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    Comcast, GE near agreement valuing NBC Universal at $30 billion

    By Sam Gustin | Filed Under: , , ,

    comcast-ge-near-agreement-on-30-billion-valuation-for-nbc-univComcast (CMCSA), the nation's largest cable company, and GE (GE), the giant industrial conglomerate, are nearing agreement on a deal that would value NBC Universal, the huge entertainment company, at around $30 billion, sources familiar with the matter tell DailyFinance. If successful, the pact would pave the way for a distribution and content behemoth sure to attract attention from regulators. The new entity would dramatically alter the competitive landscape of a media world already wracked by Internet-driven disruption and the ever-increasing penetration of high-speed broadband service.

    Comcast, already a corporate giant, clearly sees the long-lusted-after golden chalice of a unified content and distribution system within its grasp.

    Fiat pulls the plug on Chrysler's electric car program

    By Alex Salkever | Filed Under: , ,

    After announcing some impressive plans to develop electric cars earlier this year, Chrysler has provided few details lately, and now we know why: the company has disbanded its crash program to produce vehicles running on electrons. Chrysler has also backed off a bold January 2009 pledge to manufacture 500,000 conventional and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles by 2013. Reuters reported the sad news late Friday in an interview with Fiat CEO Serigo Marchionne.

    Fiat, reportedly aghast at the horrific condition of its newly acquired U.S. subsidiary, decided to pull the plug on the speculative but exciting effort to add some green to Detroit's also-ran brand. The move is another step in Marchionne's efforts to shake up personnel and organizational structure at Chrysler. Marchionne declared U.S. car sales "a disaster" in September,

    Google buys AdMob for $750 million as mobile ads get ready for prime time

    By Sam Gustin | Filed Under: , ,

    What would you do if you had $10 billion in cash to play with? If you're Google (GOOG), you drop $750 million on AdMob, a leader in mobile display advertising.

    The search giant announced a deal to do just that on Monday, in a clear indication of where it sees the future of its business. Company CEO Eric Schmidt has been explicit in his belief that Google can earn "many times" in mobile advertising what it earns in conventional Web advertising. This move looks like a major bet on that conviction.

    The $750 million deal, a stock transaction, is one of the search giant's largest ever, and is further evidence of renewed vigor in the technology and Internet markets.

    Manufactured homes may need more than tax breaks to spur sales

    By Jonathan Berr | Filed Under: , ,

    President Barack Obama's recently extended homebuyers' tax credit may help revive the flagging fortunes of the manufactured home industry -- and not a moment too soon.

    According to the Manufactured Housing Institute, about 55,000 prefabricated homes will be sold in the U.S. in 2009, down from 81,000 a year earlier. Improvement could come in 2010 thanks to the tax credit, but expectations appear to be modest. The industry's woes extend beyond the current economic crisis, with one executive talking of "10 tough years."

    Metropolitan Home magazine becomes latest recession victim

    By Jeff Bercovici | Filed Under:

    The good news: Magazine ad pages are actually up in the fourth quarter for the first time in a dog's age. The bad news: Metropolitan Home won't be around to enjoy it. Hachette Filipacchi Media just announced that it's shutting down the shelter title following publication of its December issue, choosing to focus its limited resources on Elle Decor, its last remaining home-design magazine. A company spokeswoman says 13 editorial staffers have been let go, including editor-in-chief Donna Warner, along with a yet-to-be-determined number of business-side employees.

    Shelter publications have been hit especially hard by the advertising downturn of the past couple years -- not surprisingly, considering that the recession was precipitated by the collapse of the housing bubble. Preceding Met Home into extinction were Home, another Hachette Filipacchi title, Conde Nast's Domino...

    Boeing's move to South Carolina cuts 787's costs, but risks labor turbulence

    By Peter Cohan | Filed Under:

    boeings-750-million-move-to-s-c-how-much-will-it-really-saveAs I posted, Boeing (BA) is opening a plant in South Carolina to help build its 787 Dreamliner -- the up to 330-passenger aircraft whose scheduled delivery date has been delayed six times. BusinessWeek reports that Boeing is investing $750 million in that plant and expects to pay the workers there $15 an hour, 42% less than its unionized Washington state workers get. With 850 Dreamliner orders worth $110 billion on the books, Boeing can hardly afford more problems with this plane. Is this move by the company short-sighted?

    The answer depends on whether Boeing can train those South Carolina workers to do what those in Washington can. Lately, things haven't worked out so well for Boeing in its relationship with those Washington workers. About a year ago, Boeing's 27,000-member...

    McDonald's sees slack U.S. demand, so it's cooking up dollar breakfast deals

    By David Schepp | Filed Under: , , , ,

    It seems McDonald's (MCD) is more popular overseas than at home. The iconic fast-food chain reported Monday that sales at outlets open at least 13 months rose 3.3% overall last month as diners flocked to its restaurants in Europe, Asia and Africa.

    In the U.S., however, customers were less enthusiastic. Domestic same-store sales for the Oakbrook, Ill., company were basically flat in October, slipping 0.1%. The slack demand in the U.S. may be a primary reason the ubiquitous burger chain plans to offer a dollar menu for breakfast items beginning in January, The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) reported.

    Fewer home mortgages are under water as values stabilize

    By Lita Epstein | Filed Under: ,

    The percentage of Americans owning homes that are under water is falling, according to Zillow's third-quarter Real Estate Market Reports, which focus on 156 metropolitan areas. The other good news is that home values were relatively flat between the second and third quarters, so the price declines may be over for most homeowners.

    Zillow found that 21% of homeowners with single-family homes were underwater on their mortgages at the end of the third quarter, down from 23% in the previous quarter. Two factors play into the drop. One is that many under water homeowners have already lost their homes to foreclosure. The second is that home values have stabilized in some areas of country and have even started going back up in other areas.

    Goldman Sachs CEO Blankfein says firm is doing 'God's work'

    By Douglas McIntyre | Filed Under: , ,

    Lloyd Blankfein, the CEO of Goldman Sachs (GS), has put an unusual spin on the bank's activities. He says his firm is doing "God's work." This may seem like an audacious statement coming from a man whose company has been harshly criticized for planning to give many of its employees multi-million pay packages just a bit more than a year after the collapse of the credit markets.

    Blankfein told The Times of London, "We help companies to grow by helping them to raise capital. Companies that grow create wealth. This, in turn, allows people to have jobs that create more growth and more wealth. We have a social purpose." That is, of course, a social purpose that comes at a very steep price; it charges huge fees for raising money and handling M&A transactions, even if they eventually fail.

    Nokia recalls 14 million cell phone chargers due to shock risk

    By AP | Filed Under: , ,

    nokiaNokia Corp. (NOK) announced Monday that some 14 million mobile phone chargers could be dangerous for users and said it will replace them free of charge.

    The chargers, bearing Nokia's name and made by Chinese battery and auto part maker BYD Co., are models AC-3E and AC-3U, made between June 15 and Aug. 9 this year; and AC-4U, manufactured between April 13 and Oct. 25, 2009. They were mostly sold in Europe and North America.

    More Recall News: Maclaren Recalling 1 Million Strollers
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