Business
Bulletins
01:00 AM EDT on Wednesday, August 27, 2008
•Companies
Citi to pay $18 million: Citigroup Inc. will pay nearly $18 million in refunds and settlement charges for taking $14 million from customers’ credit card accounts, California’s attorney general said yesterday. Citigroup will make refunds to the 53,000 customers affected, and pay $3.5 million in damages and civil penalties to the state of California, which had been investigating the questionable practices for three years, the attorney general said. The bank will also pay 10 percent interest to California customers, who accounted for $1.6 million of the money “swept” out of accounts and into a Citi fund between 1992 and 2003. Citigroup’s “account sweeping program” automatically removed positive balances from customers’ credit card accounts, Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. said. For instance, if a customer double-paid a bill by mistake or refunded a purchase for credit, that positive balance was then taken from the customer without notification, Brown said. “The company knowingly stole from its customers, mostly poor people and the recently deceased, when it designed and implemented the sweeps,” said Brown in a statement. “When a whistleblower uncovered the scam and brought it to his superiors, they buried the information and continued the illegal practice.” (Associated Press)
Mattel gets $100 million in Bratz case: A federal jury in Riverside, Calif., yesterday awarded Mattel Inc. $100 million in damages in a federal copyright lawsuit that pitted the house of Barbie against MGA Entertainment Inc., the maker of the saucy Bratz dolls. MGA and its chief executive officer, Isaac Larian, were told to pay a total of $90 million in three causes of action related to Mattel’s employment contract with designer Carter Bryant, who developed the Bratz concept. The jury also ordered MGA, Larian and subsidiary MGA Hong Kong to pay a total of $10 million for copyright infringement. MGA contends the three awards related to the contract were duplicative and said it plans to ask a judge to set total damages at no more than $40 million. In a victory for MGA, the jury did not award any punitive damages and found that neither Larian nor MGA acted willfully when they employed Bryant, a finding that could have dramatically increased the damages. (Associated Press)
•Markets
Dollar advances: The dollar rose against major currencies yesterday in New York, ending at 109.63 Japanese yen, up from Monday’s close of 109.35 yen. The euro closed at 3:30 p.m. at $1.4650, down from $1.4756.
Metals climb: Gold for current delivery closed at $822.20 a troy ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up from Monday’s close of $819.80. Silver closed at $13.572 an ounce, up from $13.365.
Fuels rise: October light, sweet crude oil rose $1.16 to $116.27 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. September heating oil rose 5.85 cents to $3.2099 a gallon. September gasoline rose 8.74 cents to $2.9697 a gallon. September natural gas rose 45.3 cents to $8.278 per 1,000 cubic feet.
Associated Press
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