8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 8, 2004 -BUSINESS/ECONOMY BUSINESS BRIEFS ARLINGTON, Va. US Airways, pilot union fail to reach deal US Airways' efforts to extract $800 million in cost cuts from its unions and avoid a return to bankruptcy suffered a major setback when a deeply divided pilots union refused to submit a contract proposal to its membership for a vote. Investors sent US Airways shares down 13 percent, or 30 cents, to $2.05 a share yesterday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. US Airways has warned that a bankruptcy filing could be imminent in the coming weeks if it cannot cut new labor deals with its unions. A study com- missioned by the pilots' union also concluded that bankruptcy loomed as soon as mid-September if the airline could not implement changes to its current operations. DENVER Invesco settles allegations of improper trading Invesco Funds Group and its sister company have agreed to pay $376.5 million and surrender $75 million in fees to settle state and federal allegations of improp- er trading, with the money mainly going to investors hurt by the practices. Denver-based Invesco will pay $325 million to resolve litigation alleging it permitted excessive market-timing activity in its funds, Attorney General Ken Salazar said. Its sister company, AIM Advisors Inc. of Houston, agreed to pay $50 million. The money will be paid to investors in what Salazar called one of the largest settlements yet in the market-timing scandal that has swept the $7 trillion mutual funds industry. HOUSTON Halliburton may pull out of Army contract If the U.S. Army divides what is now Halliburton Co.'s massive logistics contract into too many pieces to seek competitive bids and spread the work, the Houston-based oil services conglomerate may not join the bidders, its chief executive said yesterday. Halliburton CEO Dave Lesar told analysts at a New York energy conference that he wasn't certain if the company would rebid if the contract was separated into too many pieces, Halliburton spokeswoman Wendy Hall said. The Wall Street Journal reported in yesterday's editions that the Army plans to break up the contract - valued at as much as $13 billion - and dole out the work to more companies. U.S. Defense Department officials told the newspaper the plan to rebid the contract was intended to increase efficiency by spreading the workload, rather than as a punitive measure to Halliburton subsidiary KBR, which has more than 30,000 employees and subcontractors in Iraq and Kuwait. SAN FRANCISCO Netflix, TiVo plan to offer online DVD service Home entertainment trendsetters Netflix Inc. and TiVo Inc. hope to link up on a service that will use high-speed Internet connections to pipe DVD-quality mov- ies into the homes of their mutual subscribers. The.recently drooping stocks of both companies perked up yesterday as inves- tors embraced the prospect of an alliance between two pioneers that have changed the way millions of households rent DVDs and watch television. Los Gatos-based Netflix has attracted 2.1 million subscribers to its $21.99-per- month service, which mails up to three DVDs at a time after customers place their orders on the Internet. The service, which draws upon Netflix's library of 25,000 DVD titles, doesn't charge late rental fees - a concept that has forced video rental giant Blockbuster Entertainment to change its practices. AP PHOTOS Left: Democratic; 2.: presidential nom- W. Inee Sen. John Wy'>' Kerry gestures to the crowd during a town meeting In Greensboro N.C., yesterday. - Right: President . Bush greets the crowd at a'°" campaign rally at Lee's Summit Hi h S h o nLee's Sum m it,-'-MNp.'> Mo., yesterday a -N -3 .* * Bus] rr 1 1 e ecow ic plns r , r 14e The Associated Press President Bush and rival John Kerry yesterday offered different ways to boost the sluggish job market, the president calling for legal reforms to help workers and businesses while his Democratic opponent proposed ending tax breaks for compa- nies that send jobs overseas. Kerry, moving aggressively in the face of polls showing his candidacy lagging, used the latest fore- but still the highest ever - Kerry told supporters in North Carolina that the deficit represented other bad Bush choices. "Only George W. Bush could celebrate over a record budget deficit of $422 billion, a loss of 1.6 million jobs and Medicare premiums that are up by a record 17 per- cent," Kerry said. "W stands for wrong - the wrong direction for America." When Kerry claims that the nation has lost 1.6 million private sector. cast of a record budget deficit to bolster his contention that Bush is leading the country in the wrong direction. The Bush administration described the lower deficit prediction as positive economic news. In his second day of cam- paigning in Missouri, a state he won in 2000 by just 79,000 votes out of 2.3 million cast, Bush plans to deal with job losses include increasing funding for community colleges and creating "opportunity zones" of reduced taxes. jobs during the Bush adminis- tration, he does not include government jobs. Nonfarm payrolls are down 913,000 since Bush took office when growth in federal, state and local government jobs is included in the total. Kerry said he would end tax breaks for companies that outsource overseas, a potent issue in North Caro- in Iraq. "No matter how many times Senator Kerry chang- es his mind, it was right for America then and it's right for America now if Saddam Hussein is no lon- ger in power," the president told supporters Monday in Poplar Bluff, Mo. Kerry's plan to deal with the problem of outsourc- ing jobs would eliminate rules allowing companies to defer paying taxes on income earned by their for- eign subsidiaries until they bring the profits back to the United States. Kerry says the elimination would ensure that American companies will be taxed on their foreign subsidiaries' profits just like they are taxed on their domestic profits. "He's actually encouraging the export of American jobs," Kerry said of Bush's sup- port for the current rules. The president's plan for dealing with job losses is through job training, increased funding for commu- nity colleges and creation of "opportunity zones" of reduced taxes. Bush said the jobs picture is improving, largely due to tax cuts that he said have helped push down the unemployment rate to 5.4 percent. The economy "is strong and is getting stronger," Bush told a Labor Day crowd in Poplar Bluff. Political analysts point to one potential problem for Kerry in Missouri - lingering bitterness in the Democratic Party's ranks over a primary election that ousted incumbent Democratic Gov. Bob Holden. Kerry needs a huge turnout of loyal Democrats to win the state in November. Bush told a rally in suburban Kansas City that Kerry had stood in the way of legal reforms that would help generate jobs and protect workers and businesses. He called Kerry "one of the trial lawyers' most reliable allies in the Senate." Bush, linking Kerry policies to campaign dona- tions from trial attorneys, said "junk lawsuits" hin- der job creation and cost the economy more than $230 billion a year. With the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office predicting this year's federal deficit will reach $422 billion - less than earlier forecasts lina and other states that have suffered job losses. "Because of George Bush's wrong choices, this country is continuing to ship good jobs overseas - jobs with good wages and good benefits." Kerry said. Kerry's criticism on the economic front came a day after he leveled harsh criticism at Bush over the war in Iraq, declaring that the president had sent U.S. troops to the "wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time." Bush dismissed Kerry's remarks on the war as yet another switch in position by a senator who origi- nally voted to give the oresident the authority to act - Compiled from Daily wire reports Show your student I.D. & get 1501o off regular price merchandise. Here's a no-brainer: Simply show your valid student I.D. and save 150 on all regular price stuff. (That's a lot of stuff.) But, you'd better hurry. 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