September 2009

Marshall Auerback: The G20 Summit: Hijacked by Neo-Liberalism

September 29, 2009

We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again. As a matter of national accounting, the domestic private sector cannot increase savings unless and until foreign or government sectors increase deficits. Call this the tyranny of double entry bookkeeping: the government’s deficit equals by identity the non-government’s surplus. So, if the US private sector is to rebuild its balance sheet by spending less than its income, the government will have to spend more than its tax revenue. The only other possibility is that the rest of the world stops saving on a massive scale — letting the US run a current account surplus. But that is highly implausible and socially undesirable, since it means we export our economic output, rather than consume it domestically. And if the government deficit does not grow fast enough to meet the saving needs of the private domestic sector, national income will decline, which, given the size of the private sector’s debt problem, will generate a huge debt deflation. This is the foundation of modern monetary theory. Would that the IMF and the G20 understood these basic facts. The anodyne communiqué from last weekend’s Pittsburgh summit makes clear that this is not the case. Western policy makers appear determined to consign us to years of additional economic misery because of the continued embrace of a flawed market fundamentalist economic paradigm. So far, instead of trying to revive the productive economy, most of the G20′s resources have consisted of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for a dying financial sector. This has not “worked” to the extent that last weekend’s communiqué advertised. The best analogy to describe the current state of our financial system is that we have placed scaffolding over a decaying building, but done little to repair the underlying structure. What happens when the economic scaffolding is removed via “exit strategies,” as the G20 participants have advocated? For many generations, we didn’t face the unprecedented financial fragility we are experiencing today. But there are good reasons why we avoided this until recently. We have spent the past quarter century eviscerating what was fundamentally a robust structure originally devised during the New Deal, a system which basically saved the US capitalist system and served the interests of its citizens very well until it was hijacked by a bunch of corporate predators under the guise of deregulation and neo-liberalism. To read the communiqué from the Pittsburgh summit is to gain insight into an ideology which views government, not as a stabilizing influence protecting us from private sector rent seeking monopolists. Rather it’s an unwanted stepchild, brought out on display as a necessary evil, and destined to be shoved away as soon as we get back to a “normal” economic state of affairs, where the government minds its own business and lets the magic of the “free market” operate. Hence, the emphasis by the Pittsburgh summiteers on ” sustained, strong and balanced growth “, the usual code words designed to encourage budget surpluses, more private sector savings and shift from public to private sources of demand. There is little understanding that if households and firms try to net save (save more out of income flows than they tangibly invest) incomes collapse, and desired private net saving is thwarted. The private “excess saving” cannot exist without a budget deficit or a trade surplus. Many people make this mistake. At best, we can talk about planned private saving being in excess of planned private investment, but other than that, we are violating double entry bookkeeping principles. And consider this: in 1998, 1999 and 2000 (increasing each year), the US government “virtuously” ran budget surpluses. And guess what happened? The private sector became more heavily indebted than before as the fiscal drag squeezed liquidity and destroyed aggregate demand and incomes. Along with our misconceived embrace of financial deregulation, the combined result was sharply rising unemployment and a major recession in 2001-02 with unemployment rising sharply and the automatic stabilizers pushing the budget back into deficit. Unfortunately, that was the yellow flag for what was to follow, a warning signal blithely ignored by our economically illiterate policy makers. Instead, we perpetuated a massively leveraged financial system via Frankenstein financial products such as collateralized debt obligations, and credit default swaps. We squeezed private sector incomes via constrictive fiscal policy, thereby inducing the debt-fueled consumption that is now regularly decried by our officialdom and the commentariat. The bottom line is that if we want habitual private sector savings, we need habitual government deficits. And government deficits are not an aberration; they are the norm. Our first (and possibly greatest) Treasury Secretary, Alexander Hamilton, called the national debt a “national blessing.” Similarly, Paul Krugman and L Randall Wray have argued that it was World War II and the subsequent cold war that ended the depression, which created the foundations for a significant expansion of government debt, which in turn set the stage for the “Golden Age.” The government deficit reached 25 percent of GDP during the war, providing a massive amount of private sector saving in the form of safe financial assets that strengthened balance sheets. From 1960 onward, the baby boom drove rapid growth of state and local government spending, so that even though federal government spending remained relatively constant as a percent of GDP, total government spending grew rapidly until the 1970s. This pulled up aggregate demand and private sector incomes, and thus consumption. This is unsurprising: The private sector cannot create “net nominal wealth” because every private financial asset is offset by a private financial liability. Over the long term, the maximum that a government can hope to collect in the form of taxes is equal to its purchases of goods of services. There is no hope of running long-term budget surpluses because the government cannot possibly collect more than the income it has created as it paid out dollars. When the government attempts this, as it did during the Clinton Administration, the public finds that its net financial assets would be less than its tax liability, requiring households to dip into its “reserves” of accumulated savings, which gradually become depleted. In the absence of other factors, demand slows and the government almost invariably falls back into deficit. If an external creditor is added (such as China or Japan) it merely delays or extends the process, since for a time, countries running current account surpluses with the US can use their surplus dollars to accumulate additional US dollar financial claims. But in the absence of any increase in US government spending (which is the only source of NEW NET FINANCIAL ASSETS), the end result is still a massive accumulation of private sector debt, which is what got us into this mess in the first place. By contrast, assuming a non-convertible, freely floating fiat currency, a government can never be insolvent even if its tax revenue declines significantly. Its balance sheet can never become precarious in the same way that a household balance sheet can. In the abstract, this always sounds controversial to those uncomfortable viewing the world within a financial balances construct. It also helps to explain the intellectual incoherence at the heart of the G20 communiqué and the Obama Administration’s economic policies, which has been dominated by Wall Street interests. So it’s worthwhile considering some historic examples, which illustrate the point better. During WWII, the US government generated huge deficits and bond issues. The record expansion of government deficits not only facilitated the war effort, but created full employment. (As an aside, it is always interesting to pose the following question to “deficit terrorists”: if government budget deficits are so awful, and so egregious for the long term performance of an economy, then why run them at all during wartime, when presumably we need the economy to be functioning in an optimal manner?) After the war, the Fed was concerned with potential inflationary pressures and raised interest rates. President Truman, a hard money man par excellence, drastically cut defense spending from $90.9bn to $10.3bn and the US accumulated huge fiscal surpluses. Post war surpluses, combined with Fed tightening, contributed to a recession in 1949. Unfortunately, it took the “military Keynesianism” brought on by the Korean War to shift Truman away from his aversion to deficit spending, which was continued by Eisenhower, and sustained via his national highways building program. During that period, unemployment decreased. Similarly benign effects on unemployment were manifested in the wake of the Kennedy tax cuts and those of Reagan in the early 1980s. Today, budget deficits are the highest as a percentage of GDP, but they are overstated to some degree, because they include the TARP measures to stabilize the financial system which brought the global economy to its knees in 2007/08. Classic Treasury expenditures deal with the purchase of real goods and services; Federal Reserve functions deal with the purchase and sale of financial assets. And yet, the focus of policy makers is quickly reverting to “exit strategies” and a reduction of budget deficits, where the Pittsburgh communiqué pledged to “prepare our exit strategies and, when the time is right, withdraw our extraordinary policy support in a co-operative and co-ordinated way, maintaining our commitment to fiscal responsibility.” If only that were true. The only way one could politically justify a government running a sustained surplus would be to make the case that unemployment created a more functional way of ensuring high profits (via wage discipline) than full employment. Put in those terms, it’s not a particularly compelling message, but it has the virtue of being consistent with modern monetary theory. Oddly enough, the G20 communiqué devotes considerable attention to the government’s “exit strategies”, which came in response to the destructive private sector financial practices which created this catastrophe. There has been less attention directed to the underlying causes themselves. Thus the IMF, in its latest “Global Financial Stability Report”, suggests that restarting securitization markets is “critical” to a wider economic recovery, and that current US and European proposals to force banks that originate loans to hold on to the first 5% of losses in all securitizations, were not sufficiently flexible and might backfire. In the words of Credit Lyonnais Asia strategist, Christopher Wood: [The IMF] is yet again doing the world a disservice by acting as a lobbying group for the securitised debt peddlers. It is clearly fundamentally correct that the agents of securitisation should be made to retain some ‘skin in the game’ after the terrible damage they have inflicted. It is true that the collapse of securitisation represents a massive deflationary risk for the global economy. But that does not mean that the answer is to allow a new free-for-all in securitisation assuming, charitably, there is demand for the securitised product. (“Greed and Fear”, 24 Sept. 2009, CLSA, Asia Pacific Markets) The IMF, the G20, indeed virtually all policy makers — including the Obama Administration — will make themselves far more relevant when they emphasize that full employment and prosperity can only be achieved to the extent that governments are prepared to spend up to a level justified by non-government saving. That does not mean unconstrained government spending. But the spending ought to be set with regard to results desired and competencies to execute plans — not out of some pre-conceived notion of what is “affordable”. Our federal government can afford anything that is for sale in terms of its own currency. And if it spends too much after getting us to a state of full output, it can get inflationary. But let’s get to that state of affairs first before we start worrying about perpetuating the flawed model of the past. That got us transitory prosperity and wage gains. And it promises years of economic misery if we do not move beyond neo-liberal economic fairy tales. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0.

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AIG’s Joseph Cassano In Westport, CT: BACK On U.S. Soil

September 29, 2009

The former AIG exec dubbed “The Man Who Crashed The World” by Vanity Fair is back in the U.S. Reuters broke the news that Joseph Cassano, the former head of AIG’s infamous financial products unit, has returned to the United States. (Check out Cassano in our “Where Are They Now?” retrospective on “Financial Crisis Financiers” .) Since his return, Cassano has apparently been laying low in a home described as “surprisingly modest.” Reuters reporters snooped around Cassano’s Westport, Connecticut home but found no sign of him with either the editor of the local paper or with a worker at the local golf course. Did Cassano return to Connecticut because of pressure from his mounting legal troubles? The Wall Street Journal reported recently that Cassano and other AIG execs could face a grand jury in Brooklyn. The NY Post also reported that Cassano will almost certainly be deposed in the coming weeks. Here’s Reuters on Cassano’s stateside return: “On recent visits to Cassano’s house, which is about an hour’s drive from AIG’s Manhattan HQ, there was little sign that it is the residence of a man who received hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation from the company over the 21 years he was there. The home, which the bespectacled Cassano bought in 1993 for about $750,000, according to real estate records, is most notable for how modest it is compared with some of the far grander houses nearby. The records show it only has two bedrooms, although it does have four bathrooms, an in-ground pool, a bathhouse and two fireplaces. Instead of the flashy BMWs that dot the driveways in the town, which is part of an area known as the “Gold Coast” because of the area’s prosperity and concentration of hedge funds, the couple still make do with the his-and-her Jeep Cherokees they bought 12 years ago and which are parked out front.” The Westport News , which bragged that it respected Cassano’s privacy and that “it did not report of [Cassano's return," still took the opportunity to dish this tidbit on its website: "[Reuters], in a lengthy report on Cassano’s move, did not say when the son of a Brooklyn, N.Y. police officer returned to Westport, where he has been a registered voter since 1995. But neighbors told WestportNow late last month they noticed his return when they saw a moving van outside his home.” According to a FundRace search at the address listed in Reuters’ piece, Cassano and his wife, Ellen Hooker, each donated $2,300 to President Obama’s 2008 election campaign. Read Reuters’ full story on Cassano’s return . Or check out “Where Are They Now? Financial Crisis Financiers” . Get HuffPost Business On Facebook and Twitter !

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Credit Cards: Federal Reserve Closer To New Limits On Cards

September 29, 2009

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve proposed rules Tuesday to better protect Americans from sudden hikes in interest rates on credit cards. The proposal would generally bar rate increases during the first year after an account is opened. It also would ban – with a few exceptions_ increasing the rate on existing credit card balances. For instance, if a customer is behind more than 60 days on a payment, the rate on the existing balance can be boosted. “This proposal is another step forward in the Federal Reserve’s efforts to ensure that consumers who rely on credit cards are treated fairly,” said Fed member Elizabeth Duke, the point person on the effort. The proposal also would require credit card companies to obtain a customer’s consent before charging fees or transactions that exceed their credit limit, and would forbid companies from issuing credit cards to people under the age of 21 unless they have the ability to make the required payments or a parent or other co-signer. The Fed is required to take the action under legislation passed by Congress and signed into law by President Barack Obama in May. The public, industry and other interested parties will have an opportunity to weigh in on the Fed’s proposal. The provisions are slated to take effect on Feb. 22, 2010.

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Patricia Handschiegel: The New Power Girls: Diane Von Furstenberg, AMEX And Women Entrepreneurs Share What Small Business Needs, Plus Introducing…

September 29, 2009

If last week wasn’t enough to prove that there are incredible women everywhere in business today I don’t know what else will. My first email Monday was from the female business development VP of a major company updating me on their interest in an acquisition of a project. Next, I had a call with the powerhouse behind some of American Express’ most incredible programs. Nancy Smith, AMEX’s Vice President, Global Media, Content and Community. Nancy has won awards for her work. Incredible. It followed by a chat with Shazi Visram, founder of Happy Baby and one of three finalists in the NBC/AMEX “Shine a Light” program . In just three years, Shazi has taken her product line from a handful of stores to a full out empire sold in more than 5,000 today. Then, I spoke with THE Diane Von Furstenberg, one of Shine a Light’s two female judges, iconic fashion designer and wife of one of my biggest role models, Barry Diller. Sunday I grabbed brunch oceanside with some of t he most talented and successful women from L.A. tech business . “Any time you put three women in a room to discuss business, I’m interested,” Von Furstenberg said during our chat. Power Girls are everywhere. In fact, there are more of us than ever. Smith had shared that AMEX was inspired by a desire to bring attention to small business, which plays a big part in the success and economic state in our country. Visram talked about how if chosen as the winner, she’d use the Shine a Light grants to help benefit a unique virtual employment program Happy Baby offers to moms, which currently employs 50 women. Von Furstenberg said she was moved by the enthusiasm seen among the Shine a Light entrepreneurs. But it was Smith’s comment about how she and AMEX had asked themselves, “What did entrepreneurs need?” in creating the Shine a Light program that got us thinking. With more women in business than ever, more opportunities than ever, what did people need to succeed today? What if anything did women founders especially need or want? We asked more than a thousand women founders on the New Power Girls email subscription list to find out. “I think women entrepreneurs need more experienced mentors,” said Sophia Chiang, CEO of Qlubb.com . Sortingwithstyle.com founder and “The Office Stylist’s” Sayeh Pezeshki, feels it’d be helpful to have more case study examples and anecdotes from women. For New Power Girls co-creator Meghan Cleary and I, it was all about recognizing a lack of exposure, which Shine a Light is also addressing. It’s why we created the New Power Girls Huff Post series, and expanded it today to include NPGDaily.com , a new daily blog covering women startups and existing companies. Now women will have both. What we noticed most among all of the women who responded to the query, virtually all were willing to lend a hand in helping everybody move forward. After all, when Power Girls see a need, they fill it. To hear more about what Meghan and I think women entrepreneurs need, visit here . To vote for Shazi or other finalists in the Shine a Light program, visit here .

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Michael G. Winston: Penny Wise, Pound Foolish

September 29, 2009

In a world where diets and diet metaphors abound, companies have been obsessed for the past several years with trimming away the fat, getting lean and mean, and shedding weight in order to survive the recession and compete in the new global economy.

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White House Hints At Veto Threat Of "Weak" Consumer Protection Bill

September 29, 2009

The White House on Tuesday suggested that President Obama would consider vetoing regulatory reform legislation if it did not include strong enough protections for consumers of credit cards, mortgages and other financial instruments. Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters that there were “big” concerns inside the administration over reports that Congress was scaling back a key pillar of the president’s approach to reform: the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency (CFPA). And, in a warning shot to the legislative branch, he suggested that proposed legislation to create the CFPA might not pass the president’s desk if it becomes too watered down in the process. “The president would not sign any bill that he thought was too weak,” said Gibbs. “I think we have seen what happens whether it is credit card companies, mortgage companies, we now see it more in stories covering the charges for bank overdrafts and the amount of money that costs the American people each year. The American people deserve an advocate on their behalf dealing with these entities. The president believes that strongly and believes that at the end of the day we will have a strong Consumer Finance Protection Agency working on behalf of the American people.” Gibbs would not definitely say whether the administration was issuing an actual veto threat (he just hinted at the possibility). “We are confident that it will be in the final bill that he’ll be able to sign,” he said. Nevertheless, the press secretary’s rhetoric was the clearest signal to date that the White House is not pleased with how Congress has handled the regulatory reform process. The brainchild of TARP Oversight Chair Elizabeth Warren, the CFPA was adopted by the White House as a tool to curb the abuses of many financial industry and even non-financial industry institutions. The agency would effectively serve as a cop on the consumer product beat, regulating home loans and credit card fees, and ensuring that terms used in advertising to promote such products were straightforward and understandable. In recent days, however, the concept has been narrowed down by House Financial Services Committee chairman Barney Frank, in an effort that seems designed to ensure that it passes through Congress. The new version of the CFPA, for instance, would not cover telecommunications companies or real estate brokerages. Nor would it have the power to require financial institutions to offer “plain vanilla” products and services — a move that critics say would leave consumers largely exposed to predatory practices in both these industries. Tapping into a bit of populist rhetoric, Gibbs stressed the White House’s concern over these legislative changes and threatened, broadly, to push back against them. “The president will fight for and fight against anybody with special interests who don’t see it as an important part of financial regulatory reform,” he said. Get HuffPost Politics On Facebook and Twitter!

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Lobbyists Donating Twice As Much To Democrats As Republicans

September 29, 2009

The Wall Street Journal reports that lobbyists have donated twice as much to Democrats as Republicans this year — a direct result of Democratic control over both Congress and the White House. Corporate political action committees spent 60 percent of their contribution money on Democrats, who have in turn raised $153.5 million in the first six months of the 2009-2010 election cycle. The Center for Responsive Politics reports that in that time Democrats have raised a staggering 62 percent more than Republican candidates. Meanwhile, lobbyists have made 70 percent of their donations to Democrats, up from 37 percent in 2006. From the Wall Street Journal : Spokesmen for the companies say they donate to politicians who support their priorities. Ron Rogers, a spokesman for Merck, said that the company donates more to Democrats now because “there are more Democrats that there used to be.” Republicans, however, may have some reason to hold out hope for the 2010 midterm elections: The Republican National Committee raised more than the Democratic National Committee last month.

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Yvette Kantrow: Doom, the rerun

September 29, 2009

Like Top 10 lists and year-end retrospectives, anniversary stories are a convention of journalism that just won’t go away. So last week we were forced to endure an avalanche of coverage dedicated to re-enacting, re-analyzing, re-reporting, but mostly, regurgitating the fall of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. one year after the fact. The media has deemed Lehman’s failure to be the official start of the financial crisis, despite the cataclysmic events that preceded it, including not only the implosion of Bear Stearns Cos., but the government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac just a week earlier. Funny how there were no anniversary stories commemorating that landmark event. With a few exceptions, the Lehman coverage consisted of the usual anniversary fare, from the pedestrian where-are-they-now stories to the handwringing what-have-we-learned pieces. (Answer: Not much.) The New York Times gave over a chunk of its op-ed page to former Lehmanites weighing in on the firm’s last days — “I was robbed first by Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve Chairman, and Henry Paulson, the former Treasury secretary,” whined one embittered Lehman employee — while CNN boasted of landing an interview with Alan Schwartz, the last Bear CEO. It seems any fallen Wall Street bigwig will do. Lehman’s Dick Fuld, however, remained largely out of view, except on Reuters, where reporter Clare Baldwin staked out his vacation home in Ketchum, Idaho. “Dick Fuld gave me a hug,” began Baldwin’s account of meeting the ex-Lehman chief, who told her that for legal reasons, he couldn’t talk about the events of last Sept. 15. Too bad. At least that would have been something new. As Slate’s Jack Shafer complained about Sept. 11 anniversary stories: “In its most naked form, the anniversary article makes no attempt to advance the story or deepen the collective understanding of the selected anniversary event.” In the case of Lehman’s anniversary, we’ll lodge another complaint: Many of the pieces were authored by journalists who have written or are writing books on the financial crisis. Are their pieces simply promos for their books? Or are their books just longer versions of their anniversary pieces? Where does the marketing end and the journalism begin? There was David Wessel, author of “In Fed We Trust: Ben Bernanke’s War on the Great Panic” on the front page of The Wall Street Journal last Monday arguing that the Fed deserves credit for preventing catastrophe last fall. Want more? Buy the book. At The Times, Joe Nocera, who is working on a crisis book with Bethany McLean, posited that Lehman’s death provided the political will needed to save the economy at large. Nocera also starred in a video on The Times’ Web site retelling the story of Lehman’s collapse, as if we had all just landed from Mars and needed to be filled in. His co-stars: Gretchen Morgenson and Andrew Ross Sorkin, whose own crisis book is scheduled for release next month. Newsweek, meanwhile, commemorated Lehman’s failure by excerpting an upcoming book on J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon by Duff McDonald, who profiled Dimon for New York magazine after the Bear deal. And then there’s Lawrence McDonald, the former Lehman vice president who penned an “insider account” of the firm’s fall. He showed up on “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer” to once again blame it all on Fuld and his private elevator. Needing to get away from all this, we happily retreated into James B. Stewart’s epic anniversary piece in The New Yorker, “Eight Days: The battle to save the American financial system.” (Good thing Roger Lowenstein changed his upcoming crisis book from “Six Days That Shook the World” to “The End of Wall Street.”) Stewart interviewed everyone from Bernanke to Timothy Geithner to Paulson to provide a clinical, behind-the-scenes account of what happened the week Lehman died. He tells his readers off the bat that “memories inevitably have been colored by hindsight and efforts to shade the truth, to affix blame and claim credit,” but his narrative is both highly credible and highly readable. Finishing the piece, you can’t help but wonder what’s left for all those upcoming books to say — a feeling that only deepens when you realize that some of those nearly-instant tomes were completed in about the same amount of time that it took Stewart to craft a 20,000-word magazine story. We suppose the books can offer insight or perspective that we haven’t heard before, but we’re not hopeful. After all, we’re already sick of hearing about Fuld’s damn elevator. Yvette Kantrow is executive editor of The Deal .

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Robert Teitelman: The Search for Normalcy

September 29, 2009

The papers Tuesday seem to disagree about exactly where we are. The New York Times led off by Andrew Ross Sorkin’s front page column declaring mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and optimism back, and buttressed by the business section’s pumping for Dow 10,000, jostles uneasily with the Financial Times , where John Authers worries in The Short View about money managers getting into the market just to join the crowd and Pimco’s CEO Mohamed El-Erian warns that we’ve hardly started the recovery and that there’s considerable pain ahead. “The signs,” murmurs El-Erian with Greenspanian opacity, “of inappropriate reversion are multiplying.” As for The Wall Street Journal , it plays it cool. For all the happy talk about M&A, the Journal story’s key quote comes from Rob Kindler at Morgan Stanley: “It’s still too early to call the bottom of the M&A market. I would not be surprised if we continue to have this low level of M&A for the next three to six months.” In fact, the uplift camp finds itself in a trap. The more they talk up M&A, the higher stock prices go — almost the definition of a rally built on squishy ground. The situation was pretty accurately summed up in the new BusinessWeek whose cover story , by Roben Farzad, described two camps battling for hearts and minds. On one hand, there’s the gang arguing that last year’s crisis created a de-leveraged, rebalanced “new normal” that we haven’t yet begun to cope with. Who pops up as a proponent of this new normal but El-Erian, which makes you wonder whether he and his similarly gloomy boss at Pimco, William Gross, are talking up their own book. On the other side, there are the “old normalists” who believe we’re about to bounce back to our former levels like tackling dummies. The crisis was an anomaly of sorts, temporarily knocking a robust economy off its stride. We’re not about to fundamentally change. We are who we are, and that’s pretty decent. (These attitudes have a real effect on political issues like regulatory reform and even Federal Reserve interest rate policy.) Give BusinessWeek credit for more than just getting issues out in the midst of selling itself: The magazine has enough sense to note that the real question here is the squirrelly definition of “normal.” This is the same magazine, alas, that late last year was saying that given the crisis we had to retrospectively shrink all those inflated growth figures from the previous boom, suggesting, in other words, that it had a “new normal,” and it was late 2008. These two perspectives obviously sit uneasily with each other, but hey, it’s the magazine business. The idea of “normal” suggests that there is a kind of optimal capacity or efficiency in the economy that is then accurately mirrored (or not) in various metrics, from M&A to stock prices to unemployment. In other words, “normal” suggests a point of equilibrium, theoretical or real, that like a Platonic ideal exists at any given duration in time, from a day to a year to a century. For true believers, this “normal” can accrue political, moral, even religious meaning. We will always reach value, truth and beauty if we just wait long enough; this is comforting, but it’s a little like getting to determine when a football game ends. Various observers take very different views of “normal.” Some believe that “normal” exists as a deep, inherent attribute of the economy, linked somehow to culture or demographics or God, which suggests that we can try to emulate “normals” that existed, say, in the 1960s — or at least ransack through history trying to find “normals” we like. Others view “normal” as more dynamic. In the Financial Times , El-Erian predicts “it will take years for unemployment to return to its natural rate, even after the natural rate shifts upward.” That shifting natural rate is a rough approximation of normal. But there’s another view of “normal” that has come out of the crisis stronger than ever: that “normal” doesn’t exist at all, that the belief in market equilibrium is part of the kit bag of ideas, including the efficient market and rational expectations, which have been effectively undermined. Authers in the Financial Times goes into those arguments in a clear-minded survey Tuesday. The trouble, as Authers recognizes, is that there’s nothing to replace the solid base, the certainty that the efficient market, with its underlying belief in normal equilibria, could provide. Investing is a human endeavor. And money management is both a social and a bureaucratic enterprise pursued by mortal, anxiety-prone, not always prescient folks. Investors, from Aunt Mary to CalPERS, need some method that makes sense (or that at least is socially validated, the more the better, which explains the power of crowds) and some metric that feels “normal.” Without it, the whole enterprise, from money management to M&A, feels like a total roll of the dice. We live by fictions; and we seek refuge in crowds. The next best thing to being right is to be wrong with everyone else. And the crowd, as we should know very well by now, has immense power to resist whatever reality — whatever “normal” — lurks out there, sometimes for a very long time. Perhaps (this is an old Bush administration mantra) that underlying reality of “facts” can be reshaped entirely by whatever conventional wisdom is being peddled, and that if we can just achieve enough momentum, we can actually pull off Larry Summers’ takeoff. Put that way, the current tug of war is occurring between those who believe in “facts” and those who simply believe in the trend. Caution is probably in order. We may not have changed fundamentally since last year, but we’re not quite the same either. The one thing that’s certain here is that there’s no certainty at all. Robert Teitelman is the editor in chief of The Deal.

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Big Pharma Getting Billions More Than Reported Out Of Senate Finance Bill

September 29, 2009

The introduction of the Senate Finance Committee’s health care proposal turns the focus from what the pharmaceutical industry will contribute to reform efforts toward what manufacturers stand to gain. The pharmaceutical industry could see an increase of approximately $115 billion over 10 years in U.S. drug sales as a direct result of the Senate Finance Committee’s health reform legislation – at least by one way of slicing up the numbers used in economic analyses underlying the bill.

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Keith Ferrazzi: Want to Meet Powerful People? Five Places to Look

September 29, 2009

The image is one thing and the human being is another. – Elvis Presley Fame breeds fame. The fact is, all my prowess for reaching out to other people would be far less effective if a few of those people in my Rolodex weren’t well-known names. Problem is, while we’re excited by the idea of meeting “celebrities,” they are often not all that anxious to meet us. So how can we get close to them? Yes, it helps to be at the right places and invited to the right events. But the fancy weekends and invite-only conferences aren’t the only ways to meet important people. In America, there is an association for everything. If you want to meet the movers and shakers directly, you have to become a joiner. It’s amazing how accessible people are when we meet them at events that speak to their interests. Check out my blog for a list of ways you can connect with Powerful People. There’s nothing wrong with looking for ways to spend time with people who have accomplished more and have more wisdom than you. Once you put yourself in position to connect with the famous and powerful, the key is not to feel as if you’re undeserving or an impostor. You’re a star in your own right, with your own accomplishments, and you have a whole lot to give to the world. If you pursue celebrities in a sincere manner, with good intentions, you’re not being manipulative. And if you are emboldened by a mission and you’ve put in the time and hard work to establish a web of people that count on you, then the time will come when your growing influence will put you in a place where you’ll be face-to-face with someone who can help you make a difference. Question: Have you ever truly connected with a celebrity or person of influence? What worked? Join me on my blog at http://www.keithferrazzi.com/blog !

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Elmo Tickle Hands Selling for $30 Will Top Holiday Gifts, Toy Insider Says

September 29, 2009

By Allison Abell Schwartz Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Elmo Tickle Hands , a Transformer that becomes a truck, and a DVD game based on the film “Twilight” may be among the best-selling gifts this holiday season as toymakers seek to attract parents shopping on budgets. Mattel Inc. ’s $29.99 Elmo hands, which emit sounds and phrases from the popular Sesame Street character, and Hasbro Inc. ’s $44.99 Optimus Prime from the movie “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” were among the “Hot 20” chosen by the Toy Insider , a consumer shopping guide being released today. Half of the toys retail for $30 or less and all are under $100. Mattel, Hasbro and other toymakers that make at least a third of their annual revenue from the fourth quarter, offered toys for less than $20 last holiday season to lure parents grappling with tighter budgets. This year parents again will look for bargains, and manufacturers have responded with lower prices, said Jonathan Samet, the Toy Insider’s publisher. “Gift givers this year are going to be very sensitive about the money they allocate toward their holiday shopping,” said Samet, who is based in New York and has worked in the toy industry for 26 years. Even if the economy improves, “I still think that parents are going to be more sensitive to what they spend.” Last year’s “Hot 20” list included Hasbro’s Furreal Friends Biscuit, an animatronic puppy that lies down and moves its head. The puppy retailed for about $179, the only item on last year’s list to top $100, Samet said. Promoting Toys Retailers are also looking for ways to boost revenue after last year’s holiday shopping season was the worst in four decades. Toys “R” Us will open more than 80 temporary locations across the country starting next month as well as more than 260 temporary stores within Babies “R” Us locations. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s largest retailer, has featured a “Family Night Center” in its stores this month to help customers find ideas and savings on games for families. Sears Holdings Corp., the biggest U.S. department-store company, started selling toys in August through 20 in-store toy shops. U.S. toy sales through August dropped 2 percent to $10.3 billion from $10.4 billion a year earlier, according to NPD Group Inc., a Port Washington-based researcher. In 2008, toy sales fell 3 percent to $21.6 billion, according to NPD data. Robotic Hamsters Toy sales may decline about 1 percent this holiday season, according to Gerrick Johnson , a toy analyst at BMO Capital Markets in New York. “It’s still going to be weak, but I would be surprised if the decline is bigger than it was last year,” Johnson said, citing retailers’ efforts to boost toy sales. Zhu Zhu Pets, robotic hamsters that sell for as little at $9.99, may be the hot product this year, he said. Zhu Zhu Pets are currently sold out on the Web sites of Wayne, New Jersey- based Toys “R” Us and Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart . Toys based on movie and television properties will be popular this holiday, Samet said. In addition to the Optimus Prime toy, a “Force Trainer” tied to the Star Wars series, and the “Twilight Scene It?” DVD game are on the “Hot 20” list. Toys that connect to virtual worlds on the Internet have become more popular as children have been introduced to technology at an earlier age, Samet said. Spin Master’s “Liv Dolls” and Leapfrog Enterprises Inc.’s “My Pal Scout & My Pal Violet,” which can be customized online, are among products on the Toy Insider’s list. The fourth annual Toy Insider will be published Oct. 22 in the November issue of Hearst Corp.’s Redbook magazine. Toymakers don’t pay for their products to appear on the list, Samet said. Mattel, based in El Segundo, California, rose 12 cents to $18.08 yesterday in Nasdaq Stock Market trading . Pawtucket, Rhode Island-based Hasbro advanced 2 cents to $27.20 on the New York Stock Exchange. To contact the reporter on this story: Allison Abell Schwartz in New York at aabell@bloomberg.net .

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Finding a Job May Be Getting Easier Than It Looks: Chart of the Day

September 29, 2009

By David Wilson Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Employment in the U.S. is rebounding at a “significantly faster” pace than seasonally adjusted data on jobless claims would suggest, according to Oscar Gruss & Son Inc. The CHART OF THE DAY compares this year’s unadjusted and adjusted figures on continuing claims, or the number of people receiving unemployment benefits who filed for them at least two weeks earlier. The data were compiled by the Labor Department. The pre-adjustment total dropped for the last nine weeks, the longest streak since May 2008. The number of claims fell by 1.05 million, or 17 percent, during the period. Adjusted claims changed direction on a week-to-week basis throughout the period and declined by only 113,000, or 1.8 percent. Continuing claims are the most reliable cyclical indicator of U.S. employment, according to Michael Shaoul , chief executive officer at Oscar Gruss, and Michael Aronstein , chief investment strategist. In their view, the adjusted figures overstate these claims after understating them earlier this year. “Our assumption is that the sheer brutality of the current cycle has caused the statisticians to cease to trust the ‘raw’ data and therefore fall into the trap of abusing the process of seasonal adjustment,” they wrote in the report. Shaoul and Aronstein estimated that continuing claims ought to be about 5.7 million on an adjusted basis, as opposed to the 6.14 million reported for the week ended Sept. 11. (To save a copy of the chart, click here.) To contact the reporter on this story: David Wilson in New York at dwilson@bloomberg.net

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Senators Clash Over Public Health Insurance Option Before Panel Vote Today

September 29, 2009

By Laura Litvan and Kristin Jensen Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — The Senate Finance Committee began its fifth day of debate over health legislation, with Chairman Max Baucus poised to join Republicans in voting against a proposed government program to compete with private insurers. The “public option” is the biggest flashpoint in the deliberations over how to revamp the U.S. medical system, with many Democrats arguing that it’s essential to reining in costs by providing competition to private insurers. Republicans oppose the plan, saying it will undercut the companies. “Why would we not do this?” said West Virginia Senator Jay Rockefeller , who proposed adding a public option to legislation put forward by Baucus, a Montana Democrat. “People come second and the profits come first if we’re against this.” Baucus’s panel, the last of five to draft a measure, plans to vote today on the amendment. New York Democrat Charles Schumer intends to introduce another amendment on the issue and said he’ll also raise it on the Senate floor. Rejection by the Senate would set up a showdown with the House, where three committees have already included the option in legislation. Schumer said last week the idea is an “underdog” on the finance committee. Baucus left it out of the proposal he released earlier this month because of opposition from Republicans and some conservative Democrats. Today, Baucus said insurance companies are already facing a host of new standards in his proposal, including a requirement that they issue policies to all who need them and restrictions on the different premium charges they can place on the youngest and oldest policy holders. They would also have new competition from nonprofit cooperatives. Feet to Fire “It does hold insurance companies’ feet to the fire,” he said of his proposal. Rockefeller said his amendment would probably save $50 billion over 10 years and reduce costs for families, not focus on profits for insurers such as Philadelphia-based Cigna Corp. Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa, the top Republican on the panel, countered that a public option would be “a slow walk toward government-controlled, single-payer health care.” Baucus originally intended to finish up his panel’s work in three days. As this morning began, he said the finance committee had already considered 60 amendments and was holding the longest “mark-up” of a measure in 15 years. The panel later will take up issues such as how to pay for the health-care legislation, which carries an estimated cost of about $900 billion over 10 years. Baucus’s plan, the basis for the panel’s work, includes a tax on high-end, or “Cadillac,” insurance plans, an idea also gaining traction in the House. Stocks Down The insurance industry opposes new taxes as well as the public option, saying it would disrupt coverage. The Standard & Poor’s index of 13 managed-care companies has dropped 7.8 percent in the past month, with industry leaders WellPoint Inc. of Indianapolis and UnitedHealth Group Inc. of Minnetonka, Minnesota, among the biggest losers. During that same period, the S&P 500 index has gained 2.9 percent. If the finance panel passes its legislation , Senate leaders must combine the measure with one passed by the Senate health committee and then schedule a chamber vote. It would have to be merged with a House version before more votes. House leaders are trying to combine versions of the health-care legislation approved by three committees in that chamber. Democrats are debating whether the public option should be allowed to peg the reimbursements it gives to providers to the lower rates paid by Medicare, the government program for the elderly. Baucus’s panel has drawn the most attention on the issue in Congress because it’s the only one with a proposal that may still get Republican support; it also won praise from the White House. Last week, Baucus thwarted challenges to his plan from both parties. “They defeated all of the crippling amendments,” said former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle , a Bloomberg Television contributor, in an interview this morning. “They showed the cohesion they’re going to need all the way through this process to get the job done.” To contact the reporters on this story: Nicole Gaouette in Washington at ngaouette@bloomberg.net ; Laura Litvan in Washington at llitvan@bloomberg.net

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New York Terrorism Suspect Zazi Pleads Not Guilty to Bombing Conspiracy

September 29, 2009

By Patricia Hurtado Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Najibullah Zazi, an Afghan man who U.S. prosecutors said may have sought to explode a bomb in New York near the anniversary of the 2001 terror attacks, pleaded not guilty to a conspiracy indictment during a hearing in federal court in Brooklyn. Zazi, 24, a former airport shuttle van driver, was engaged in “a chilling and disturbing sequence of events,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy Neff said in Denver federal court last week, where Zazi was arrested on a charge of lying to the FBI. The sequence “suggests the defendant was intent on making a bomb and being in New York on 9/11 for purposes of perhaps using such item,” Neff said. Transferred to New York last week, Zazi was brought to court today before U.S. District Judge Raymond Dearie for his initial hearing in the conspiracy case. Zazi faces as much as life in prison if convicted. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is seeking others in the probe, according to court papers. At today’s hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Knox said the alleged conspiracy was “international” in scope. Dearie rejected bail for Zazi and ordered him held in custody until a December court hearing. Dearie said the defendant poses a risk of flight and a danger to the community. Bomb-Making Instructions Zazi received bomb-making instructions while in Pakistan, where he attended an al-Qaeda training camp, the U.S. said in the conspiracy indictment unsealed Sept. 24. He and three other unnamed associates also purchased components for improvised explosive devices during a period from July to September, the government claimed. After Zazi drove from Denver to New York in early September, he attempted to assemble the components, prosecutors said last week. Investigators contend they have evidence Zazi stayed at a New York hotel cooking the chemical items intended for use in the bomb. Authorities in New York searched Zazi’s rental car and found he had images of nine pages of bomb-making instructions on a computer laptop. They included the making of TATP, an explosive used in the 2005 London train bombings and intended for use in the 2001 plot to blow up an airplane by “shoe bomber” Richard Reid , prosecutors said. Cell Phone The defendant was found to have a cell phone video of Grand Central Terminal in New York City, according to the New York Daily News, citing unidentified people. City subways and Metro- North trains to upstate New York and Connecticut go through the terminal, located in midtown Manhattan. Federal agents also searched a hotel room where Zazi stayed in the Denver area and found chemical residue and acetone in the vents above the stove, indicating the chemicals were heated to make them more potent and more concentrated. “His actions suggest that the defendant was in the throes of making his bomb,” Neff said. Zazi “did receive detailed bomb-making information. Evidence also indicates he and other individuals closely associated to him were seen purchasing” materials, such as hydrogen peroxide and acetone, to make the explosives, the lawyer said at the Denver hearing. Michael Dowling, a lawyer for Zazi, wasn’t immediately available for comment. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said last week that the investigation was continuing. ‘Imminent Threat’ “We believe any imminent threat arising from this case has been disrupted, but as always we remind the American public to be vigilant,” Holder said. Assistant Attorney General David Kris said last week that authorities had no specific information regarding the timing, location or target of any planned attack. Two other men who were arrested and charged with lying to the government as part of the terror investigation were granted bail Sept. 24 by federal judges in Denver and New York. Zazi’s father, Mohammed Wali Zazi, 53, who appeared with his son in Denver, was ordered released on bond. A criminal complaint alleged that he lied to officials who questioned him about his son’s activities. The third defendant is Ahamad Wais Afzali, 37, of New York City, who prosecutors described as an acquaintance of the Zazis and a funeral home employee, was freed on $1.5 million bond after his parents, who own an Afghan restaurant in Virginia and his wife, a New York City public school teacher, co-signed the bond. The case is U.S. v. Najibullah Zazi, 09-CR-00663, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Brooklyn). To contact the reporter on this story: Patricia Hurtado in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in Brooklyn at pathurtado@bloomberg.net .

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Stocks in U.S. Fluctuate as Consumer Companies Gain, Energy Shares Decline

September 29, 2009

By Elizabeth Stanton Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fluctuated as better- than-estimated earnings at Walgreen Co. and the biggest gain in home prices in four years sent consumer shares higher, while energy producers dropped as a stronger dollar dragged down oil. Walgreen Co. jumped to a 17-month high as rising sales of prescription drugs boosted results. Gannett Co. rallied 19 percent after the largest U.S. newspaper publisher predicted third-quarter earnings that topped analysts’ estimates. Lennar Corp. led homebuilders higher after the S&P/Case-Shiller home- price index rose 1.2 percent in July from the prior month. Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp. slipped as oil retreated. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 0.1 percent to 1,064.01 at 1:18 p.m. in New York after falling as much as 0.5 percent earlier. The Dow Jones Industrial Average decreased 8.23 points, or 0.1 percent, to 9,781.13. The S&P 500 has rallied 57 percent from a 12-year low in March, pushing valuations in the index to about 20 times the reported profits from continuing operations, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s near the most expensive level since 2004. Alcoa Inc. will be the first Dow company to release third- quarter earnings, scheduled for Oct. 7. Micron Technology Inc. and Constellation Brands Inc. are among the S&P 500 companies set to release results this week. Lennar, the third-largest U.S. homebuilder, rose 2.6 percent to $15.03. KB Home, the Los Angeles-based homebuilder that sells to first-time buyers, added 2.6 percent to $17.34. The S&P/Case-Shiller index of home values in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas rose 1.2 percent in July from the prior month, the most in almost four years. ‘Seeing the Bottom’ “We’re seeing the bottom in the housing market,” said Robert Lutts , president of Cabot Money Management in Boston, which manages $450 million. “What the stock market is gauging here is the health of the consumer. Every time you see a tick up in home values, it puts a floor under the economy which the market is going to love.” Walgreen Co. jumped 10 percent to $37.65, a 17-month high. Fiscal fourth-quarter profit beat analyst estimates as the company sold more prescription drugs. Gannett rose the most in the S&P 500, rallying 19 percent to $11.83. The largest U.S. newspaper publisher said it anticipates third-quarter adjusted earnings of at least 39 cents a share. The average analyst estimate in a Bloomberg survey was 31 cents. Exxon Mobil Corp., the biggest U.S. oil company, fell 0.4 percent to $69.33 and was the biggest drag on the S&P 50. A Senate measure to control global warming calls on U.S. power plants, factories and refineries to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by 20 percent through 2020, a deeper cut than approved by the House, according to a draft to be released tomorrow. Polo Ralph Lauren Climbs Polo Ralph Lauren Corp., the designer of Chaps and Club Monaco clothing, rose 5 percent to $77.95 after being upgraded to “buy” from “neutral” at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Goldman said the company is “at the start of a multi-year growth opportunity.” MBIA Inc. sank 3.7 percent to $7.92 after Standard & Poor’s cut the credit ratings of the world’s biggest bond insurer by total guarantees. The company had its rating lowered to BB- , or three steps below investment grade, from BB by S&P, which cited continued losses related to structured finance products. U.S. stocks rose yesterday as takeovers in the drug and technology industries added to evidence that acquisitions are rebounding from the slowest pace in six years. Mergers and acquisitions involving U.S. companies have totaled $49.3 billion in September, compared with $26.6 billion in August and $36.8 billion in July, based on Bloomberg data. Wien’s Reputation The steepest rally in the S&P 500 Index since the 1930s is restoring Byron Wien’s reputation as a stock picker. Wien, hired by Blackstone Group LP last month, said he’s keeping his January forecast for a 33 percent annual gain in the benchmark index, implying a 13 percent advance from yesterday’s close. More than six months ago, the S&P 500 needed to rise 77 percent to reach Wien’s year-end prediction of 1,200. Wien’s year-end forecast for the S&P 500 is higher than the average estimate of strategists surveyed by Bloomberg of 1,037. U.S. equities are in a bull market and profits will increase as the economy rebounds, bringing down price-to- earnings ratios, Laszlo Birinyi said. “The bull market is intact,” Birinyi, the founder of Westport, Connecticut-based research and money-management firm Birinyi Associates Inc., said today in a Bloomberg Television interview. “The market is saying that the ‘E’ part of P/E may be a pleasant surprise. The market is forecasting that you’re going to have a better recovery than people think.” To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

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Federal Reserve Proposes Rules to Implement Credit-Card Law, Restrict Fees

September 29, 2009

By Jeff Plungis Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Federal Reserve proposed rules today that will end banks’ ability to apply credit-card payments to balances with the lowest interest rates first, implementing legislation Congress passed in May. The Fed also proposed that creditors obtain consumers’ consent before charging fees for transactions that exceed credit limits. Restrictions on lending to people under the age of 21 and subprime credit-card fees were also included in the rules, the Fed said in a statement . “The rule bans several harmful practices and requires greater transparency in the disclosure of the terms and conditions of credit-card accounts,” Federal Reserve Governor Elizabeth Duke said in the statement. President Barack Obama signed the credit-card legislation in May, describing its provisions as “common-sense reforms” that would “protect consumers.” The proposed Fed rules will take effect Feb. 22. To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net .

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FDIC Wants Banks to Prepay Fees Through ’12 to Boost Its Depleted Reserves

September 29, 2009

By Alison Vekshin Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is asking lenders to prepay three years of premiums, raising $45 billion, to replenish reserves drained by the fastest pace of bank failures in 17 years. The insurance fund will have a negative balance as of tomorrow after 120 banks were shut in the past two years, and will be positive by 2012, the staff said. Banks failures may cost $100 billion through 2013 with half the cost already incurred, the FDIC said. The agency today rejected options for a second special fee or borrowing from the Treasury Department. “What we are proposing to do is to tap the ample liquidity of the banking industry to improve our own liquidity position without borrowing from the Treasury,” FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said at a Washington board meeting. The agency is required by law to rebuild the insurance fund when the reserve measured against insured deposits falls below a certain level. The fund, drained by 95 bank failures this year, had $10.4 billion as of June 30 and will return to a positive balance in 2012. The proposal adopted unanimously by the board requires banks to pay premiums for the fourth quarter and next three years on Dec. 30. The board backed prepayments over alternatives such as borrowing taxpayer dollars from the Treasury Department, charging the banking industry a special fee in addition to levies they already pay and borrowing directly from the banks. Dec. 30 Payment Under the proposal, the FDIC wouldn’t impose another special assessment this year. The agency would raise assessments by 3 basis points in 2011. The FDIC will seek public comment until Oct. 28. The banking industry lobbied against a special fee that would be added to the regular annual premium, telling the FDIC and Congress such a levy would hurt their ability to raise capital. The industry welcomed the FDIC’s proposed approach. “It’s certainly a better solution than taking a large chunk of money out of banks’ income and capital,” James Chessen , chief economist at the American Bankers Association , said after the meeting. The prepayment approach gives “the FDIC the cash that they need, it will be paid for by the industry and it will not have the severe impact that other options would have had on banking,” Chessen said. Banks paid a special assessment in the second quarter that raised $5.6 billion for the insurance fund. The agency also has authority to impose fees in the third and fourth quarters. Banks backed prepayment because the premiums are classified as an asset when the payment is made, becoming an expense during the quarter in which the obligation is due. The agency has authority to borrow against a Treasury line of credit that Congress in May increased to $100 billion. This option would have put the FDIC in the position of borrowing from taxpayers in the wake of public anger over the bank bailout. To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Vekshin in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net .

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Whitestone REIT Announces Third Quarter 2009 Dividend

September 29, 2009

HOUSTON, Sept. 29, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Whitestone REIT, a public, non-traded community business center real estate investment trust (REIT), announced a quarterly cash dividend of $0.1125 per common share and per limited partnership unit for the third quarter of 2009. The dividend will be paid to common shareholders and limited partnership unit holders in three monthly installments of $0.0375 per share or limited partnership unit on or about the first day of October, November, and December. The dividend is unchanged from the amount paid in the previous quarter and represents the 12th consecutive quarterly dividend declared on common shares and limited partnership units since the management was internalized within the REIT in October 2006.

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TechLaw Solutions Selects Chad Arsich as Regional Director

September 29, 2009

CHANTILLY, VA–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – TechLaw Solutions is pleased to announce that e-Discovery veteran Chad Arsich has joined the company as Midwest Regional Director, based in Chicago, Illinois. Over the 10-plus years Chad has spent in e-Discovery and litigation support he has developed strong expertise in data collection, electronic file processing, hosting, and data review. His experience includes coordination and management of multi-terabyte electronic discovery processing projects under strict project deadlines.

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Dave Rothenberg Joins Knewco, Inc. as Chief Executive Officer

September 29, 2009

Industry Veteran to Run Emerging In-Text Knowledge Discovery and Advertising Company

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ValCom Partners With Bid4Assets for Its Largest Televised Real Estate Auction Ever (Marketwire)

September 29, 2009

CLEARWATER, FL–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – ValCom, Inc. ( OTCBB : VLCO ) and its MyFamilyTV broadcast network subsidiary today announced that they will be partnering with Bid4Assets, a leading online real estate auction company, to produce its largest televised real estate auction to date in a four-hour live auction show, “My Family Real Estate Auction.” The live auction show will air …

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Sirona Biochem Adds French Patenting ‘Top Gun’ Lawyer to Its Scientific Advisory Board

September 29, 2009

VANCOUVER, BC–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – Mark Senner, President, Reports: Sirona Biochem Corp. ( TSX-V : SBM ), an emerging biotech company focused on diabetes and obesity, announced today the first major appointment to its Scientific Advisory Board, patent lawyer Jacques Warcoin, CEO of Cabinet Regimbeau in Paris, France. M. Warcoin filed the first biotechnology patent in France 31 years ago and heads up a 180-person patent law firm in Paris. At the heart of his success is the belief that you ‘have to stay on top of the science until your retirement.’

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Donini Announces New President for Canadian Subsidiary

September 29, 2009

MONTREAL–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – Peter Deros, President and CEO of Donini Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : DNNC ), announced today that Jean Vassiliadis has been named President and CEO of its operating Canadian subsidiary Pizzacorp DTC Franchises Inc., effective immediately. Mr. Vassiliadis is currently an owner operator of a Pizza Donini franchise in the greater Montréal area and a member of the Board of Directors of Donini Inc.

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Exelon Quits Chamber Of Commerce Over Climate Change Legislation

September 29, 2009

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has lost another member because of its opposition to climate change legislation, reports the Washington Post. The nation’s largest nuclear power generator, Exelon, has announced it will leave the nation’s largest business association. John Rowe, chairman and chief executive for the company, said “inaction on climate is not an option” in a speech at an energy efficiency conference. From the Post : “If Congress does not act, the EPA will, and the result will be more arbitrary, more expensive and more uncertain for investors and the industry than a reasonable, market-based legislative solution.” Exelon is not alone in dropping its Chamber of Commerce membership. New Mexico’s Public Service Company and Pacific Gas and Electric have also quit, both citing the Chamber’s stance on climate change legislation.

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Move Over, Deodorant; Underarm Spray May Increase Testosterone, Sex Drive

September 29, 2009

By Simeon Bennett Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Men with low sex drive because of decreased amounts of testosterone may someday find help as easy as applying an underarm spray. The spray, called Axiron, restored levels of the hormone to normal in 84 percent of testosterone-deficient men after four months, its developer Acrux Ltd., said in a statement today. The Melbourne-based company said it will seek approval this year from the Food and Drug Administration to sell Axiron in the U.S., the world’s largest pharmaceuticals market. More than a third of American men over 45 years suffer testosterone deficiency, U.S. researchers found in a 2006 study . It can sap sex drive and cause impotence, osteoporosis and memory loss, according to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Shares of Acrux , which has never made a profit, have more than tripled this year on anticipation of the trial results. The trial “exceeded all of our expectations,” Chief Executive Officer Richard Treagus said on a conference call today. “We believe this will generate significant revenue for our company from 2010 onwards.” The global market for testosterone treatments was worth $1 billion in the year ended March and grew more than 20 percent in the U.S., Acrux said, citing data from IMS Health Inc. The company plans to start discussions with potential partners next month, Treagus said. Take Profits Acrux rose 1 cent to A$1.61 on the Australian stock exchange, valuing the company at A$257 million ($225 million). “We suggest that investors who entered Acrux for the release of these results may care to take profits today,” Tanya Solomon , a health-care analyst with RBS Morgans Ltd. in Brisbane, said in a note to clients today. She owns the stock and rates it a “ buy .” Axiron overcomes problems associated with testosterone gels, which are considered messy, sticky and slow-drying, Acrux said. About 94 percent of patients and 92 percent of doctors rated the product better than testosterone gels when considering the risk of the product rubbing off on other people, the company said. Acrux Chief Financial Officer Jon Pilcher declined to estimate Axiron’s sales potential. Androgel, a product made by Brussels-based Solvay SA , had sales of 337 million euros ($493 million) in 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A Testosterone gel made by Malvern, Pennsylvania-based Auxilium Pharmaceuticals Inc. had 2008 sales of $125 million. In the company-funded study involving 135 men in six countries, test subjects reported having twice as much sex and 80 percent more libido on average after using Axiron. They also had a 35 percent increase in sexual performance and a 13 percent increase in positive mood, the study showed. No serious side- effects were reported, Acrux said in the statement. To contact the reporter on this story: Simeon Bennett in Singapore at sbennett9@bloomberg.net

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Home Prices in 20 U.S. Cities Climb the Most in Four Years as Slump Abates

September 29, 2009

By Bob Willis Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Home values in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas climbed in July by the most in almost four years, a sign the housing slump that led to the worst recession in seven decades is abating. The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index rose 1.2 percent in July from the prior month, the biggest gain since October 2005, the group said today in New York. From a year earlier , values were down 13.3 percent, less than economists anticipated. Another report showed consumer confidence unexpectedly fell. Foreclosure-driven price declines, low borrowing costs and government tax credits for first-time buyers have lifted home sales for much of this year, helping to slow the decline in prices. Stability in real-estate values and rising stock prices may help prop up spending as American consumers fret over mounting joblessness. “The worst has passed,” said Mark Vitner , a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina. “We expect prices to bottom out around the middle of next year and then look for modest price appreciation for the next several years. There is still a tremendous oversupply of homes in most major markets.” The New York-based Conference Board’s consumer confidence measure fell to 53.1 in September from 54.5 the prior month, the private research group said today, amid growing concern over the lack of jobs. The gauge was projected to increase to 57, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. 500 Index Retreats The Standard & Poor’s 500 index dropped after the confidence report, erasing earlier gains. The index fell 0.1 percent to 1,062.03 at 10:06 a.m. in New York. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.31 percent from 3.28 percent late yesterday. The S&P/Case-Shiller index was forecast to fall 14.2 percent in the year ended in July, according to the median projection of 36 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Estimates ranged from declines of 12.5 percent to 15 percent. The measure fell 15.4 percent in the 12 months ended in June. Year-over-year records began in 2001 and the gauge has fallen every month since January 2007. All 20 cities in the S&P/Case-Shiller index showed a smaller year-over-year price decrease in July than in the prior month. Las Vegas showed the biggest plunge at 31 percent, followed by Phoenix at 29 percent. Cleveland showed the smallest decline at 1.3 percent. Broad Gains Compared with the prior month, 17 of the 20 areas covered showed an increase, led by a 3.1 percent jump in Minneapolis and a 2.9 percent increase in San Francisco. Las Vegas suffered the biggest one-month decrease at 1.9 percent. Combined sales of new and existing homes have risen for four out of the last five months, signaling the worst of the housing crisis is over. Sales of new homes climbed in August to the highest level in almost a year, the Commerce Department reported last week. Sales of existing homes unexpectedly declined, while remaining at the second-highest level in 23 months, the National Association of Realtors reported last week. Fed policy makers last week said they would keep the benchmark lending rate near zero “for an extended period,” while noting that the economy and housing had strengthened. They also said they would slow the central bank’s purchases of mortgage debt and extend the program through the first quarter of 2010 in order to keep lending rates low. Profit Pending Lennar Corp., the third-largest U.S. homebuilder, is among companies that see demand improving, even as losses mount. The Miami-based company said last week it expects to turn a profit in fiscal 2010. “In the third quarter we started to see some real signs that the housing market is in fact starting to stabilize,” Stuart Miller , Lennar’s chief executive officer, said on a Sept. 21 conference call. “The sense that now is the time to buy is starting to gain momentum.” Mounting foreclosures present a risk of renewed price declines as more homes are thrown onto the market. Foreclosure filings in August exceeded 300,000 for the sixth straight month, according to data from RealtyTrac Inc. A total of 358,471 properties received a default or auction notice or were seized last month, 18 percent more than a year earlier. KB Home, the Los Angeles-based homebuilder that sells to first-time buyers, on Sept. 25 reported a third-quarter loss exceeding analysts’ estimates and said a housing recovery isn’t imminent. “The precise timing of a housing recovery remains uncertain,” Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Mezger said on a conference call with analysts. To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

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Iran May Quit Nuclear Non-Proliferation Pact If Talks Fail, Lawmaker Says

September 29, 2009

By Ali Sheikholeslami Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Iran may end its participation in the global nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty if talks this week fail to resolve the international dispute over the country’s atomic development, a member of the parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee said. The West has always had a “carrots and sticks” approach to Iran, said lawmaker Mohammad Karami-Rad, who urged the powers to “end their excuses and negotiate on significant issues,” the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported. “If Iran remains under Zionist pressures and U.S. bullying and if the 5+1 talks fail, the parliament will take clear stands, such as quitting the NPT,” he said, referring to Israel and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany A delegation from Iran will meet in Geneva on Oct. 1 with representatives of the world powers to discuss the Iranian uranium-enrichment program, a project that has prompted three sets of United Nations sanctions. Iran told the UN atomic agency on Sept. 21 that it’s building a second enrichment plant. The U.S., the U.K. and France on Sept. 25 demanded immediate access to the site by UN inspectors. Uranium enrichment is at the center of Western concerns about Iran’s nuclear program. The process isolates a uranium isotope needed to generate fuel for a nuclear power reactor; in higher concentrations it can be used to make a bomb. Iran denies it is developing a nuclear weapon and insists the enrichment is needed for civilian uses, such as the production of electricity. Further Sanctions Iran’s construction of the underground plant may prompt additional economic sanctions, including restrictions on banking and on oil and gas technology, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told CNN Sept. 27. Iran denies it violated the rules of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency, saying it complied with a requirement to notify the IAEA of the facility’s existence at least 18 months before uranium enters the plant. Iran tested several missiles this week, including its two- stage, solid-fuel Sejil and the liquid-fuel Shahab-3, which both put Israel within reach. In May, Iran launched a Sejil-2, which it said has a range of 2,000 kilometers (1,240 miles). The Obama administration said yesterday Iran’s missile test was typical of the “provocative” acts by the country. The Iranian parliament urged the leading UN powers to use the “historic opportunity” at the Geneva talks. In a statement, 239 lawmakers today warned that the country may adopt other alternatives if the powers “repeat their mistakes,” IRNA reported. To contact the reporter on this story: Ali Sheikholeslami in London at alis2@bloomberg.net .

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Pimco’s Gross Says He’s Purchasing Treasuries to Protect Against Deflation

September 29, 2009

By Thomas R. Keene and Susanne Walker Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Bill Gross , who runs the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co. , said he’s been buying longer maturity Treasuries in recent weeks amid a re-emergence of deflation concern. “We’ve exchanged our mortgages for the government’s check” as the Federal Reserve winds down purchases of agency debt, Gross said in an interview from Newport Beach, California, with Bloomberg Radio. Gross boosted the $177.5 billion Total Return Fund’s investment in government-related bonds to 44 percent of assets, the most since August 2004, from 25 percent in July, according data released earlier this month on Pimco’s Web site. The fund cut mortgage debt to 38 percent from 47 percent. The Total Return Fund handed investors a 17.85 percent gain in the past year, beating 94 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The one-month return is 1.94 percent, outpacing 57 percent of its competitors. Pimco, based in Newport Beach is a unit of Munich-based insurer Allianz SE. Officials at Pimco have forecast a “new normal” in the global economy that will include heightened government regulation, lower consumption and slower growth. The economy will likely expand at a 2 percent to 3 percent rate going forward, Gross said. The world’s largest economy shrank at a 1.2 percent annual rate from April to June, more than the originally reported 1 percent contraction, according to a Bloomberg News survey before the Commerce Department’s Sept. 30 report. The jobless rate climbed to 9.8 percent this month, from 9.7 percent in August, according to a separate Bloomberg survey before the Labor Department reports figures on Oct. 2. To contact the reporter on this story: Susanne Walker in New York at swalker33@bloomberg.net

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U.S. Stocks Fluctuate as Housing Data Offset Drop in Consumer Confidence

September 29, 2009

By Elizabeth Stanton Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fluctuated after an unexpected slump in consumer confidence offset a smaller-than- forecast drop in home prices. Treasuries declined, while oil retreated as the dollar strengthened. Lennar Corp. and KB Home climbed at least 2.1 percent as the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index fell 13.3 percent in July from a year earlier, the smallest drop in 17 months. Walgreen Co. surged 11 percent on earnings that topped analysts’ estimates. Benchmark indexes erased most of an early advance as the Conference Board’s confidence index trailed estimates. “We’ve had a good rally,” said Randy Bateman , who oversees $13 billion as chief investment officer at Huntington Asset Advisors in Columbus, Ohio. “Some people are going to say valuations have recovered sufficiently given the uncertainties and pull money off the table.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 0.2 percent to 1,064.81 at 10:13 a.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 5.14 points, or 0.1 percent, to 9,794.5. The S&P 500 has rallied 57 percent from a 12-year low in March, pushing valuations in the index to about 20 times the reported profits from continuing operations, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s near the most expensive level since 2004. U.S. stocks rose yesterday as takeovers in the drug and technology industries added to evidence that mergers are rebounding from the slowest pace in six years. Mergers and acquisitions involving U.S. companies have totaled $49.3 billion in September, compared with $26.6 billion in August and $36.8 billion in July, based on Bloomberg data. Earnings Season Alcoa Inc. will be the first Dow company to release third- quarter earnings, scheduled for Oct. 7. Micron Technology Inc. and Constellation Brands Inc. are among the S&P 500 companies set to release results this week. The steepest rally in the S&P 500 Index since the 1930s is restoring Byron Wien’s reputation as a stock picker. Wien, hired by Blackstone Group LP last month, said he’s keeping his January forecast for a 33 percent annual gain in the benchmark index, implying a 13 percent advance from yesterday’s close. More than six months ago, the S&P 500 needed to rise 77 percent to reach Wien’s year-end prediction of 1,200. Wien’s year-end forecast for the S&P 500 is higher than the average estimate of strategists surveyed by Bloomberg of 1,037. To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

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Consumer Confidence in U.S. Unexpectedly Declines Amid Rising Unemployment

September 29, 2009

By Shobhana Chandra Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Confidence among U.S. consumers unexpectedly fell in September as a rising unemployment rate weighed on households. The Conference Board’s confidence index dropped to 53.1, from a revised 54.5 in August, a report from the New York-based group showed today. Measures of present conditions and expectations for six months from now both declined. Unemployment is forecast to rise to 10 percent this year, even as the monthly pace of job losses slows. Today’s report corroborates the Federal Reserve’s assessment last week that sluggish income growth and tight credit are restraining household spending and slowing the pace of the economic recovery. “Layoffs appear to have topped out but hiring has not yet begun,” John Silvia , chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina, said before the report. “Consumer confidence and spending will likely remain constrained well into early 2010.” Consumer confidence was projected to increase to 57 this month, from an originally reported reading of 54.1 in August, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 78 economists. Forecasts ranged from 54 to 70. The index averaged 58 last year. Home Prices A separate report today showed home values in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas declined less than forecast in the year ended in July, a sign the housing slump that led to the worst recession in seven decades is abating. The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index fell 13.3 percent in July from a year earlier, the smallest drop in 17 months, the group said in New York. Adjusted for seasonal variations, the gauge rose 1.2 percent from the prior month. The Conference Board’s measure of present conditions dropped to 22.7 from 25.4 the prior month. The gauge of expectations for the next six months decreased to 73.3 from 73.8. The share of consumers who said jobs are plentiful fell to 3.4 percent from 4.3 percent. The proportion of people who said jobs are hard to get increased to 47 percent from 44.3 percent. The proportion of people who expect their incomes to rise over the next six months increased to 11.2 percent from 10.8 percent. The share expecting more jobs decreased to 17.9 percent from 18 percent. Plans to buy automobiles, homes and major appliances within the next six months declined in September, the report showed. Sentiment Report Today’s figures follow the Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment, which rose this month to the highest level since January 2008. Economists say the Conference Board’s index tends to be more influenced by attitudes about the labor market. The pace of job losses is easing as the economy shows signs of accelerating. Payrolls fell by 216,000 in August, the smallest decline in a year, according to the Labor Department. The economy has lost 6.9 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007, making it the biggest employment slump of any downturn in the post-World War II period. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predict unemployment may reach 10 percent by year-end, the highest level since 1983, from 9.7 percent in August. At the same time, steadying demand is helping some consumer-related businesses such as American Greetings Corp. The second-largest U.S. greeting-card company last week reported a gain in second-quarter profit. ‘Bit Better’ “Sales are actually a bit better than what we expected,” Zev Weiss , chief executive officer of the Cleveland-based company, said on a conference call on Sept. 24. “If you look at it from a year-over-year perspective, they’re hanging in there very nicely. And in this environment, that’s pretty good.” Companies not faring as well include Rite Aid Corp ., the third-largest U.S. drugstore chain. The Camp Hill, Pennsylvania- based business cut its full-year forecast last week, saying customers will remain focused on discounts in a “tough economy.” Confidence may improve in future months as consumers repair their balance sheets. Net worth for households and non-profit groups climbed to $53.1 trillion from $51.1 trillion in the first quarter, marking the first gain since the third quarter of 2007, according to a Sept. 17 report from the Fed. Fed policy makers last week said they would keep the benchmark lending rate near zero “for an extended period,” while noting that the economy and housing had strengthened. They also said they would slow the central bank’s purchases of mortgage debt and extend the program through the first quarter of 2010 in order to keep lending rates low. To contact the reporter on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

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FDIC Says Banks Must Prepay Fees Through 2012 to Boost Depleted Reserves

September 29, 2009

By Alison Vekshin Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., seeking to replenish deposit reserves as banks fail at the fastest pace in 17 years, today voted unanimously to have lenders prepay fees through 2012, raising about $45 billion. Lenders would prepay FDIC premiums for the fourth quarter and next three years on Dec. 30, to replenish the deposit insurance funds that staff estimated will have a negative balance at the end of this quarter, the agency said. The agency raised its estimate for the cost of bank failures to $100 billion through 2013, from $70 billion, and said about half the expenses will be incurred by the end of this quarter. To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Vekshin in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net .

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Thad Cochran Porks Up, Sponsors Most Defense Earmarks

September 29, 2009

Sen. Thad Cochran’s campaign contributors are slated to benefit from $132 million in earmarks from the Mississippi Republican, reported the Washington Post . Cochran, ranking Republican on the Appropriations subcommittee on defense, tucked the earmarks into a spending bill that will see a vote on the Senate floor Tuesday. According to an analysis by Taxpayers for Common Sense , Cochran is the sponsor of more defense earmarks than any of his colleagues. Though President Obama has vowed to crack down on defense pork, the White House reacted mildly to the $636 billion bill and its $2.65 billion in earmarks, the Post reported. Faced with a veto threat, in July the Senate approved an amendment to strike $1.75 billion in funding for unneeded F-22 jets. But there’s no veto threat this time for other projects the Pentagon doesn’t want. Earlier this year Cochran called criticism over $473 million in omnibus earmarks “poppycock.”

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Board proposes rules amending credit card provisions of Regulation Z (Truth in Lending)

September 29, 2009

Board proposes rules amending credit card provisions of Regulation Z (Truth in Lending)

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Written agreement with First Utah Bank

September 29, 2009

Written agreement with First Utah Bank

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The Camden Group Strengthens Advisory Expertise in New Technologies, Services, and Policy

September 29, 2009

New Senior VP Ronald D. Van Horssen Helps Lead Expanded Focus, Leveraging Deep Experience as Award-Winning Healthcare Services and Technology Entrepreneur

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Growth Streak Continues for Victor Results Advertising

September 29, 2009

NASHVILLE, TN–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – Victor Results Advertising , a national leader in the fusion of brand and direct marketing, is excited to announce the addition of Marybeth Peters. Peters takes the helm of Victor Results Media as Vice President, providing leadership and supporting the full-service agency’s growth in integrated media, including DRTV and digital. Peters brings an impressive track record leading the successful media efforts for a variety of high caliber healthcare, insurance and financial clients. She has grown and managed media departments for global (Carat) as well as privately-owned agencies, managing media in the hundreds of millions of dollars per year. Her blue chip client roster includes Pfizer, Black & Decker and Sears, among others. Peters most recently served as Senior Vice President, Media Director for Finelight, Inc., where her accounts included Universal American, Windsor Extra and more.

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Home Prices Increase From June To July

September 29, 2009

NEW YORK — Home prices rose for the third month in a row in July, new data Tuesday showed, more proof a fragile housing recover is underway. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index of 20 major cities rose 1.2 percent from June to a reading of 143.05. Though home prices are still 13.3 percent below July a year ago, the annual declines have slowed in all 20 cities for the sixth straight month. The index is down about 33 percent from the peak in mid-2006. Home prices are now at levels not seen since the third quarter of 2003. And prices in Las Vegas, Detroit and Seattle are still falling. Prices in Las Vegas are down more almost 55 percent from their peak. In August, almost 80 percent of home resales were either a foreclosure or a sale below the value of the mortgage, the National Association of Realtors said last week. The Detroit housing market is being reeling from layoffs in the automotive industry. Seattle, by contrast, was one of the last areas to enter the downturn so prices there have yet to hit bottom. “We do need to be cautious in coming months to assess whether the housing market will weather the expiration of the federal first-time buyer’s tax credit in November, anticipated higher unemployment rates and a possible increase in foreclosures,” said David M. Blitzer, committee chairman for the Case-Shiller index. First-time homeowners can qualify for a tax credit worth 10 percent of the purchase price, up to $8,000, but it expires at the end of November. More than a dozen bills to extend the credit have been introduced in Congress, but it’s unclear if lawmakers want to continue subsidizing the real estate market. Still, there are clear positive trends: 13 metro area posted at least three straight months of price gains. The Case-Shiller indexes measure home price increases and decreases relative to prices in January 2000. The base reading is 100; so a reading of 150 would mean that home prices increased 50 percent since the beginning of the index.

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Christian Science Monitor Traces The History Of Lobbying

September 29, 2009

The Christian Science Monitor examines the history of lobbyists wielding influence over policy in Washington. The report , which is part of a series that takes an in-depth look at the profession — and art — of lobbying, discusses the passage of the 1946 Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act and progressive-era attempts at reforming the practice. From the Monitor : “Congress has always had, and always will have, lobbyists and lobbying,” said Sen. Robert Byrd (D) of West Virginia in a 1987 floor speech. “We could not adequately consider our workload without them…. At the same time, the history of the institution demonstrates the need for eternal vigilance to ensure that lobbyists do not abuse their role.”

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Will Obama Fight For The Consumer Financial Protection Agency?

September 29, 2009

The next couple of months will be crucial in determining the shape of the financial system for decades to come. And so far, the signs are not encouraging. The Obama administration is trying to refocus our attention on regulation, beginning with the president’s speech in New York two weeks ago. The financial system, after all, brought us a near-catastrophic crisis that turned a mild recession into a painfully severe one. And Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, says that he still plans to pass a regulatory reform bill before the end of the year.

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Former LeadROI Executive Raj Parekh Joins LeadPoint as Vice President of Strategic Partnerships

September 29, 2009

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – LeadPoint ( http://www.leadpoint.com ), the world’s first and largest online lead exchange, today announced that Raj Parekh has joined the company as Vice President of Strategic Partnerships. In this role Parekh, who has over 10 years of business development experience with customers and vendors, will be responsible for growing LeadPoint’s top accounts within its data and voice lead products and evangelizing the value and efficiency of purchasing leads through LeadPoint’s exchange.

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Volcker: China’s Rise Underscores The Decline Of The U.S.

September 29, 2009

Former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker said the rise of China and other emerging economies has underscored a decline in the comparative economic and intellectual leadership of the U.S.

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American Lithium Minerals Inc. Appoints Former Vice-Chairman of Merrill Lynch Canada, Mr. Hugh Aird, Vice President of Business Development

September 29, 2009

HENDERSON, NV–(Marketwire – September 29, 2009) – American Lithium Minerals Inc. ( OTCBB : AMLM ) (the “Company”) is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Hugh Aird as Vice President of Business Development. Mr. Aird, former Vice-Chairman of Merrill Lynch Canada, has joined American Lithium Minerals and will head up further Merger and Acquisitions pursuits for the company. Since graduating from Harvard University, Mr. Aird has held numerous top level executive positions throughout the financial industry. He will now work closely with American Lithium Minerals management and the board of directors to help develop and execute the company’s growth strategy. “My research tells me that Lithium is the next explosive growth sector and after researching many of the companies in this space I feel very confident that American Lithium Minerals is the best positioned,” stated Mr. Aird. “The vast opportunities available for A

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Uganda gets $126m loan from ADF

September 29, 2009

Uganda gets $126m loan from ADF

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Bombardier to build high-speed trains in China

September 29, 2009

Bombardier to build high-speed trains in China

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Japan’s consumer prices drop 2.4% in August

September 29, 2009

Japan’s consumer prices drop 2.4% in August

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Japan’s consumer prices drop 2.4% in August

September 29, 2009

Japan’s consumer prices drop 2.4% in August

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Venezuela signs oil pact with Kenya

September 29, 2009

Venezuela signs oil pact with Kenya

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Venezuela signs oil pact with Kenya

September 29, 2009

Venezuela signs oil pact with Kenya

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Vietnam’s economy grows 5.8% in Q3

September 29, 2009

Vietnam’s economy grows 5.8% in Q3

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