the company closed at $27.6 Friday on Nasdaq. (Reporting by Shobhana Chadha in Bangalore; Editing by Don Sebastian)

Costco May same-store-sales lower than Street view

* Says May sales helped by extra day from holiday shift

(Reuters) – Costco Wholesale Corp (COST.O) said it saw May sales in stores open at least a year rise 9 percent, slightly less than Wall Street forecasts for the period, which included an extra day compared with a year ago due to the shift in the Memorial day holiday.

Analysts had expected the largest U.S. warehouse club operator to post sales of 9.7 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.

For the four weeks ended May 30, the company said its net sales rose 11 percent to $6.09 billion from the previous year.

The shift in the Memorial Day holiday, which fell on May 31 this year, helped the May 2010 total and comparable sales by about 2 percent, the company said.

Including the benefit from the inflation in gasoline prices and strengthening foreign currencies, Costco said same-store-sales at U.S. locations climbed 7 percent, while international sales jumped 17 percent.

Shares in the Issaquah, Washington-based company closed at $58.95 Wednesday on Nasdaq.

(Reporting by Antonita Madonna Devotta in Bangalore; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

UPDATE 1-Family Dollar sees profit near upper end of range

June 3 (Reuters) – Family Dollar Stores Inc (FDO.N) reported a 7 percent increase in third-quarter same-store sales on Thursday and said its earnings would come in near the upper end of its forecast range.

Family Dollar said net sales for the quarter, ended May 30, rose 8.4 percent to $2.00 billion, driven by strength in its seasonal and grocery categories.

The retailer said it expects third-quarter earnings to be near the upper end of its forecast range, which calls for earnings of 71 to 76 cents per share. Analysts on average have been expecting 77 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. (Reporting by Martinne Geller, editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

Japan retail fund inflows drop 55 pct in May -Lipper

TOKYO, June 1 (Reuters) – Japanese retail investors scaled back their interest in new investments trust funds in May, with inflows dropping 55 percent from a month earlier on worries about Europe’s debt crisis.

Newly launched investment trusts or “toushin” attracted 203.9 billion yen ($2.2 billion), the smallest amount since August, and 41 percent lower than a year earlier, data by Thomson Reuters fund research company Lipper showed.

Inflows had risen to 452.7 billion yen in April, which was the highest level since September 2006.

An auto stocks fund from Nomura Asset Management, Japan’s top asset manager, was quite popular, attracting 91.5 billion yen but the rest saw only modest demand.

It was the sixth straight month for a toushin structured by Nomura Asset to draw the biggest inflows.

Global shares prices and the euro have been battered by debt woes in Greece and other European countries. Japan’s broader Topix index dropped almost 11 percent in May.

Japanese individuals hold about $15 trillion in personal assets and although retail investors became more cautious last month, they are keen to diversify their assets and seek higher returns by shifting out of low yielding accounts. ($1=91.05 yen) (Reporting by Chikafumi Hodo; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Momentum stalls in April clothing sales: SpendingPulse

(Reuters) – Electronics and luxury items were the fastest-growing U.S. sales categories in the retail sector in April, but weakness in apparel suggests that a sustained recovery in overall retail may be too soon to call, according to a report released on Tuesday.

“What we saw in April was generally a mixed bag of results, especially compared to the generally strong results in March,” said Mike Berry, director of industry research for MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse, which estimates total retail sales across all payment forms.

While high-profile gadgets like Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) iPad helped consumer electronics sales to a 9.7 percent rise in April — up from 4.5 percent in March and a 6.9 percent decline a year earlier — clothing sales didn’t see the same increase.

Women’s clothing sales fell 4.1 percent in April, compared to a rise of 4.2 percent in March, SpendingPulse said. The overall U.S. specialty apparel category fell 3.9 percent.

Some of that decline is due to an earlier Easter, meaning many pre-holiday sales were logged in March rather than April.

“Still, we saw a little more softness than I think we expected on the apparel side,” said Berry. “If you combine March and April we’re basically flat year over year, which is slightly disappointing.”

Car sales spurred by dealer incentives may have stolen sales from apparel, Berry said, noting that the first financing payments for vehicles purchased earlier this year may have come due in April.

Analysts, on average, expect April same-store sales to rise 1.6 percent, with a 5.4 percent gain for the combined March and April period, according to Thomson Reuters data.

MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse bases its data on aggregated sales activity in the Mastercard payments network, together with estimates for payment forms like cash and check.

ARE WE BACK?

Luxury retail sales logged their third straight month of double-digit growth during April, according to SpendingPulse. Excluding jewelry, those sales rose 15.5 percent, versus 22.7 percent growth in March and 22.7 percent in February.

The mixed results from the range of categories points to lingering consumer caution that has kept most retail sales still shy of 2008 levels.

“Have we bounced off the bottom? Yes, we’ve definitely bounced off the bottom — but are we back? In most segments the answer is no,” said Berry.

Since the 2009 holiday season, when consumers opened their wallets to spend after a long period of austerity brought on by the recession, retailers have been trying to see if that spending will continue.

“What we saw in March was the beginnings of the indications that that was indeed happening,” said Berry. “But with these April results, that has tempered the enthusiasm a little bit, although some was due to the calendar shift.”

The focus will now move to May, but that low-spending month is dominated by home improvement projects and the start of the summer family travel season.

MasterCard Advisors is the professional services arm of MasterCard Worldwide. (Reporting by Alexandria Sage; Editing by Bernard Orr)

Momentum stalls in April clothing sales-SpendingPulse

SAN FRANCISCO, May 4 (Reuters) – Electronics and luxury items were the fastest-growing U.S. sales categories in the retail sector in April, but weakness in apparel suggests that a sustained recovery in overall retail may be too soon to call, according to a report released on Tuesday.

“What we saw in April was generally a mixed bag of results, especially compared to the generally strong results in March,” said Mike Berry, director of industry research for MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse, which estimates total retail sales across all payment forms.

While high-profile gadgets like Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) iPad helped consumer electronics sales to a 9.7 percent rise in April — up from 4.5 percent in March and a 6.9 percent decline a year earlier — clothing sales didn’t see the same increase.

Women’s clothing sales fell 4.1 percent in April, compared to a rise of 4.2 percent in March, SpendingPulse said. The overall U.S. specialty apparel category fell 3.9 percent.

Some of that decline is due to an earlier Easter, meaning many pre-holiday sales were logged in March rather than April.

“Still, we saw a little more softness than I think we expected on the apparel side,” said Berry. “If you combine March and April we’re basically flat year over year, which is slightly disappointing.”

Car sales spurred by dealer incentives may have stolen sales from apparel, Berry said, noting that the first financing payments for vehicles purchased earlier this year may have come due in April.

Analysts, on average, expect April same-store sales to rise 1.6 percent, with a 5.4 percent gain for the combined March and April period, according to Thomson Reuters data.

MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse bases its data on aggregated sales activity in the Mastercard payments network, together with estimates for payment forms like cash and check.

ARE WE BACK?

Luxury retail sales logged their third straight month of double-digit growth during April, according to SpendingPulse. Excluding jewelry, those sales rose 15.5 percent, versus 22.7 percent growth in March and 22.7 percent in February.

The mixed results from the range of categories points to lingering consumer caution that has kept most retail sales still shy of 2008 levels.

“Have we bounced off the bottom? Yes, we’ve definitely bounced off the bottom — but are we back? In most segments the answer is no,” said Berry.

Since the 2009 holiday season, when consumers opened their wallets to spend after a long period of austerity brought on by the recession, retailers have been trying to see if that spending will continue.

“What we saw in March was the beginnings of the indications that that was indeed happening,” said Berry. “But with these April results, that has tempered the enthusiasm a little bit, although some was due to the calendar shift.”

The focus will now move to May, but that low-spending month is dominated by home improvement projects and the start of the summer family travel season.

MasterCard Advisors is the professional services arm of MasterCard Worldwide. (Reporting by Alexandria Sage; Editing by Bernard Orr)

Brain drain, low investment hamper African science

LONDON, April 12 (Reuters) – Africa’s contribution to the global body of scientific research is very small and does little to benefit its own populations, according to a report from Thomson Reuters (TRI.N) released on Monday.

Like India and China, Africa suffers from a “haemorrhage of talent”, the report said, with many of its best brains leaving to study abroad and failing to return.

“The African diaspora provides powerful intellectual input to the research achievements of other countries, but returns less benefit to the countries of birth,” Jonathan Adams, director of research evaluation at Thomson Reuters, said in a statement as the report was published.

More information about the report is available here Adams and colleagues, who use a Thomson Reuters database to track scientific publications, found that three nations dominate Africa’s research output — with South Africa leading by a long way, ahead of Egypt in second place and then Nigeria.

“Africa’s overall volume of activity remains small, much smaller than is desirable if the potential contribution of its researchers is to be realised for the benefit of its populations,” said Adams.

The report found that part of the problem was down to a “chronic lack of investment in facilities for research and teaching” — a deficit the authors said must be remedied.

Adams said the reason behind this was not simply money: “The resources available in some African countries are substantial, but they are not being invested in the research base.”

In fields of research relevant to natural resources, however, the study found a relatively high representation of African research as a share of world publications.

South Africa’s 1.55 percent share of research in plant and animal science is the continent’s biggest share in any field, it said, with this output surpassing Russia’s 1.17 percent but well behind China’s 5.42 percent share in the same field.

The report pointed to a few examples of countries which, despite low output, produced much higher quality research than larger neighbours.

Malawi, for example, with one-tenth the annual research output of Nigeria, produces research of a quality that exceeds the world average benchmark while Nigeria hovers at around half that impact level, the report said.

“The challenges that the continent faces are enormous and indigenous research could help provide both effective and focused responses,” it added.

The study is part of a series showing the changing landscape and dynamics of scientific research around the world.

Previous studies found that China had more than doubled its output of scientific papers to rank second only to the United States in terms of volume, while Russia’s influence in science and scientific industries was rapidly shrinking. [ID:nN02461423] [ID:nN25198050]

(Editing by Michael Roddy)