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Hedge Fund Manager Ackman Sees Premium For Wachovia

 
Steve Gelsi
MarketWatch Pulse
     

    NEW YORK (Marketwatch) -- Wachovia shareholder and hedge fund manager Bill Ackman said the financial firm could be worth between $7.29 a share and $19.59 a share, well above its recent trading level of $5.62 a share on Monday. Ackman said at a presentation that there could be more than $20 billion of cash at Wachovia's holding company. Wachovia's brokerage and asset management units could be worth $4.3 billion to $8 billion. Ackman said firms including Morgan Stanley , Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan could be interested in acquiring Wachovia's brokerage business. The Wells Fargo offer to buy Wachoiva is attractive to shareholders, but the rival offer from Citi may be more atractive if the Wachovia holding company does indeed have $20 billion or more in cash. Wachovia has yet to disclose its cash holdings or any other details. (Reported by MarketWatch Staff Writer Alistair Barr.)

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    Weekly Jobless Claims

    Each Thursday at 8:30 a.m. EST, the government tells us about how many people went through one of the most unpleasant experiences of their lives: filing for unemployment help for the first time. It's essentially a survey, since state unemployment is managed by your state, not the federal government.

    The report runs like clockwork, but it¿s notoriously inaccurate. For one thing, the number often has wide swings from week to week, so it's a rare event for the figures to come in exactly as economists predict. Second, it is very seasonal. Folks like school bus drivers often file claims when summer comes around, and other people get retail jobs as the holidays approach. Some economists like to use it to handicap the big monthly employment situation report, but they often do so at their statistical peril

    Sometimes, weekly jobless claims make political, rather than economic, noise. If there¿s a big spike in claims, some politicians will often cite the number as a sign the economic sky is falling. But, it's important to remember what the weekly jobless numbers don't tell you: you don't know how long these folks stay unemployed, how long they've been out of work in the first place, or even if they're truly out of work and not just trying to scam the government.

    Because it's so unreliable, economists usually put the past four weeks together and look at a moving average. That gives a little better picture of the overall trend, but it's still not a great indicator.