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JPMorgan's income increase defies expectations

JPMorgan Chase surprised Wall Street on Thursday with a sharp increase in investment banking income at a time when other banks are warning of layoffs because of a slowdown in trading.
Investors had been expecting investment banking results at major Wall Street firms to decline on fears of a slowdown after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said it plans to eliminate 230 jobs beginning in September. Citigroup analyst Keith Horowitz has warned that overall bank revenue from fixed income trading would likely drop 30 percent in the second quarter, stock trading by 15 percent. The explanation: investors cutting back on trading because of market volatility caused by the European debt crisis.
As expected, JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s revenue from trading did decline - 18 percent in fixed income and 14 percent in equities from the previous quarter. However the bank was able to more than make up the difference with higher fees from underwriting stocks and bonds. That lifted JPMorgan's earnings 13 percent in the three-month period ending in June.
The New York bank earned $5.4 billion ($1.27 per share) in the three months ending in June. That was above the $1.22 per share that analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast. JPMorgan earned $4.8 billion ($1.09 per share) in the same period a year ago.

VIDEO GAMES

Sales down 10 percent from '10

A market research firm says U.S. retail sales of video game hardware, software and accessories dropped 10 percent in June to $995 million compared with the same month a year ago.
The NPD Group said in its monthly report Thursday that sales of video game hardware fell 9 percent to $366.6 million. That includes handheld game systems and gaming consoles like the Wii.
Sales of software, the games themselves, dropped 12 percent to $469.5 million. Sales of game accessories declined 11 percent to $158.9 million.

COUPONS

Connecticut official questions Groupon

Groupon Inc.'s practice of selling group-discount coupons with expiration dates is being reviewed by Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen for possible state law violations.
"It appears that what Groupon Inc. sells or offers may fall within the definition of a gift certificate under Connecticut law," Jepsen said in a press statement issued Thursday. "Connecticut law prohibits gift certificates from being sold or issued subject to an expiration date."
Jepsen, in a July 12 letter, asked Groupon Chief Executive Officer Andrew Mason how his company's certificates are bought and redeemed, how many have been sold in the state, which retailers have accepted them and the typical terms of those agreements.
The attorney general also asked about expiration dates. The Chicago-based company has until Aug. 5 to reply.

FBI Investigates News Corp Following 9/11 Phone Hack Allegations

After nearly a decade of fighting to preserve his son's legacy, Jim Riches said the emerging News Corp scandal involving 9/11 victims is the ultimate slap in the face.
"I think it’s abominable, and if these people could pry and hack into 9/11 family members, then they’re making money off the dead,” said Riches, who lost his son on September 11th.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is now looking into allegations that reporters with the now-defunct News of the World attempted to hack phones of people who were killed during the terror attacks.
Riches' son, Jimmy Jr., was a 29-year-old firefighter who died when the towers collapsed.
"They might have been trying to pry into my phone records or my son’s phone records or whatever, but we are asking the FBI to look into this,” said Riches. “We want to sit down with them and we want to see the results of the investigation.”
Rupert Murdoch's News Corp is at the center of a firestorm that has sparked investigations in Britain and Washington.
It all started when word leaked that Murdoch's employees hacked into the phone of a British teenage murder victim.
Explosive allegations that a News of the World reporter tried to buy phone records of 9/11 victims from a private investigator in New York followed.

9/11 family members like Jim Riches say the allegations are deeply troubling, and if they prove to be true, he wants the parties involved prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
Members of Congress are also calling for a full-scale investigation.
"We have the 10th anniversary, the wounds are already opened up, there’s no closure, my son is never going to walk back through that door,” said Riches. “The wounds are open and this just reopens them again."
Next week, Rupert Murdoch and his son, James, will face Britain's Parliament to address allegations of phone hacking and bribery.

India says no leads in Mumbai bomb attacks

BEIJING,July 15 (Xinhuanet) – India's Interior Minister says intelligence agencies did not receive any warnings prior to the Mumbai attacks. 17 people were killed and over 140 injured in the three bomb blasts. It is the biggest attack since 2008, when Pakistani-based militants rampaged through the financial hub.
Interior Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram held the press conference after visiting the blast sites in Mumbai early on Thursday.
He said the explosions, in three separate neighborhoods, were a "coordinated terror attack", but suggested that there are no immediate suspects.
Palaniappan Chidambaram, India's Interior Minister, said, "All groups that have the capacity to carry out such terror attacks are suspected. We are not pointing a finger at this stage to this group or that group. All angles will be investigated. All premises will be examined and all leads will be followed without any predetermination."
The Maharashtra state chief announced compensation for the victims families.
Prithviraj Chavan, Chief Minister of Western India's Maharashtra State, said, "The government has decided to offer a compensation of Rupees 5 Lakhs (5, 00,000) to the families of the deceased and Rupees 50,000 ($1,122.21) to the injured. We are constantly keeping vigilance to those who are critical, to those who are seriously injured."
The blasts occurred at about 6.45 pm local time on Wednesday, within minutes of each other. At least one car and a motorbike were used in the coordinated attacks.
The biggest blast occurred in the Opera House area, a hub for diamond traders.
The next blast occurred at the Zaveri Bazaar of southern Mumbai, India's largest bullion market, which has been targeted twice before. The third blast took place in Dadar, a crowded street accommodating various Muslim and Hindu shops, in the heart of Mumbai.
There was no immediate indication regarding who may have been behind the attacks.

WRAPUP 1-Murdochs bow to British inquiry in hacking scandal


Murdochs change mind, agree to answer UK committee's questions
* U.S. Attorney General says investigations of News Corp "progressing"
* Police arrest former News of World deputy editor
LONDON, July 15 (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch and his son James have bowed to pressure to answer questions from Britain's parliament over alleged phone hacking crimes at one of his newspapers and the U.S. Attorney General said a similar investigation was underway in the country.
"There have been members of Congress in the United States who have asked us to investigate those same allegations and we are progressing in that regard using the appropriate Federal law enforcement agencies," Attorney General Eric Holder told reporters at a conference in Sydney,Australia.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has said it was looking into allegations News Corp tried to hack into the phones of 9/11 victims.
The public disgust that erupted over reports that one of Murdoch's News Corp newspapers had hacked into the voicemails of murder victims has so far forced Murdoch to shutter the offending tabloid, Britain's News of the World, and back out of a $12 billion business deal to buy the shares he does not own of British satellite broadcaster BSkyB .
Murdoch, long accustomed to having entree to the halls of power in Britain instead of being forced to kowtow, and his son James, 38, his heir apparent, initially had said they would not face questions from the British parliament's media committee over phone hacking.
They reversed their decision on Thursday after Prime Minister David Cameron said they should attend and as politicians across the spectrum united in denouncing the hacking that initially had seemed to focus on celebrities and politicians but has become far more widespread.
British Business Secretary Vince Cable, on BBC radio, said of the swift volte-face by politicians queueing up to condemn the Murdochs: "It is a little bit like the end of a dictatorship when everybody suddenly discovers they were against the dictator."
Rebekah Brooks, who runs Murdoch's British newspaper arm, News International, also has agreed to be grilled by the committee. She was a friend of Cameron, who has echoed calls for her to resign.
Speculation was growing at News International's east London headquarters that the company might be reconsidering its position on Brooks after resisting pressure for her to quit, a source familiar with the situation said.
A major News Corp shareholder said Brooks should quit because of the scandal that has engulfed the company.
"For sure she has to go, you bet she has to go," Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal told the BBC's Newsnight programme. Alwaleed says his Kingdom Holding is the second biggest shareholder in News Corp and controls seven percent of the votes.
Murdoch has denied that News Corp was drawing up plans to separate its newspaper holdings, which are at the heart of the controversy, from the rest of the media company.
It includes the Fox broadcast network in the U.S., the 20th Century Fox movie studio and newspapers around the world, including The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and Britain's The Times and the Sun tabloid.
"HANDLED CRISIS WELL"
Murdoch said News Corp had handled the crisis "extremely well in every way possible" making just "minor mistakes" and called reports he would split off his newspaper assets "pure rubbish".
Speaking to The Wall Street Journal, Murdoch said his son had acted "as fast as he could, the moment he could" to deal with the scandal.
The Australian-born media mogul's comments came as he faced investigations on both sides of the Atlantic.
In addition to the probe by British lawmakers keen to break his grip on politics, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said it was looking into allegations News Corp tried to hack into 9/11 victims' phones.
"We are aware of the allegations and are looking into it," said Peter Donald, an FBI spokesman in New York.
The phone-hacking scandal deepened on Thursday with the arrest by British police of a ninth suspect, Neil Wallis, a former deputy editor of News of the World, on suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications.
His detention added weight to a government call for the media regulator to decide whether Murdoch's business was fit to run British television stations.
In addition, Britain's senior police chief came under fire after his force said Wallis had been hired as a consultant by the police.
Paul Stephenson, London's police commissioner, was summoned for a 90-minute meeting with the city's mayor after the capital's force said it had employed the journalist between October 2009 and September 2010.
The disclosure was an embarrassment for a police force facing questions about its links to tabloid reporters and prompted Home Secretary (interior minister) Theresa May to write to Stephenson asking for an explanation.
RESTRICTED IN WHAT MAY SAY
Brooks, who edited the News of the World at the time of one of the most serious alleged incidents, said the police inquiry might restrict what she could say. Her concern was echoed by James Murdoch in a letter to the committee confirming his and his father's attendance.
The session is certain to be hostile. During a heated debate on the hacking scandal on Wednesday, Dennis Skinner, a veteran left-wing Labour member of parliament described Murdoch as "this cancer on the body politic".
Murdoch and other senior executives have denied any knowledge of the alleged practices which are having repercussions around the world.