October 2009

– investments that will help finance community development projects, stimulate economic growth and create jobs. This will create real opportunities to change lives and transform communities,” said Senator Mikulski, a senior member of the

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Mikulski, Cardin Announce Maryland Organizations to Receive $185 Million in New Markets Tax Credits

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"Distressed Debt" via Industry-News.org in Google Reader:

WARSAW With recent signs of liquidity strains easing and fears of a tidal wave of distressed assets receding following a year of deep uncertainty for the CEE markets, one of the CEE property sectors top lenders warned that, while there have been some

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Developers & investors warned casino not yet open

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CIRE Magazine :: Betting On Troubled Assets

October 31, 2009

These cash-rich buyers are pooling funds to pick up troubled commercial real estate assets at bargain prices. “They are about the only ones with enough cash and no immediate expectation of financing being available soon,” says Ron L. …

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The Secrets To Goldman Sachs’ Success: Contrary Bets, Predatory Lending, Government Connections, Offshore Tax Havens

October 31, 2009

WASHINGTON — In 2006 and 2007, Goldman Sachs Group peddled more than $40 billion in securities backed by at least 200,000 risky home mortgages, but never told the buyers it was secretly betting that a sharp drop in U.S. housing prices would send the value of those securities plummeting.

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Report: More Americans Gaining Weight, Eating Poorly During Recession

October 31, 2009

In an online survey this summer of 1,200 people about food affordability, conducted by food-industry research firm Technomic, 70% of respondents said healthier foods are increasingly difficult to afford.

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Yankees Take 5-3 Lead on Phillies in Fifth Inning of World Series Game 3

October 31, 2009

By Vince Golle Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — The New York Yankees lead the Philadelphia Phillies 5-3 in the fifth inning in Game 3 of the World Series. The Phillies were leading the Yankees 3-2 at the start of the inning until Andy Pettitte’s run-scoring single to center field. Johnny Damon followed with a double that scored Pettitte and Derek Jeter. Phillies pitcher Cole Hamels walked Mark Teixeira and was relieved after giving up three runs on four hits during the inning. Tonight’s game, delayed one hour and 20 minutes because of rain, is the first at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia after the teams split the opening two at Yankee Stadium.

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Clinton Praises Israeli Offer on Settlements; Palestinians Demand Freeze

October 31, 2009

By Indira A.R. Lakshmanan and Calev Ben-David Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Israel’s “unprecedented” offer to limit construction of Jewish settlements on the West Bank, while Palestinians maintained their demand for a total building freeze. Clinton met in Jerusalem with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after stopping in Abu Dhabi to talk with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas . She was trying to restart peace negotiations that broke down in December when Israel launched a military operation in the Gaza Strip. While the U.S. supports a total freeze, the Israeli prime minister’s proposal not to begin any new building on Palestinian territory as a precursor to talks was “unprecedented in the context of prior negotiations,” Clinton said at a news conference with Netanyahu late last night. “There are always demands made in any negotiations that are not going to be met,” she said when asked whether she had managed to budge the two parties’ positions so that talks toward a two-state solution can resume. “We hope that we’ll be able to move into the negotiations where all the issues” will be on the table for the two sides to “begin to resolve.” Hours earlier in Abu Dhabi, spokesmen for Abbas said the Palestinian insistence on a freeze of all settlement building before returning to talks hadn’t changed. “President Abbas stressed that peace talks with Israel can’t be resumed before it halts all settlement activities,” Palestinian Authority negotiator Saeb Erakat said in an e-mailed statement after the meeting with Clinton. All settlement actions, including what Israel terms as “natural growth,” must stop, Erekat said. No ‘Breakthrough’ The talks between Abbas and U.S. officials “have not led to any breakthrough,” the president’s spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh , told reporters, according to the Palestinian news agency Wafa. Clinton’s trip was intended to encourage the two sides to “narrow the gap” in their positions in order to get peace negotiations restarted, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said before the news conference. The U.S. “continues to talk to all of the parties to help them clarify what the details are” of possible compromise solutions. Clinton told Obama a week ago that it is premature to resume formal Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. The Palestinians need to take more steps to prevent terror, and Israel needs to do more to improve the lives of the Palestinians, an official said Clinton told Obama. Obama’s Meeting Obama had ordered a review of the peace effort after a three-way meeting with Abbas and Netanyahu Sept. 22 in New York. Netanyahu met Oct. 30 with U.S. envoy George Mitchell to prepare for the Clinton meeting and said he hoped the secretary of state would enable Israelis and Palestinians to restart peace talks “as soon as possible.” Erakat, in an interview, said Clinton had asked Abbas to allow Israel to complete construction of 3,000 units in Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Palestinians have been losing faith in Obama’s peacemaking ability and in U.S. policies in the Mideast, according to a survey released Oct. 18 by the Jerusalem Media & Communications Center. Slightly less than 24 percent of those questioned said Obama could boost chances of peace, down from 35.4 percent who in June said they were optimistic about U.S. participation in the Mideast effort, according to the poll. Oslo Accords Israelis and Palestinians are still fighting over the same issues since peace talks began through the 1993 Oslo accords at a White House ceremony presided over by former President Bill Clinton , Hillary Clinton’s husband. The agenda includes the future of Jerusalem, the fate of Palestinian refugees and the borders of a future Palestinian state. Clinton’s stopover in the Persian Gulf emirate of Abu Dhabi comes after Iran demanded changes to a United Nations-brokered deal that would send Iranian enriched uranium to Russia for processing into nuclear fuel for a Tehran research reactor. The Iranian reaction cast doubts over wider talks to allay suspicions Iran is seeking the means to build a nuclear weapon. “We are willing to work toward creative outcomes like shipping out the low-enriched uranium,” Clinton said at the news conference, “but we are not going to wait forever.” To contact the reporters on this story: Indira Lakshmanan in Jerusalem at ilakshmanan@bloomberg.net ; Calev Ben-David in Jerusalem at cbendavid@bloomberg.net .

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Australia Plans to Release `Better’ GDP, Unemployment Forecasts, Swan Says

October 31, 2009

By Jacob Greber Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — Australia will revise forecasts for growth and unemployment with figures “better” than those published in May, Treasurer Wayne Swan said. The government’s so-called mid-year economic and fiscal outlook will be published in Canberra tomorrow, the treasurer said in a statement on his Web site today. Australia’s economy is growing faster and generating more jobs than the government forecast six months ago, as record interest rate cuts and more than A$20 billion ($18 billion) in cash handouts to consumers spur domestic demand. Rising household confidence and China’s demand for natural resources were among reasons central bank Governor Glenn Stevens last month raised borrowing costs from a half-century low. “Because of the efforts of Australians, combined with the actions taken by the government and the Reserve Bank, our forecasts for growth and unemployment will be better,” Swan said in an e-mailed statement today. The treasurer in May predicted Australia’s economy would shrink 0.5 percent in the 12 months through June 2010, before expanding 2.25 percent the following fiscal year. The central bank, which on Nov. 6 is also due to publish revised economic forecasts, in August scrapped a prediction the economy will fall into a recession. GDP will rise 1 percent in fiscal 2010 and 3.25 percent the following year, it said. Growth Accelerates GDP growth unexpectedly accelerated in the second quarter at the fastest pace in more than a year, expanding 0.6 percent from the first quarter when it gained 0.4 percent, the statistics bureau said Sept. 2. Third-quarter figures will be published next month. The International Monetary Fund last week reiterated its prediction that Australia’s GDP will gain 0.7 percent this calendar year and 2 percent in 2010. Mounting evidence of economic rebound prompted Stevens to raise borrowing costs last month by a quarter percentage point to 3.25 percent, from a half-century low of 3 percent. The move made Stevens the first Group of 20 policy maker to raise interest rates since the height of the global financial crisis. Eighteen of 22 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News expect Stevens to raise the overnight cash rate target by another quarter-point on Nov. 3. The rest forecast a half-point increase. Emergency Lows “Stevens has previously indicated that rates cannot stay at 50-year emergency lows,” Swan said today. The treasurer also said while the economy is performing better than the government forecast in May, when it last published predictions, recessions among trade partners such as the U.S. will have an impact on Australia’s budget. “Unfortunately the budget has still taken a big hit from the global recession, and challenges remain in areas like business investment and the terms of trade,” a measure of income from exports, Swan said. The government said in May it faces record budget deficits until 2016 as it embarks on a stimulus program to boost investment in roads, railways, ports and schools. The budget shortfall will climb to A$57.6 billion in fiscal 2009-10 and A$57.1 billion the following year, Swan said May 12. Australia’s jobless rate , which Swan predicted would reach 6 percent in this year’s second quarter and 8.5 percent 12 months later, fell in September for the first time in five months, declining to 5.7 percent from 5.8 percent. Keeping borrowing costs at “very low levels” may be “imprudent” and threaten the central bank’s goal of keeping inflation between 2 percent and 3 percent on average, the Reserve Bank of Australia said in minutes of its October meeting published last month. The consumer price index rose 1 percent in the third quarter from the previous three months, when it gained 0.5 percent, a report showed last week. To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net

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South Korea’s October Exports Fall 8.3%, Less Than Economists’ Forecasts

October 31, 2009

By Sungwoo Park and Seyoon Kim Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — South Korea’s exports fell less than economists estimated in October, adding to signs that trade may start to rebound from the slump triggered by the global financial crisis. Overseas shipments declined 8.3 percent from a year earlier to $34 billion, the Ministry of Knowledge Economy said today in Gwacheon. The median estimate of 10 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for an 11.8 percent decrease. Imports fell 16.3 percent to $30.2 billion, resulting in a trade surplus of $3.8 billion. “Exports are still on the decline, but Korea will see an increase in coming months,” said Lee Sang Jae , an economist at Hyundai Securities Co. in Seoul. “Demand from China is helping sustain South Korean exports, while orders from the U.S. and elsewhere still remain weak.” Exports, which make up more than half of the economy, may start to rebound in November, the government said last month. Samsung Electronics Co., Asia’s biggest maker of chips, flat screens and mobile phones, said Oct. 30 profit tripled to a quarterly record. LG Electronics Inc. reported quarterly profit that beat analysts’ estimates, boosted by record shipments of televisions and higher sales of appliances. The nation’s gross domestic product expanded 2.9 percent in the third quarter from three months earlier, the fastest pace in seven years. Finance Minister Yoon Jeung Hyun said full-year economic growth is possible in 2009, compared with a previous government forecast of a 1.5 percent contraction. China Exports Exports to China, the biggest buyer of South Korean goods, gained 3.4 percent in the first 20 days of October. Exports to the U.S. slid 37.4 percent, the ministry said. Shipments to Japan declined 22.5 percent over the same period. Economic growth in China accelerated to 8.9 percent last quarter, fueled by government stimulus spending and more than $1 trillion of new bank lending. There are additional signs South Korea’s economy is recovering. Factory production gained at the fastest pace in three months in September, manufacturers’ confidence stayed near a two-year high and consumer confidence climbed to a seven-year high, earlier reports showed. Economies across Asia are “rebounding fast” from the global crisis, helped by fiscal support that the region’s governments must maintain due to weak global export demand, the International Monetary Fund said on Oct. 29. Growth in Asia including Japan, Australia and New Zealand will probably accelerate to 5.8 percent next year from 2.8 percent this year, it said. To contact the reporter on this story: Sungwoo Park in Seoul at spark47@bloomberg.net ; Seyoon Kim in Seoul at skim7@bloomberg.net .

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China Manufacturing Grows at Fastest Pace in 18 Months on Stimulus, Loans

October 31, 2009

By Bloomberg News Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — China’s manufacturing expanded at the fastest pace in 18 months in October, adding to signs that the nation can sustain its economic rebound. The Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to a seasonally adjusted 55.2 from 54.3 in September, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today in an e-mailed statement in Beijing. The latest number was higher than the median estimate of 54.7 in a Bloomberg News survey of 10 economists. A reading above 50 indicates an expansion. A $586 billion stimulus plan and unprecedented growth in new loans have countered an 11-month slump in exports , helping China to bounce back from the worst global recession since the Great Depression. Today’s manufacturing figure compares with a record-low 38.8 in November last year, when recessions in the U.S., Europe and Japan sent export orders plunging. “China’s recovery has been impressive, but has been heavily reliant on government-directed investment,” said Brian Jackson, Hong Kong-based strategist for emerging markets at Royal Bank of Canada. “To sustain strong growth through 2010, we will need to see a more broad-based recovery.” Surging auto sales, driven by tax cuts and subsidies, are boosting manufacturing in the world’s third-biggest economy. Passenger-car purchases exceeded 1 million units for the first time in September as General Motors Co. , the largest overseas automaker in China, reported that sales doubled. Profit Gains The government forecast on Oct. 27 that industrial production will grow at a faster pace in the fourth quarter as the recovery consolidates. Tsingtao Brewery Co., the nation’s second-biggest brewer by volume, is among manufacturers to have reported an increased third-quarter profit. UBS AG forecasts that China’s economy will expand 8.4 percent this year and 9 percent in 2010 and Vice Premier Li Keqiang reiterated on Oct. 30 that the government’s 8 percent growth target is within reach this year. “The economy of China has been enjoying better momentum with each passing quarter,” Li said at a lunch in Sydney, speaking through an interpreter. The export slump cut economic growth to a 6.1 percent annual pace in the first quarter of this year, the slowest in almost a decade, according to government data. The stimulus plan, spanning roads, railways and the construction of low-cost homes, helped to drive expansions of 7.9 percent in the second quarter and 8.9 percent in the third. Stronger demand for exports in the coming months as the global economy improves “should provide scope for Beijing to start tightening policy from early 2010, while still keeping growth at relatively high levels,” Jackson said. The manufacturing index, released by the logistics federation and the Beijing-based National Bureau of Statistics, is based on replies to questionnaires sent to purchasing executives at more than 730 companies in 20 industries. It began in January 2005. For Related News and Information: Most-read stories on China: MNI CHINA 1W Most-read China economy stories: TNI CHECO MOSTREAD BN For top economic news: TOP ECO For top China news: TOP CHINA Credit crunch page: WCC Government relief programs: GGRP

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Supreme Court To Hear Case About Excessive Pay; Parallels Seen In Executive Compensation

October 31, 2009

The Supreme Court this week will hear a case that raises bedrock questions about the ability of the market to set “reasonable” corporate compensation, and experts say its outcome could hold important clues about the judiciary’s view of extraordinary interventions in the economy by the executive branch and Congress.

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UK Study: Illegal Music Downloaders Also Spend The Most On Music

October 31, 2009

People who illegally download music from the internet also spend more money on music than anyone else, according to a new study.

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Ford Workers Reject Contract changes

October 31, 2009

DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. workers have overwhelmingly rejected contract changes that would have allowed the automaker to cut labor costs, leaving Ford at a disadvantage to its Detroit rivals as it continues its struggle to return to profitability. The United Auto Workers union had given local unions until Monday to complete voting. But a person briefed on the voting said Saturday that the contract changes have been rejected by large margins. The person asked not to be named because the UAW hasn’t announced the results yet. The UAW and Ford agreed to the contract changes several weeks ago, but Ford workers needed to ratify them. Ford has 41,000 UAW-represented workers. Two large union locals in Kentucky and Ford’s home city of Dearborn rejected the contract Friday, sealing its fate. Those unions together represent 13,000 Ford workers. Exact tallies weren’t available, but at least 12 UAW locals representing about 27,500 workers so far have vetoed the deal, many overwhelmingly. Only about four locals with a total of 7,000 members favored the pact. Ford sought the deal to bring its labor costs in line with Detroit rivals Chrysler Group LLC and General Motors Co., both of which won concessions from the union as they headed into bankruptcy protection earlier this year. Under pattern bargaining, the three automakers usually match pay, benefits and other contract provisions. But workers weren’t convinced they should make more concessions, since Ford avoided bankruptcy and is considered healthier than its rivals. At least two Wall Street analysts are predicting that Ford could report a profit Monday when it announces third-quarter earnings. Rocky Comito, president of UAW Local 862 in Louisville, said Friday that workers felt they were being asked to sacrifice more than the company’s executives. Ford CEO Alan Mulally made $17.7 million last year, although that was down 22 percent from the year before. “Some want to see management give more at the upper level,” Comito said. Ford was offering workers a $1,000 bonus if they ratified the contract. But the contract also would have frozen entry-level pay, changed some work rules and limited workers’ ability to strike. A message seeking comment was left Saturday for the UAW. UAW President Ron Gettelfinger said Friday that there wouldn’t be a revote if the contract changes failed. “If it fails, there would be no reason to go back to the bargaining table,” Gettelfinger said at a community event in Detroit. “We have a democratic process in place. People have a right to express themselves. We recognize there’s a lot of misinformation about it out there, but that is what it is.” Factory-level union leaders have known for several days that the deal would be defeated, said one Detroit-area official who asked not to be identified because the voting is not completed. The union did a poor job of explaining the need to preserve jobs and keep Ford competitive with GM and Chrysler, the official said. He doesn’t believe members will approve any more changes until the 2011 contract, which will leave Ford at a disadvantage and has the potential to knock the company from its position as the strongest financially of the Detroit Three. “Our goal should be to keep Ford Motor Co. going in the right direction,” he said. Gary Chaison, a professor of labor relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., said the vote was a slap to UAW leadership. It’s extremely rare for union members to oppose the union’s recommended vote. Chaison said the vote damages the reputation of UAW Vice President Bob King, the chief Ford negotiator, who has been mentioned as a successor to Gettelfinger when the union elects a new president in 2010. “The sign of a good leader is that you can agree to something and then sell it to the membership,” Chaison said. Chaison said Ford asked for too much too soon after workers already agreed to concessions earlier this year. He also said Ford lacked credibility because its financial situation wasn’t as dire as GM’s or Chrysler’s. “They made such a strong case about not going to bankruptcy court and turning the corner, so they couldn’t go to the workers and say, ‘We need this to turn the corner,’” he said. The no votes came even as Ford reached a similar cost-cutting agreement with the Canadian Auto Workers union Friday. The CAW has agreed to cuts in benefits in exchange for product guarantees, but that agreement must be ratified by Canadian workers. In addition to the plants in Louisville and Dearborn, workers at factories in Chicago; Claycomo, Mo.; and Livonia, Plymouth, Sterling Heights, Flat Rock, Ypsilanti Township, Mich., rejected the deal. Locals in Wayne, Mich.; Cleveland; Indianapolis and St. Paul, Minn., voted in favor. ___ Associated Press Writers Corey Williams in Detroit and Janet Cappiello Blake in Louisville contributed to this report.

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Stiglitz Says U.S. Recession `Nowhere Near’ End as Job Market Remains Weak

October 31, 2009

By Bob Willis Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz said the U.S. recession is “nowhere near” an end and the economy’s third-quarter growth rate of 3.5 percent, the first expansion in more than a year, won’t carry into 2010. While this week’s figures on gross domestic product are “very good,” the numbers would be “miserable” without stimulus measures enacted by the Obama administration, Stiglitz said today at a forum in Shanghai. He urged the U.S. and other countries not to pull back on efforts to shore up economies. “When we look at if workers can get jobs, if they can work full time, if businesses are able to sell goods they produce, in those terms, we are nowhere near the end of recession” in the U.S., said Stiglitz, 66, the former chief economist at the World Bank. The U.S. job market is still “in very bad shape.” Federal assistance to the housing and auto industries helped propel growth in the July-September quarter. President Barack Obama , in his weekly radio address to the nation, today called the Oct. 29 report on GDP a “good sign” and said an expanding economy is the first step to job creation. While most economists estimate the recession has ended, the National Bureau of Economic Research is responsible for determining when contractions begin and end. The Cambridge, Massachusetts, organization usually makes its recession pronouncement as long as a year and a half after the fact. The group defines a recession as a “significant” decrease in activity over a sustained period of time. The declines it measures would be visible in gross domestic product, payrolls, production, sales and incomes. Surging Unemployment The U.S. unemployment rate reached a 26-year high of 9.8 percent in September and economists project it will exceed 10 percent by early 2010. “The unemployment rate is likely to go up,” Stiglitz told reporters two days earlier in Beijing. “Growth won’t be fast enough to bring down the unemployment rate.” Stiglitz, a professor of economics at Columbia University in New York, said the growth rate of 3 percent to 3.5 percent needed to create enough jobs for new U.S. labor market entrants was unlikely to be sustained into next year. It is too early for the U.S. and other countries to begin easing stimulus measures put in place a year ago to avert a financial market meltdown, Stiglitz said. “For the world as a whole, it’s premature to think about exiting stimulus,” he said today in Shanghai. Stiglitz became a Nobel laureate in 2001, sharing the prize with George A. Akerlof and A. Michael Spence, both of the U.S., for their analysis of how markets function when buyers and sellers have different information about a product or service. Curbing Stimulus Around the world, central banks are paring emergency measures taken at the height of the financial crisis. The record $1.4 trillion budget deficit limits Obama’s options for more aid, Obama’s options for more aid, while Federal Reserve officials try to convince investors that the central bank will exit emergency programs in time to prevent a pickup in inflation. Japan’s central bank said Oct. 30 that it will stop buying corporate debt at the end of the year. Australia this month became the first Group of 20 nation to raise rates since the height of the crisis, and Norway’s central bank followed. In China, the State Council pledged Oct. 21 to continue monetary and fiscal stimulus even after the economy exceeded officials’ expectations for the first nine months of the year. Growth is likely to top the government’s 8 percent target for 2009, the central bank said this week. U.S. economy’s third-quarter growth at a 3.5 percent annual rate followed four quarters of contraction that marked the worst performance in seven decades. Obama, in his remarks, said “economic growth is no substitute for job growth.” To contact the reporters on this story: Bob Willis in Washington bwillis@bloomberg.net ;

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Stiglitz Says U.S. Recession `Nowhere Near’ End as Job Market Remains Weak

October 31, 2009

By Bob Willis Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz said the U.S. recession is “nowhere near” an end and the economy’s third-quarter growth rate of 3.5 percent, the first expansion in more than a year, won’t carry into 2010. While this week’s figures on gross domestic product are “very good,” the numbers would be “miserable” without stimulus measures enacted by the Obama administration, Stiglitz said today at a forum in Shanghai. He urged the U.S. and other countries not to pull back on efforts to shore up economies. “When we look at if workers can get jobs, if they can work full time, if businesses are able to sell goods they produce, in those terms, we are nowhere near the end of recession” in the U.S., said Stiglitz, 66, the former chief economist at the World Bank. The U.S. job market is still “in very bad shape.” Federal assistance to the housing and auto industries helped propel growth in the July-September quarter. President Barack Obama , in his weekly radio address to the nation, today called the Oct. 29 report on GDP a “good sign” and said an expanding economy is the first step to job creation. While most economists estimate the recession has ended, the National Bureau of Economic Research is responsible for determining when contractions begin and end. The Cambridge, Massachusetts, organization usually makes its recession pronouncement as long as a year and a half after the fact. The group defines a recession as a “significant” decrease in activity over a sustained period of time. The declines it measures would be visible in gross domestic product, payrolls, production, sales and incomes. Surging Unemployment The U.S. unemployment rate reached a 26-year high of 9.8 percent in September and economists project it will exceed 10 percent by early 2010. “The unemployment rate is likely to go up,” Stiglitz told reporters two days earlier in Beijing. “Growth won’t be fast enough to bring down the unemployment rate.” Stiglitz, a professor of economics at Columbia University in New York, said the growth rate of 3 percent to 3.5 percent needed to create enough jobs for new U.S. labor market entrants was unlikely to be sustained into next year. It is too early for the U.S. and other countries to begin easing stimulus measures put in place a year ago to avert a financial market meltdown, Stiglitz said. “For the world as a whole, it’s premature to think about exiting stimulus,” he said today in Shanghai. Stiglitz became a Nobel laureate in 2001, sharing the prize with George A. Akerlof and A. Michael Spence, both of the U.S., for their analysis of how markets function when buyers and sellers have different information about a product or service. Curbing Stimulus Around the world, central banks are paring emergency measures taken at the height of the financial crisis. The record $1.4 trillion budget deficit limits Obama’s options for more aid, Obama’s options for more aid, while Federal Reserve officials try to convince investors that the central bank will exit emergency programs in time to prevent a pickup in inflation. Japan’s central bank said Oct. 30 that it will stop buying corporate debt at the end of the year. Australia this month became the first Group of 20 nation to raise rates since the height of the crisis, and Norway’s central bank followed. In China, the State Council pledged Oct. 21 to continue monetary and fiscal stimulus even after the economy exceeded officials’ expectations for the first nine months of the year. Growth is likely to top the government’s 8 percent target for 2009, the central bank said this week. U.S. economy’s third-quarter growth at a 3.5 percent annual rate followed four quarters of contraction that marked the worst performance in seven decades. Obama, in his remarks, said “economic growth is no substitute for job growth.” To contact the reporters on this story: Bob Willis in Washington bwillis@bloomberg.net ;

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Berlin Wall 20th Anniversay Commemoration Reunites Bush, Gorbachev, Kohl

October 31, 2009

By Patrick Donahue Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Former President George Bush lauded his German ex-counterpart, Helmut Kohl , as a “solid rock” and onetime Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev called for an American “perestroika” as the three Cold War leaders reunited for the 20th anniversary of the collapse of the Berlin Wall. The three were honored at an event today in Berlin attended by Chancellor Angela Merkel and German President Horst Koehler as the capital prepares to mark two decades since the wall came down on Nov. 9, 1989, bringing an end to communist rule in East Germany and preparing the way for reunification. It was 79-year-old Kohl’s first appearance in public since a fall last year at his home in southwestern Germany left him hospitalized and in need of physical rehabilitation. He appeared on stage in a wheelchair and spoke haltingly. “In German history we don’t have many reasons to be proud,” Kohl told the audience. Still, he said that of his own chancellorship, “I have every reason, despite the resentment and exasperation, to be proud. I have nothing better to be proud of than being proud of German unity.” Bush, who experienced the Berlin Wall’s collapse in the first year of his presidency and went on to support German reunification in the face of resistance from European leaders, played down the politics of the changes in 1989. He said the breakthrough occurred “in the hearts and minds of people who had too long been deprived of their God-given rights.” The oldest of the three leaders, 85-year-old Bush walked with a cane. Gorbachev, 78, recalled how relations with Kohl began badly before improving. The former Soviet leader, whose liberalizing policies of “glasnost” (transparency) and “perestroika” (rebuilding) ushered in the downfall of the Soviet Union, called for renewed friendship between Russia and its former Cold War foes. Citing the election of President Barack Obama , Gorbachev said that the U.S. “needs its own perestroika.” To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Donahue in Berlin at at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net .

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Berlin Wall 20th Anniversay Commemoration Reunites Bush, Gorbachev, Kohl

October 31, 2009

By Patrick Donahue Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Former President George Bush lauded his German ex-counterpart, Helmut Kohl , as a “solid rock” and onetime Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev called for an American “perestroika” as the three Cold War leaders reunited for the 20th anniversary of the collapse of the Berlin Wall. The three were honored at an event today in Berlin attended by Chancellor Angela Merkel and German President Horst Koehler as the capital prepares to mark two decades since the wall came down on Nov. 9, 1989, bringing an end to communist rule in East Germany and preparing the way for reunification. It was 79-year-old Kohl’s first appearance in public since a fall last year at his home in southwestern Germany left him hospitalized and in need of physical rehabilitation. He appeared on stage in a wheelchair and spoke haltingly. “In German history we don’t have many reasons to be proud,” Kohl told the audience. Still, he said that of his own chancellorship, “I have every reason, despite the resentment and exasperation, to be proud. I have nothing better to be proud of than being proud of German unity.” Bush, who experienced the Berlin Wall’s collapse in the first year of his presidency and went on to support German reunification in the face of resistance from European leaders, played down the politics of the changes in 1989. He said the breakthrough occurred “in the hearts and minds of people who had too long been deprived of their God-given rights.” The oldest of the three leaders, 85-year-old Bush walked with a cane. Gorbachev, 78, recalled how relations with Kohl began badly before improving. The former Soviet leader, whose liberalizing policies of “glasnost” (transparency) and “perestroika” (rebuilding) ushered in the downfall of the Soviet Union, called for renewed friendship between Russia and its former Cold War foes. Citing the election of President Barack Obama , Gorbachev said that the U.S. “needs its own perestroika.” To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Donahue in Berlin at at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net .

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Ford UAW Workers Said to Reject Concessions That Would Match GM, Chrysler

October 31, 2009

By Keith Naughton and John Lippert

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Ford UAW Workers Said to Reject Concessions That Would Match GM, Chrysler

October 31, 2009

By Keith Naughton and John Lippert

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Michael Brenner: Lies, Statistics and Economic Statistics

October 31, 2009

Weathering a blizzard of statistics is the fate of the public minded. Numbers come at us from all points of the compass. Some are raw data, some massaged, some naked and some fitted out for the occasion by their sponsors. In this wintry economic season, they all come with a message and meaning. Making sense of the figures demands a large measure of skepticism and an eye for misrepresentation and forgery. Here is a quick everyman’s guide to economic statistics. First, the “recession.” No term has been more abusive of statistics. There is a narrow technical meaning for economists. It is strictly a matter of GDP numbers having nothing to do with our feelings of being “in the money or out of the money.” If the economy registers a quarter in which GDP rises – by however small an amount, we are no longer in recession. That’s it. That happened in the third quarter of this year when it rose at a 3.4 annualized rate. If GDP drops 4 percent in the fourth quarter and then rises just 0.4 percent in the first quarter of 2010, the business headlines could rightly proclaim that the “recession” is still over. The public understanding of the term “end of recession” is that we have hard data of a return to prosperity – or, at least, that a growth cycle is imminent. Nothing of the sort is in the numbers per se. The discrepancy between these two meanings are cynically played upon by all those who have a vested interest – political, intellectual, or financial – in creating the impression of an economic morning in America. That covers just about everyone marketing the news. Then there are GDP numbers. Politicians and markets alike rise and fall on these magic numerals. In fact, they are as soft as statistics get. At times they are fanciful. Consider the financial sector. The “virtual” wealth generated by the razzle-dazzle of recent years may have created nothing of tangible economic value – whether goods or services. Indeed, the largest part of the value created by the trading of exotic financial instruments is fictitious. President Obama admitted as much in remarking on one occasion that we shouldn’t worry that much about the evaporation of trillions in investment accounts since it wasn’t real money anyway. Economists routinely talk blithely of the “financial” economy and the “real” economy. Yet GDP – and all other aggregate statistics – make no distinction whatsoever. Nor do economic models. GDP figures are no more than the sum of all expenditures. Every time a piece of financial paper (actually, electronic dots) with little intrinsic value is transferred from one party to another the national cash register records it as a number in the tally, and does so at the face value of the transaction. This is an absurd methodology based on an absurd measure of value. We all may have been living in a world of statistical make believe. The latest numbers, for example, say that GDP grew at a 3 percent annualized rate. But if that reflects the big Wall Street banks reverting to go-go of virtual assets, then the real number is substantially lower. Rates of economic growth are further overstated by discounting population increase. If the number of Americans increases by 3 percent and GDP numbers grow by 3 percent, we are no better off in real terms. This relationship is prominent in calculating economic dynamics in poor countries but for some inexplicable reason largely ignored in the U.S. The implications of all this slips through our mental fingers. Yet the implications are profound for calculating national wealth, the United States’ place in international league standings, productivity and even inflation. Inflation as represented in the government’s cost of living index is another statistical fiction. For one thing, the formula was rigged by Bill Clinton to produce lower numbers in order to keep down increases in Social Security payments that are tied to annual inflation. The method was crude: When the price of one item in the index rises sharply, a cheaper item that supposedly is a functional equivalent is substituted. More generally, there are a plethora of distortions in data gathering that bias the index toward the low side. One small example, when all of my personal medical expenditures rose due to changes in my employer provided plan (as happened this year to millions), they never registered in the official inflation numbers. Productivity statistics are also manipulable. Every time a company “downsizes” – that is to say, fires workers – its productivity figures go up if the same quantity of goods/services is produced. Heavier work burdens for remaining employees do not count. Unpaid overtime does not count. Nor do the costs borne by customers who must wait longer for help in a box store, or on lines at an airline ticket counter, or go through the ordeal of dealing with mechanical telephone programs intended to be as painful as possible so as to force you to spend your time on the Web. Corporate and government statistics register none of this. Economists’ models do not either. The common thread running through this recitation of how economic statistics are abused is that it is the little person – as employee, as customer, as retiree – who gets the short end. Surprise, surprise.

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Michael Brenner: Lies, Statistics and Economic Statistics

October 31, 2009

Weathering a blizzard of statistics is the fate of the public minded. Numbers come at us from all points of the compass. Some are raw data, some massaged, some naked and some fitted out for the occasion by their sponsors. In this wintry economic season, they all come with a message and meaning. Making sense of the figures demands a large measure of skepticism and an eye for misrepresentation and forgery. Here is a quick everyman’s guide to economic statistics. First, the “recession.” No term has been more abusive of statistics. There is a narrow technical meaning for economists. It is strictly a matter of GDP numbers having nothing to do with our feelings of being “in the money or out of the money.” If the economy registers a quarter in which GDP rises – by however small an amount, we are no longer in recession. That’s it. That happened in the third quarter of this year when it rose at a 3.4 annualized rate. If GDP drops 4 percent in the fourth quarter and then rises just 0.4 percent in the first quarter of 2010, the business headlines could rightly proclaim that the “recession” is still over. The public understanding of the term “end of recession” is that we have hard data of a return to prosperity – or, at least, that a growth cycle is imminent. Nothing of the sort is in the numbers per se. The discrepancy between these two meanings are cynically played upon by all those who have a vested interest – political, intellectual, or financial – in creating the impression of an economic morning in America. That covers just about everyone marketing the news. Then there are GDP numbers. Politicians and markets alike rise and fall on these magic numerals. In fact, they are as soft as statistics get. At times they are fanciful. Consider the financial sector. The “virtual” wealth generated by the razzle-dazzle of recent years may have created nothing of tangible economic value – whether goods or services. Indeed, the largest part of the value created by the trading of exotic financial instruments is fictitious. President Obama admitted as much in remarking on one occasion that we shouldn’t worry that much about the evaporation of trillions in investment accounts since it wasn’t real money anyway. Economists routinely talk blithely of the “financial” economy and the “real” economy. Yet GDP – and all other aggregate statistics – make no distinction whatsoever. Nor do economic models. GDP figures are no more than the sum of all expenditures. Every time a piece of financial paper (actually, electronic dots) with little intrinsic value is transferred from one party to another the national cash register records it as a number in the tally, and does so at the face value of the transaction. This is an absurd methodology based on an absurd measure of value. We all may have been living in a world of statistical make believe. The latest numbers, for example, say that GDP grew at a 3 percent annualized rate. But if that reflects the big Wall Street banks reverting to go-go of virtual assets, then the real number is substantially lower. Rates of economic growth are further overstated by discounting population increase. If the number of Americans increases by 3 percent and GDP numbers grow by 3 percent, we are no better off in real terms. This relationship is prominent in calculating economic dynamics in poor countries but for some inexplicable reason largely ignored in the U.S. The implications of all this slips through our mental fingers. Yet the implications are profound for calculating national wealth, the United States’ place in international league standings, productivity and even inflation. Inflation as represented in the government’s cost of living index is another statistical fiction. For one thing, the formula was rigged by Bill Clinton to produce lower numbers in order to keep down increases in Social Security payments that are tied to annual inflation. The method was crude: When the price of one item in the index rises sharply, a cheaper item that supposedly is a functional equivalent is substituted. More generally, there are a plethora of distortions in data gathering that bias the index toward the low side. One small example, when all of my personal medical expenditures rose due to changes in my employer provided plan (as happened this year to millions), they never registered in the official inflation numbers. Productivity statistics are also manipulable. Every time a company “downsizes” – that is to say, fires workers – its productivity figures go up if the same quantity of goods/services is produced. Heavier work burdens for remaining employees do not count. Unpaid overtime does not count. Nor do the costs borne by customers who must wait longer for help in a box store, or on lines at an airline ticket counter, or go through the ordeal of dealing with mechanical telephone programs intended to be as painful as possible so as to force you to spend your time on the Web. Corporate and government statistics register none of this. Economists’ models do not either. The common thread running through this recitation of how economic statistics are abused is that it is the little person – as employee, as customer, as retiree – who gets the short end. Surprise, surprise.

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Troubled loans dogging commercial real estate players

October 31, 2009

Philadelphia Business Journal – by Natalie Kostelni Staff Writer Related News More local commercial real estate, from shopping centers to office buildings, are facing unsettled loan situations. In Center City, the owner of 1601 Market St. is

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Dave Lindorff: Out Out-of-Whack Economy and the Happy Talk Propagandists

October 31, 2009

If you listen to the happy-talk folks at Treasury and the Fed, and on the tube, you’d think things had finally turned a corner. The economy grew at a 3.5% annualized rate in the third quarter ended September 30. “The Economy is Back in Gear” shouted the headline on an article by CNN senior writer Chris Isadore. “The recession ended unofficially in September,” said a reporter on NPR. There was some mention of the fact that earlier in the week there were reports that consumer confidence had fallen, foretelling a sluggish Christmas retail season, and that new home sales slipped an unanticipatedly high 3.6% in September, when analysts had been expecting a rise in sales. Meanwhile, new unemployment claims filed during the third week of October jumped to 531,000, well above the predicted 520,000, indicating that the official unemployment rate is likely to top 10% in the next Department of Labor report due out in early November. As well, fully one-third of the nation’s homeowners were now said to be “underwater,” meaning that their outstanding mortgage balances are greater than the current value of their homes. Not surprisingly, foreclosures are continuing to surge. How to explain this seeming oxymoronic situation? Well, that positive economic growth figure, which comes on the heels of a 6.4% decline in GDP in the first quarter and a .7% decline in the second quarter is, according to government analysts, actually largely the result of two government stimulus programs — the “cash for clunkers” program that induced people to rush out and buy a new car (usually a much smaller, cheaper and, for the car makers, less profitable one than they had been buying in prior years), and the $8,000 new home tax credit, which led a lot of people to rush out and buy a first home. The thing about those two stimulus programs is that they don’t so much expand economic activity as they push it forward. That is to say, a person who takes advantage of the cash-for-clunker program is generally someone who owns a worn-out junker and needs to buy a new vehicle anyhow, so what the government subsidy does really is just push that purchase forward. Once the program ended, sales of cars plummeted (not to mention that the bulk of the payments went to people who purchased foreign cars, so the economic boost was just for dealers in the US, not car makers). The same is true with houses. Very few people would make the decision about whether to buy a home or not based on just $8000, but the availability of an $8000 government subsidy for a limited time would lead people to push forward their plan to purchase a home. What that means is, don’t count on this “recovery” to last into next year. The cars that needed to be bought have been bought, and the homes that people wanted to buy have been bought. The car subsidy is gone now, and even extending the home buying subsidy, as the realty industry lobby is pressing Congress to do, isn’t going to induce that many more people to buy. Meanwhile it’s worth noting an oddity about this “recovery” being trumpeted in government and media. The relationship between the dollar and the stock market has become very strange. If you look back at stories on these two things to 2007, before the financial crisis hit, and earlier, you’ll see myriad articles explaining that the dollar and the US stock market tend to move in tandem. This was always explained as being because as the dollar strengthens, foreign investors want to put their money into dollar-denominated assets. Similarly, if the dollar weakened, analysts would write confidently that the stock market would be hurt as investors pulled their money out of US equities to invest in markets denominated in appreciating currencies. Now, the analysts say that as equities strengthen, the dollar will fall, but if equities fall, the dollar will appreciate. The reason for this new inverse relationship should be cause for considerable alarm. Why? In fact, it turns out that the last eight months of a rising equities market has been largely the direct result of a shrinking dollar. This is because so much of the sales and earnings of companies in the S&P 500 and the much narrower Dow Index are earned overseas, denominated in foreign currencies, but accounted for on the books of these US-incorporated firms in dollars, that as the dollar declines in value, corporate sales and earnings appear to be growing. Reportedly, as much as 80 percent of the appreciation in the S&P Index since last March 9 when the market hit bottom can be attributed to the dollar’s fall against major world currencies. Financial writers and reporters on TV don’t mention this tectonic shift. They just report the new relationship (Stocks up, dollar down, stocks down, dollar up) as though that’s they way it’s always been. But actually, this is a phenomenon has normally been characteristic of Third World, so-called “developing” economies. That since the end of 2008 it has become characteristic of the US economy should be cause for concern. So don’t be conned by the happy talk salesmen at the Fed and Treasury and in the White House, or by their propagandists in the newsmedia, who are trumpeting the latest GDP growth figure as a sign that the recession is over, apparently in the hopes that people will run out to the mall and start spending (in those remaining stores that don’t have their windows taped or covered in plywood). What we’ve seen was a blip on the chart, engineered by a couple of “going out of business” sales by the car and housing industry. Real unemployment — measured the honest way it used to be 30 years ago, to include those who have given up looking for work or who are working part time involuntarily — is hitting 20% (for those who are bad at math, that’s one out of five working-age Americans). Foreclosures are hitting a record. Half of laid-off workers are cashing out their 401(k)s in order to buy food. State and local governments, both major employers, are hitting a wall as tax collections plummet and federal stimulus funds run out. This is not the foundation for a renewal of economic growth; it is the precondition for a renewed or prolonged recession. And if the dollar continues its slide, which is likely given the US’s huge budget deficits and trade deficits, as well as the Federal Reserve’s inability to raise interest rates (a move that could strengthen the dollar but which would crush the economy), all those things that Americans buy abroad which are no longer made at home, as well as the oil that is imported, will cost that much more, driving consumers further into the hole. And remember, 70% of US GDP is consumer spending, a result of our decimation of our industrial base. Recession ending? Don’t bet on it. DAVE LINDORFF, a Philadelphia-based investigative journalist, was a Knight-Bagehot Fellow in Economics and Business Journalism. His latest book is “The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net

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Dave Lindorff: Out Out-of-Whack Economy and the Happy Talk Propagandists

October 31, 2009

If you listen to the happy-talk folks at Treasury and the Fed, and on the tube, you’d think things had finally turned a corner. The economy grew at a 3.5% annualized rate in the third quarter ended September 30. “The Economy is Back in Gear” shouted the headline on an article by CNN senior writer Chris Isadore. “The recession ended unofficially in September,” said a reporter on NPR. There was some mention of the fact that earlier in the week there were reports that consumer confidence had fallen, foretelling a sluggish Christmas retail season, and that new home sales slipped an unanticipatedly high 3.6% in September, when analysts had been expecting a rise in sales. Meanwhile, new unemployment claims filed during the third week of October jumped to 531,000, well above the predicted 520,000, indicating that the official unemployment rate is likely to top 10% in the next Department of Labor report due out in early November. As well, fully one-third of the nation’s homeowners were now said to be “underwater,” meaning that their outstanding mortgage balances are greater than the current value of their homes. Not surprisingly, foreclosures are continuing to surge. How to explain this seeming oxymoronic situation? Well, that positive economic growth figure, which comes on the heels of a 6.4% decline in GDP in the first quarter and a .7% decline in the second quarter is, according to government analysts, actually largely the result of two government stimulus programs — the “cash for clunkers” program that induced people to rush out and buy a new car (usually a much smaller, cheaper and, for the car makers, less profitable one than they had been buying in prior years), and the $8,000 new home tax credit, which led a lot of people to rush out and buy a first home. The thing about those two stimulus programs is that they don’t so much expand economic activity as they push it forward. That is to say, a person who takes advantage of the cash-for-clunker program is generally someone who owns a worn-out junker and needs to buy a new vehicle anyhow, so what the government subsidy does really is just push that purchase forward. Once the program ended, sales of cars plummeted (not to mention that the bulk of the payments went to people who purchased foreign cars, so the economic boost was just for dealers in the US, not car makers). The same is true with houses. Very few people would make the decision about whether to buy a home or not based on just $8000, but the availability of an $8000 government subsidy for a limited time would lead people to push forward their plan to purchase a home. What that means is, don’t count on this “recovery” to last into next year. The cars that needed to be bought have been bought, and the homes that people wanted to buy have been bought. The car subsidy is gone now, and even extending the home buying subsidy, as the realty industry lobby is pressing Congress to do, isn’t going to induce that many more people to buy. Meanwhile it’s worth noting an oddity about this “recovery” being trumpeted in government and media. The relationship between the dollar and the stock market has become very strange. If you look back at stories on these two things to 2007, before the financial crisis hit, and earlier, you’ll see myriad articles explaining that the dollar and the US stock market tend to move in tandem. This was always explained as being because as the dollar strengthens, foreign investors want to put their money into dollar-denominated assets. Similarly, if the dollar weakened, analysts would write confidently that the stock market would be hurt as investors pulled their money out of US equities to invest in markets denominated in appreciating currencies. Now, the analysts say that as equities strengthen, the dollar will fall, but if equities fall, the dollar will appreciate. The reason for this new inverse relationship should be cause for considerable alarm. Why? In fact, it turns out that the last eight months of a rising equities market has been largely the direct result of a shrinking dollar. This is because so much of the sales and earnings of companies in the S&P 500 and the much narrower Dow Index are earned overseas, denominated in foreign currencies, but accounted for on the books of these US-incorporated firms in dollars, that as the dollar declines in value, corporate sales and earnings appear to be growing. Reportedly, as much as 80 percent of the appreciation in the S&P Index since last March 9 when the market hit bottom can be attributed to the dollar’s fall against major world currencies. Financial writers and reporters on TV don’t mention this tectonic shift. They just report the new relationship (Stocks up, dollar down, stocks down, dollar up) as though that’s they way it’s always been. But actually, this is a phenomenon has normally been characteristic of Third World, so-called “developing” economies. That since the end of 2008 it has become characteristic of the US economy should be cause for concern. So don’t be conned by the happy talk salesmen at the Fed and Treasury and in the White House, or by their propagandists in the newsmedia, who are trumpeting the latest GDP growth figure as a sign that the recession is over, apparently in the hopes that people will run out to the mall and start spending (in those remaining stores that don’t have their windows taped or covered in plywood). What we’ve seen was a blip on the chart, engineered by a couple of “going out of business” sales by the car and housing industry. Real unemployment — measured the honest way it used to be 30 years ago, to include those who have given up looking for work or who are working part time involuntarily — is hitting 20% (for those who are bad at math, that’s one out of five working-age Americans). Foreclosures are hitting a record. Half of laid-off workers are cashing out their 401(k)s in order to buy food. State and local governments, both major employers, are hitting a wall as tax collections plummet and federal stimulus funds run out. This is not the foundation for a renewal of economic growth; it is the precondition for a renewed or prolonged recession. And if the dollar continues its slide, which is likely given the US’s huge budget deficits and trade deficits, as well as the Federal Reserve’s inability to raise interest rates (a move that could strengthen the dollar but which would crush the economy), all those things that Americans buy abroad which are no longer made at home, as well as the oil that is imported, will cost that much more, driving consumers further into the hole. And remember, 70% of US GDP is consumer spending, a result of our decimation of our industrial base. Recession ending? Don’t bet on it. DAVE LINDORFF, a Philadelphia-based investigative journalist, was a Knight-Bagehot Fellow in Economics and Business Journalism. His latest book is “The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net

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Montreal Takes Back Sin City Name as Yacht, Cash Scandals Mar Mayoral Race

October 31, 2009

By Chris Fournier and Frederic Tomesco Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Montreal got the nickname Sin City during Prohibition, when Americans crossed the border into Canada to drink, gamble and buy sex. The epithet is making a comeback this month. Allegations of price fixing, kickbacks and ties to organized crime are marring tomorrow’s election for mayor of Canada’s second-biggest city. Almost two-thirds of respondents in an Angus Reid poll released yesterday said the scandals will influence their vote. “This is Sin City all over again,” said Harold Chorney, a political science professor at Concordia University in Montreal. “Corruption is part of the history here.” Gerald Tremblay , the mayor since 2001, in September canceled a C$356 million ($330 million) pact to install water meters after La Presse newspaper reported that a city councilor vacationed on a yacht owned by the contractor who led the winning bid. Challenger Louise Harel , who leads in the polls, ousted her deputy this month after he admitted that his staff took improper cash donations. The corruption allegations are diverting attention from economic challenges facing the city of about 1.7 million people. The winner of the election faces rising costs for mass transit, policing and water, according to a May 21 Moody’s Investors Service report. Montreal has the highest debt load of any Canadian city, and ran a deficit of about C$330 million in 2008, compared with a surplus the previous year, said Ryan Domsy , senior financial analyst in Toronto at DBRS Ltd., a debt-rating company. Close Race The mayoral race is too close to call, according to an Angus Reid poll published yesterday in La Presse. Tremblay , 67, a Harvard Business School graduate, trails with 30 percent support. Harel, 63, a non-English-speaking lawyer and former minister in the separatist Parti Quebecois provincial government, leads with 34 percent. Richard Bergeron , 54, an architect who says the Sept. 11 attacks were carried out by the U.S. government and wants to ban cars from Rue Saint Catherine, the city’s busiest shopping street, is second at 32 percent. About 25 percent of respondents in the Angus Reid poll singled out transparency and the fight against corruption as the city’s No. 1 priority. Angus Reid polled 804 Montreal residents Oct. 28 and 29, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. “It’s one of the first really open races for years in Montreal,” Julie Belanger, 32, a Montreal office worker, said after an Oct. 27 candidates’ debate. “Usually you can guess who’s going to win, but this time it could be anybody.” Yacht Trips Tremblay canceled the water-meter contract, won by a group of local engineering firms, and fired two top bureaucrats after a report from Montreal’s auditor general found that elected officials lacked the necessary information before approving the project. The probe was sparked this year by a La Presse report that Frank Zampino, formerly head of the city’s executive committee, vacationed in January 2007 and February 2008 on a yacht owned by Tony Accurso , who led the group that won the water-meter order, the city’s biggest contract. Zampino retired from politics last year. Accurso’s lawyer, Louis Demers at De Grandpre Chait, didn’t return a call seeking comment. According to the auditor general’s report, the water-meter project was estimated in 2004 to cost C$36 million, about a 10th of the final contract’s price. “All of these allegations of corruption certainly don’t help Montreal’s reputation,” said David Love , a trader of interest-rate derivatives at Le Group Jitney Inc., a Montreal brokerage. “The city looks bad right now.” Sweeping Clean Harel’s Vision Montreal party based its platform on ridding city hall of its “culture of secrecy and collusion” and restoring trust in the municipal administration. Harel has called for public inquiries into the allegations of corruption at city hall, as has Bergeron’s Project Montreal party. “At first I thought a broom would be useful to clean this mess, but now I think I will need a very large vacuum cleaner,” Harel said in a television interview Oct. 28. Harel’s credibility was undermined after she forced the resignation on Oct. 18 of the head of her executive committee, Benoit Labonte , for ties to Accurso. Three days later, Labonte told Radio-Canada television in an interview that people close to him took money from Accurso, owner of Simard-Beaudry Construction Inc. Labonte said kickbacks and corruption are rampant in city hall. Maclean’s, Canada’s weekly news magazine, ran this headline on its cover this week: “Montreal is a corrupt, crumbling, mob-ridden disgrace.” “There’s an underground system,” Alex Dion, economic development officer for the borough of Montreal, said after a candidates’ debate. He said the allegations hurt Montreal’s reputation in the rest of Canada. Home of Ponzi Still, Howard Silverman, chief executive officer of CAI Global Inc., a consulting firm that helps foreign companies invest in Quebec, doesn’t think the allegations will deter investors from Montreal, the city that Charles Ponzi called home for almost a decade a century ago. Ponzi was charged in 1920 for using new funds from investors to pay redemptions by other investors, a type of fraud that now bears his name. “It’s not good for the city, it looks bad, but it won’t have much of an impact,” said Silverman, who counts investors such as London-based miner Rio Tinto Group among his clients. “Every North American or global city has its scandals or its problems.” To contact the reporters on this story: Chris Fournier in Montreal at Cfournier3@bloomberg.net ; Frederic Tomesco in Montreal at tomesco@bloomberg.net

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U.S. Stocks Post Biggest Weekly Drop Since May on Concern Recovery Falters

October 31, 2009

By Sapna Maheshwari and Mary Childs Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell the most since May this week as new home sales that missed forecasts and a drop in consumer spending added to speculation that the seven-month rally outpaced prospects for an economic recovery. Home Depot Inc. and Alcoa Inc. declined at least 4.4 percent following the housing report. Bank of America Corp. lost 10 percent, leading financial companies lower, on concern that the largest U.S. lender will have to sell shares to pay back its government bailout. Exxon Mobil Corp. and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc . retreated as a dollar rally dragged down oil and metals prices. “The financial crisis had its roots in the property boom and bust, so any data that flies in the face of improvement is going to raise suspicion,” said Kevin Caron , a market strategist at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Florham Park, New Jersey, which oversees about $90 billion. “The burden of proof now falls on the economy itself to deliver.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped for a second week, falling 4 percent to 1,036.19. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 259.45 points, or 2.6 percent, to 9,712.73. The Russell 2000 Index dropped 6.3 percent to 526.77. The S&P 500’s rebound of as much as 62 percent since March 9 propelled the index to a one-year high on Oct. 19 and pushed its valuation to more than 20 times the reported operating income of its companies, the most expensive level since 2004. All 10 industries in the S&P 500 declined this week, led by raw- materials producers, financial and industrial companies. Home Sales, Spending Home Depot , the world’s largest home-improvement chain, fell 4.5 percent to $25.09 and Alcoa , the largest U.S. aluminum producer, slid 9.5 to $12.42 after sales of new U.S. homes unexpectedly dropped in September. Purchases declined 3.6 percent to a 402,000 annual pace, lower than the most pessimistic economist’s forecast , according to Commerce Department figures. D.R. Horton Inc., the largest U.S. homebuilder by revenue, lost 12 percent to $10.96. Walt Disney Co., the world’s biggest media company, and Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the largest retailer, fell after Americans cut spending for the first time in five months and a gauge of confidence weakened. Consumer spending dropped 0.5 percent in September after a 1.4 percent jump in August, Commerce Department figures showed. The Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment slid to 70.6 in October from 73.5 the month before. Economic Rebound The threat of a CIT Group Inc. bankruptcy raised concern about the sustainability of the economic rebound, pushing financial stocks to their steepest weekly drop since May. CIT, the commercial lender, plunged 37 percent to 72 cents as investor Carl Icahn agreed to support its prepackaged bankruptcy plan. JPMorgan Chase & Co. declined 7.7 percent to $41.77, and Morgan Stanley fell 8.2 percent to $32.12. Bank of America Corp . lost 10 percent to $14.58, the steepest decline in the Dow average. Dick Bove , an analyst at Rochdale Securities LLC in Lutz, Florida, said the lender will have to sell shares to pay back its government bailout. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials dropped 3.6 percent as the Dollar Index , a six-currency gauge of the greenback’s strength, added 1.1 percent, its first increase in four weeks. Gold and crude oil fell, their first weekly declines in a month. Exxon lost 2.6 percent to $71.67 and Freeport lost 9.8 percent to $73.36. U.S. Steel Corp. and AK Steel Holding Corp. fell at least 15 percent after reporting lower third-quarter results and offering fourth-quarter outlooks that disappointed investors. ‘Strong Path Up’ Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. lost 27 percent this week, the steepest drop since at least 1980, falling to $12.88. The largest U.S. tiremaker forecast an operating loss in North America this quarter. Stocks fell even after a Commerce Department report showed the U.S. economy returned to growth in the third quarter after a yearlong contraction. The world’s largest economy expanded at a 3.5 percent pace from July through September as government incentives spurred consumers to spend more on homes and cars. “People are trying to evaluate how strong the economy really is and whether we’re on a strong path up,” said Giri Cherukuri , who helps manage $1.5 billion at Oakbrook Investments in Lisle, Illinois. “We had some mixed signals. We may be in for a period of volatility for the near term as people try to digest all the news and evaluate where we stand.” Earnings Reports Kraft Foods Co. , Cisco Systems Inc., and Mastercard Inc. are among 96 companies in the S&P 500 scheduled to report quarterly earnings next week. Since the start of the third-quarter reporting period, 81 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 have released better- than-expected results, according to Bloomberg data. That’s the highest proportion in data going back to 1993. Verizon Communications Inc. climbed 2.6 percent, the steepest advance in the Dow average, to $29.59. The second- largest U.S. phone company reported third-quarter profit that topped analysts’ estimates after cutting workers and adding mobile-phone customers. Gannett Co ., the owner of USA Today, dropped 26 percent to $9.82 and the New York Times Co. lost 26 percent to $7.97. U.S. newspaper circulation declines steepened in the six months through September on increased subscription and newsstand prices, according to data from the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Reports next week will probably show that payrolls fell by 175,000 workers last month, deepening the worst employment slump since the 1930s, and factories expanded at the fastest pace since 2006, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The benchmark index for U.S. stock options had its biggest weekly gain in a year. The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, surged 38 percent to 30.69. The index, which measures the cost of using options as insurance against declines in the S&P 500 , is down from a record 80.86 in November, yet above its 20 average over its 19-year history. To contact the reporters on this story: Sapna Maheshwari in New York at smaheshwar11@bloomberg.net ; Mary Childs in New York at mchilds4@bloomberg.net .

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RBS Said to Near Deal Permitting Early Exit From U.K. Asset Insurance Plan

October 31, 2009

By Jon Menon Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc may reach an agreement to enable the bank to exit a U.K. government program to insure its risky assets earlier than predicted, a person familiar with the situation said. The bank, which will insure as much as 280 billion pounds ($413 billion) of risky assets with the government under the Asset Protection Scheme, may gain greater flexibility as part of the revised deal, the person said. It may no longer face 17.5 billion pounds in upfront costs to join the plan for five years, instead making an annual payment and absorbing a bigger first loss than first agreed, said the person, who declined to be identified because the talks are continuing. RBS, 70 percent of which is owned by the government, is trying to get back on its feet after posting the biggest loss in British corporate history during the credit crunch. The company may be forced by the EU to sell its insurance unit, 300 branches and some investment-banking assets to win approval for its plans. “Participation in the APS is necessary in order to provide a stable framework within which a long and uncertain disposal or run-off program can be efficiently managed,” Ian Gordon , an analyst at Exane BNP Paribas in London, wrote in a note to investors yesterday. Gordon has an “underperform” rating on the stock. A final decision on the terms of the asset-insurance plan hasn’t been reached, the person said, adding that RBS may agree to absorb a higher first loss under the program than the almost 43 billion pounds, including 23 billion pounds of writedowns since the credit crunch, that was originally made part of the deal. Even with the new agreement, the bank will probably take more than a year to exit the plan, the person said. ‘Poor’ Performance RBS , which had a 20 billion-pound capital injection last year, posted a loss of 24 billion pounds in 2008. Its financial performance will be “poor” for another two years, Chief Executive Officer Stephen Hester said in August. Hester previously abandoned plans to sell the insurance unit, which includes the Direct Line, Churchill and Green Flag brands, after failing to agree on a price with potential buyers in January. The Financial Times reported the new terms earlier today. Officials at RBS declined to comment. To contact the reporter on this story: Jon Menon in London at jmenon1@bloomberg.net

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Craig Newmark: Getting Serious Credit Card Consumer Protection

October 31, 2009

Sometimes banks try to pull a fast one on you, like mailing statements nearly late, then charging you for late fees. Consumer Reports is helping get reasonable consumer protection for us all and I’d appreciate it you took a look at CreditCardReform.org Here’s the deal: A key House committee just passed two major reforms

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Eric Schurenberg: The One Free Lunch Left for Investors

October 31, 2009

Jeremy Grantham’s long awaited quarterly letter made the rounds earlier this week. Most reporters, including MoneyWatch’s own Conrad de Aenlle , focused on the guru’s sarcastic evisceration of Bernanke and Geithner and his gloomy outlook for the stock market in general. But buried in the letter was a rare (of late) positive review for one sector of the stock market. Quality growth stocks, said Grantham, chief investment officer of money manager GMO, are now so cheap compared to the more deeply indebted, less stable corners of the market that they amount to a “free lunch.” The man who forecast the market bubbles of 2000 and 2007 does not use that term lightly. Grantham isn’t the only one to note the bargain pricing of high-quality growth stocks compared to the rest of the market. Morgan Stanley analysts Gerard Minack and Jason Todd wrote about it last month. As you can see from the chart below, stocks that got high quality ratings from Standard and Poor’s have barely participated in the summer rally. The big gains were racked up by the seedier elements — i.e., those deemed by S&P to have less stable and sustainable earnings. “The rally since March has been a risk rally,” is the way that Grant Bowers, portfolio manager of Franklin Growth Opportunities fund (FGRAX) summed up the discrepancy in an interview at his office this week. Diverging performance between quality growth stocks and other parts of the stock market is all part of a fairly standard cycle. Growth stocks can lag for periods of as long as seven years; then the cycle shifts and it’s growth’s turn again. Because they are more reliable, growth stocks usually trade at higher price-earnings multiples than the rest of the market. But at the moment, the average high-quality growth stock trades at no premium at all to the proletariat of the market. History would suggest that means the cycle is getting ready to turn. What does this possibility mean to you? It means that you might want to put your next equity dollars into a growth fund or ETF. If you have both value and growth funds in your portfolio (and you do, don’t you?), you might want to rebalance a bit of your holdings from the former into the latter, as long as you conduct the transaction in a 401(k) or IRA, where you won’t get hit by capital gains taxes. What it doesn’t mean is that growth stocks will take off no matter what happens in the market. Growth stocks are stocks, after all. But if you’re worried that the market may have gotten a little ahead of economic reality, quality stocks are what you’d want to own. And Morgan Stanley’s Minack sees no reason to think history won’t repeat. “We remain convinced that quality will handsomely outperform in a flat or down market,” he said by email today. You could argue whether that’s really a free lunch as Grantham says. But odds are, it’s at least a blue plate special.

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Robert Lenzner: While Larry Summers Dreams, You Can Act

October 31, 2009

Lawrence Summers, the White House economics czar, paints a fuzzy picture of a social compact between Wall Street and Main Street, an agreement based on speed limits and guardrails, overseen by Washington, with the goal of limiting risk and encouraging growth. In my StreetTalk column for Forbes.com, ” Larry Summers Has A Dream, But No Details ,” I noted that Summers lacks specifics and that such symbolic moves as limiting compensation for a tiny group of executives at bailed-out banks is not going to restore public confidence. A more noteworthy Summers point: his prediction that “the incidence of financial crises may be greater over the next 25 years than the past 25 years.” Yes, that means a return to the days of the 1987 crash in the stock market; the liquidation of Long Term Capital Management; the default of Russia and Argentina on their sovereign debts; serial monetary crises in Asia, Latin America and emerging markets; and the dot-com meltdown and the global subprime disaster that froze financial markets, requiring trillions in taxpayer bailout money. So what can an investor do? For advice, I sat down with Marc Harris of RBC, one of the few large banks that maneuvered a clear course through the economic turmoil. In the first part of our video interview, we discussed financial stocks . Harris singled out Bank of America ( BAC ), KeyCorp ( KEY ), and Boston Private ( BPFH ).

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Fitch Affirms Pacific Life's CMBS Servicer Ratings

October 31, 2009

Also at the same date, Pacific Life was the named special servicer for 13 US CMBS transactions consisting of 123 loans totaling $2.1 billion and was actively special servicing five CMBS loans totaling $440 million. …

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New York Marathon Keeps Working as Unemployed Have More Time to Prepare

October 31, 2009

By Tony C. Dreibus and Mary Childs Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Ben Lloyd will run the New York City Marathon tomorrow after a good night’s sleep and a relaxing week. After losing his job as a Barclays Plc loan salesman in August, he says he’s had plenty of time to train properly. “Actually getting to train and sleep is a pretty novel concept,” said Lloyd, 38, who lives on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. “After being laid off in August it gave me the perfect opportunity to really focus my training.” About 40,000 people are registered to start the race, the 40th running of the event that makes its way through all five boroughs of a city that’s lost 173,000 jobs since July 2008, including 37,400 at financial companies. The slumping economy hasn’t kept away unemployed people like Lloyd or those who had to travel thousands of miles to attend the event. Only 25 percent of the 26.2-mile (42.2-kilometer) race’s participants are from the New York area, about 10,000 are from other parts of the country and approximately 20,000 are from outside the United States, said Richard Finn, a spokesperson for New York Road Runners , which organizes the annual event. Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong , who overcame cancer and now runs the Lance Armstrong Foundation that raises money to help people with the illness, will run the New York City Marathon after finishing in just under three hours a year ago. After the 2008 race, he said it was “the hardest physical thing” he’d accomplished. A Status Race Lloyd, who sold high-yield loans for Barclays and lost his job as a result of the company’s acquisition of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. 10 months earlier, said the race is appealing because of its status. “The location attracts more than the race itself,” he said. “New York City is a cool place to come, and if you want to do a marathon then why not make it NYC? If you are someone who is going to end up running a lot of marathons then ultimately the New York City Marathon is one of the ones you need to do.” Marathon running has grown in the past two decades as a record 425,000 people finished the distance in 2008, up 3.2 percent from a year earlier, according to data from Running USA , a group that tracks running trends. This year’s marathon is the city’s biggest on record, with about 103,000 applicants, Finn said. “Running serves as something of an anchor in rocky waters,” said Mary Wittenberg , chief executive officer of New York Road Runners and race director of the marathon. “It’s something you can control, something you can go out and spend some time and feel better for it.” Running Shoe Sales The National Sporting Goods Association reported that in 2008 about $2.31 billion was spent on running shoes, up 5.5 percent from a year earlier, according to the Running USA site. The New York race starts in Staten Island, crosses the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge into Brooklyn before entering Queens. Runners will cross the Queensboro Bridge into Midtown and take First Avenue into the Bronx before heading back into Manhattan, along Fifth Avenue and finishing in Central Park South. The men’s and women’s winners will each receive $130,000, according to the marathon Web site. Second place nets $65,000 and third place will earn $40,000, the site said. If a former winner takes first place, he or she will receive an additional $70,000, Finn said. Last Year’s Record Brazilian Marilson Gomes dos Santos won the men’s race last year in a time of 2:08:43. Paula Radcliffe from the U.K. won the women’s race in 2:23:56. This year’s field will include Kenya’s Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot , winner of the Boston Marathon in 2007 and 2008, and Gomes dos Santos. Among the women vying for this year’s title are Radcliffe and Ludmila Petrova from Russia, last year’s runner-up. Along with the pros, Wall Streeters who are accustomed to setting and achieving goals in high-pressure situations have turned their focus to running as an outlet, according to Wittenberg. “It’s the Mount Everest of running,” she said. “It’s a major goal at a time when high-achieving people who are used to being able to set major goals in their business life might either be living with greatly reduced budgets at work or they might be out of work or stressed about their own job.” Lloyd, who plans to finish the race a few minutes slower than his personal record of 2 hours and 54 minutes because he participated in the Ironman World Championships on Oct. 10, said he’ll enjoy relaxing after the race and not having the pressure of returning to the office on Monday morning. “My triathlon club always has a big gathering post-race at a bar on the Upper East Side,” he said. “So I can enjoy a few beers without the worry of work.” To contact the reporter on this story: Tony C. Dreibus in Chicago at tdreibus@bloomberg.net ; Mary Childs in New York at mchilds4@bloomberg.net

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Investors Sense Rout in Stocks After 8-Month Rally

October 31, 2009

By Rich Miller Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — An eight-month, 68 percent rally in global stocks failed to convince investors and analysts that it’s time to take on more risk or dispel their concerns about U.S. economic policies and its banking system. Only 31 percent of respondents to a poll of investors and analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers in the U.S., Europe and Asia see investment opportunities, down from 35 percent in the previous survey in July. Almost 40 percent in the latest quarterly survey, the Bloomberg Global Poll, say they are still hunkering down. U.S. investors are even more cautious, with more than 50 percent saying they are in a defensive crouch. “The doubt and the pessimism just won’t go away,” says James Paulsen , who helps oversee $375 billion as chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis. “They’re still so shell-shocked by what they went through despite the improvement in the market and the economy.” Stock markets have slid in the past week after bounding higher since March as the economic outlook improved. The MSCI AC World Index of emerging and developed markets has risen by 68 percent since March. It fell 0.4 percent as of 1:30 p.m. in Tokyo, an eighth day of declines. The S&P 500 index, which has gained 54 percent since March, closed below its 50-day moving average level for the first time since July yesterday after a 2 percent drop. Worldwide, investors and analysts now view the U.S. as the weak link in the global economy, with its markets seen as among the riskiest by a plurality of those surveyed. One in four respondents expects an unemployment rate of 11 percent or more a year from now, compared with a U.S. administration forecast of 9.7 percent. The jobless rate now is 9.8 percent, a 26-year high. Dollar’s Decline The skepticism about the U.S. is taking a toll on the dollar, with a plurality of respondents saying it will weaken against most other currencies in the next year, the yen being the major exception among the 11 currencies tested. Thirty-seven percent say the dollar should not continue as the world’s reserve currency in 10 years. The yen fetched 90.32 per dollar as of 1:45 p.m. in Tokyo from 90.75 in New York. The poll is based on interviews conducted Oct. 23-27 with a random sample of 1,452 Bloomberg subscribers, representing decision makers in markets, finance and economics on six continents. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points. “The stock market has had quite a run since July when more Bloomberg customers thought the Standard & Poor’s 500 index would rally than predicted a downturn,” says J. Ann Selzer , president of Selzer & Co., the Des Moines, Iowa-based firm that conducted the polls. “That rally may have dampened views of what to expect next. They may also think that there are better markets now for investments than the U.S.” Emerging Markets Respondents see China, Brazil and India as the markets with the most potential, and commodities as the asset of choice, replacing stocks as the most desirable investment class in last quarter’s survey. Real estate and bonds are out of favor, with 40 percent saying bonds will have the worst returns over the next year. “Asia is the best place to put money as there are not mountains of consumer debt, bad mortgage lending, trade deficits or high unemployment,” says Peter J. Emblin , a fund executive at Thai Strategic Capital Management Co. in Bangkok who took part in the poll. Investors and analysts in Asia are the most bullish, while those in the U.S. are the most cautious. A majority of Asian investors expect their country’s benchmark stock index to rise while a plurality of U.S. and European respondents thought their benchmarks would fall in the next six months. Equity Rebound “A lot of people have been surprised by the speed of the equity rebound,” says Dan Greenhaus , chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York, adding that the rally has probably been fueled by buying from hedge funds and traders. “It caught them off guard and they don’t believe it.” Fund manager Paulsen thinks the stock markets rose largely because of the disappearance of panicked sellers. “I don’t think the market has gone up because of heavy buying. You only need a little bit of buying when there are no sellers.” Asia’s optimism is understandable. The region is leading the global economy out of the worst recession since World War II, according to the Washington-based International Monetary Fund. The IMF said on Oct. 1 that the world economy will expand 3.1 percent next year after shrinking 1.1 percent this year, with China growing by 9 percent and India by 6.4 percent. Global investors and analysts agree that the world economy is on the mend. Almost 75 percent describe the global economy as stable or improving, up from just over 60 percent in July. Higher Rates The worldwide recovery is seen as pushing up long-term interest rates, with 55 percent of those surveyed forecasting higher rates in their respective countries in the next six months. As a result, only 9 percent surveyed thought bonds were the best place to invest over the next year, half the number who favored bonds in July. More than half of respondents see the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rising in the next half year, up from 47 percent in the July poll. In Asia, where some of the biggest holders of Treasury securities are located, led by China with almost $800 billion, investors are less convinced that yields will rise. Forty-five percent of those surveyed in the region think that. The yield on the 10-year note was little changed at 3.41 percent as of 1:45 p.m. in Tokyo today. Commodities are expected to benefit from an Asian-led worldwide economic expansion, according to the survey. More than one in three investors say commodities will offer the highest return over the next year. Oil, gold, copper, corn and soybean prices are all seen rising in the next six months. $100 Oil “It’s an emerging-market story,” says Matthew Johnson , director of interest rate strategy for UBS AG in Sydney and a poll participant. “It’s all about inelastic supply and fast- growing demand.” He sees oil prices rising to $100 per barrel in the coming months from around $77 now. China garnered the most votes from investors when they were asked to pick which one or two markets would offer the best opportunities over the next year. Brazil came in second, followed by India. By contrast, a majority of investors worldwide are pessimistic about the investment climate in the U.S. and the European Union, according to the poll, though the gloom about Europe was less pronounced than it was in July. Downside Risk “The U.S. market has the most downside risk in the coming year,” says Marty Beskow , a poll participant and portfolio manager for Blue Water Capital Advisors in Duluth, Minnesota, formed in January. “Although the U.S. may experience a quarter or more of growth, the driver is not real demand but rather stimulus from the Federal Reserve and government spending that is unsustainable.” Investors have turned more pessimistic about the U.S. government’s economic plan since the last poll, with more than 60 percent saying they feel that way, compared with 55 percent in July. Almost 20 percent expect U.S. banks to be in worse shape a year from now, about double the number who felt that way in July. Two in three say the banks will improve over the next year but will still have problems. Billionaire investor George Soros said on Oct. 5 in Istanbul that the U.S. recovery will be sluggish as “basically bankrupt” financial companies and indebted consumers impede it. Worldwide, investors see large budget deficits as the biggest threat to the U.S. economy over the next year. The deficit hit a record $1.4 trillion in the year ended Sept. 30. Persistently high unemployment is seen as the next biggest threat. More than three-quarters of respondents expect the U.S. unemployment rate to be 9.5 percent or more a year from now. Tax Increases Unlike investors elsewhere, those in the U.S. see higher taxes as the biggest danger. “The increase in taxes is going to slow the growth rate of our economy to below 2 percent for the next 25 years,” says Gary Singleterry , who participated in the poll and is president of Singleterry Mansley Asset Management in Summit, New Jersey, which manages about $200 million. Three-quarters of U.S. investors think the dollar should remain the world’s reserve currency over the next decade. No more than half their counterparts in Europe and Asia feel that way. “I heard a story the other day from an old French lady who was in her 100’s when she died,” says Ben Watson , director of quantitative analytics for RBS Group (Australia) Pty Limited in Sydney and a poll participant. “In the 1920’s she remembers the U.S. being an emerging market very much like China is today. The 19th century was the European century, the 20th was the American century and the 21st will be China’s century.” Click here for additional information on methodology and a full list of survey questions. To contact the reporters on this story: Rich Miller in Washington rmiller28@bloomberg.net

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Wilbur Ross Sees `Huge’ Commercial Property Crash Ahead for U.S. Assets

October 31, 2009

By John Gittelsohn and Thomas R. Keene Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) — Billionaire investor Wilbur L. Ross Jr ., said today the U.S. is in the beginning of a “huge crash in commercial real estate.” “All of the components of real estate value are going in the wrong direction simultaneously,” said Ross, one of nine money managers participating in a government program to remove toxic assets from bank balance sheets. “Occupancy rates are going down. Rent rates are going down and the capitalization rate — the return that investors are demanding to buy a property — are going up.” U.S. commercial property sales are forecast to fall to the lowest in almost two decades as the industry endures its worst slump since the savings and loan crisis of the early 1990s, according to property research firm Real Capital Analytics Inc. The Moody’s/REAL Commercial Property Price Indices already have fallen almost 41 percent since October 2007, Moody’s Investors Service said Oct. 19. Billionaire George Soros , speaking today at a lecture organized by the Central European University in Budapest, said a “bloodletting” may be coming for leveraged buyouts and commercial real estate. “The American consumer will no longer be able to serve as the motor for the world economy,” said Soros, 79. His comments came in the same week that Capmark Financial Group Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after originating $60 billion in commercial property loans in 2006 and 2007. ‘Extreme Caution’ Ross, the 71-year-old chairman and chief executive officer of WL Ross & Co. LLC, said in an interview on Bloomberg Radio that he would use “extreme caution” before putting money into commercial real estate, especially office space, because properties are losing tenants. U.S. office vacancies hit a five-year high of almost 17 percent in the third quarter, while shopping center vacancies climbed to their highest since 1992, according to the property research firm Reis Inc. “I think it’s going to take quite a while to work itself out,” Ross said. As of Oct. 15, Ross said he had spent less than $100 million of at least $1.5 billion available to him under the Public-Private Investment Program, an investment pool of private and government money for purchasing distressed assets from financial institutions. Ross used the funds he spent so far to purchase residential mortgage-backed securities, he said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Corus Investment WL Ross was among a group of firms that agreed Oct. 6 to buy $4.5 billion of Corus Bankshares Inc.’s real estate. Starwood Capital Group LLC and TPG led the group to buy the assets of the Chicago-based lender, which was seized by federal regulators Sept. 11 after its investments in construction loans for condominiums went bad. In 2007, Ross ventured into the declining residential property market, winning an auction for the home-loan servicing unit of Melville, New York-based American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. He agreed to pay between $435 million and $500 million for the right to collect payments and maintain escrow on about $45.3 billion of home mortgages. Making Lists Dubbed the King of Bankruptcy by clients during his quarter century at the Rothschild investment bank, Ross entered the U.S. home mortgage business as an increasing number of borrowers quit making payments and profits sank in loan servicing. “Our methodology is to make a great big list: What’s every thing we can think of that’s either wrong with the industry or that we just plain don’t like about it,” Ross said today. “Then we start work on another list. If we had control of this industry, what would we do to fix each one of those problems?” he said. “Once we feel that there is a reasonable likelihood that the second chart kind of equals the first chart, that’s when we get ready to do something.” To contact the reporters on this story: John Gittelsohn in New York at johngitt@bloomberg.net ; Thomas R. Keene in New York at tkeene@bloomberg.net .

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Dalai Lama Says Tawang Visit Is for Teaching, Not to Locate His Successor

October 31, 2009

By Stuart Biggs Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — The Dalai Lama , Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, said his planned visit to Buddhist monasteries on the India-China border next month is solely for teaching and shouldn’t anger China’s government. The Dalai Lama will visit the town of Tawang in a disputed border region of Arunachal Pradesh state next month. The town is where he crossed into India in 1959 while fleeing Chinese rule over Tibet, as well as the birthplace in the 17th-century of the sixth Dalai Lama. “If my visit creates problems, I’m very sad, that’s all,” the 74 year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner told reporters in Tokyo today. “It was a fearful journey with great anxiety, and when I reached the Tawang area it was an immense relief. I have great feelings about the area.” Tawang is home to one of the largest monasteries of his Gelugpa sect of Buddhism. Local leaders invited him to teach and dedicate a new hospital, built in part with funds he donated. Next month’s visit was the first opportunity to accept, and was not meant to surprise the Chinese government, he said. Asked whether his successor may be found in Tawang, he restated that he will play no role in such efforts. Tibetans believe the Dalai Lama is the reincarnation of Avalokitsevara, the Buddha of Compassion. “If I was communist then I would have to be concerned about my successor but I’m not communist,” he said. “If the majority of Tibetan people want to keep the Dalai Lama as an institution, they will carry it on. It’s not my business.” ‘Propaganda Won’t Work’ The Dalai Lama repeated his call for reporters to be allowed to visit Tibet to assess conditions without the presence of security officers. Tibet’s biggest pro-independence demonstrations in almost 20 years took place in March 2008 when hundreds of monks marched to demand an end to religious restrictions and the release of imprisoned colleagues. “If the reality in Tibet is what the government says and that Tibetan people are happy, then our information is wrong. We would have to apologize and we would cease all our activities,” he said. “But if it’s not as the government says, then they should take a realistic approach at solving the situation because propaganda isn’t going to work.” Allowing the media to report the truth about Tibet would help China build trust with other countries that would increase its authority in global affairs, he said. “People should have full knowledge of the reality, good or bad, and that is lacking in all authoritarian countries and especially in mainland China,” he said. “This must change. If China is going to take a more constructive role on this planet, trust is essential.” To contact the reporter on this story: Stuart Biggs in Tokyo at sbiggs3@bloomberg.net .

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Obama Says Third-Quarter Growth Report Shows `Right Direction’ for Economy

October 31, 2009

By Nicholas Johnston Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama said figures on economic growth and the number of jobs created by government spending show that the economy is “moving in the right direction.” In his weekly radio and Internet address , Obama highlighted the Commerce Department report that the U.S. economy grew at a 3.5 percent annual rate the third quarter and separate data showing spending from the $787 billion economic stimulus is directly responsible for 640,329 jobs so far. “I am pleased to offer some better news that, while not cause for celebration, is certainly reason to believe that we are moving in the right direction,” Obama said. Economic growth and higher government spending hasn’t reduced the unemployment rate, which rose to a 26-year high of 9.8 percent in September. Obama has said he expects the rate to exceed 10 percent, and the jobless rate has been seized on by the administration’s critics. “Economic growth is no substitute for job growth,” Obama said today. “And we will likely see further job losses in the coming days, a fact that is both troubling for our economy and heartbreaking for the men and women who suddenly find themselves out of work.” Obama said the expanding economy is the first step to job creation and the gross domestic product report this week that showed the first quarter of growth in a year, is a “good sign.” “We have made progress,” Obama said. “At the same time, I want to emphasize that there’s still plenty of progress to be made.” Republican Address In the Republican address , House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio criticized the proposed $894 billion health- care legislation unveiled by House Democrats this week. It would create a government-run insurance program, require employers to cover workers and impose a surtax on the wealthiest Americans. “This 1,990 pages of bureaucracy will centralize health care decision-making in Washington,” he said . Boehner said the legislation would require thousands of new government employees, put bureaucrats in charge of medical treatment and will raise health insurance premiums. Boehner called on Democrats to work with Republicans to create a “fiscally responsible” overhaul of the health-care system. Republicans favor proposals to let people buy health insurance across state lines, give states tools to overhaul health-care systems, curb medical malpractice lawsuits and expand health-insurance purchasing pools, Boehner said. “We now have a choice: We can come together to implement smart, fiscally responsible reforms to improve Americans’ health care or we can recklessly pursue this government takeover that creates far more problems than it solves,” Boehner said. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

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Iceland to Remove Capital Controls on New Investments, Central Bank Says

October 31, 2009

By Omar R. Valdimarsson Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Iceland will begin lifting capital controls from tomorrow, freeing new investors from restrictions imposed after the collapse of the island’s banking system and the plunge in value of its currency, the central bank said. The decision means foreign-currency inflows linked to new investments will be exempt from the controls, the bank said in a statement in Reykjavik today. “Investors are authorized, without restrictions, to convert into foreign currency the sales proceeds from assets in which they invest after Nov.1,” the bank said in the statement. “Previously, non-residents were fully authorized to transfer foreign currency deriving from interest and dividends on investments in Iceland.” The central bank imposed the restrictions at the end of last year after the failure of its largest banks prompted a sell-off of the krona and plunged the island’s economy into a recession, forcing the government to seek a $4.6 billion International Monetary Fund -led bailout. Even after controls were introduced, the central bank raised the key rate to a record 18 percent, before lowering it to 12 percent in June. “The capital controls imposed on Nov. 28, 2008, were considered necessary in order to stabilize the economy in the wake of the financial crisis that struck Iceland in October 2008,” the bank’s statement said. “The conditions necessary for the initial stage in removing the controls, in accordance with the capital account liberalization strategy presented by the Bank on August 5, 2009, have now developed.” The second stage of the lifting of controls will target foreign-exchange outflows. Next Phase “The next phase of capital account liberalization – the removal of restrictions on capital outflows – will be determined by the success of this phase and the progress made under the macroeconomic program,” according to the statement. Today’s decision comes two days after Iceland completed a review of its economic program with the IMF. Upon completing the review the IMF disbursed $167.5 million to Iceland, and an additional $625 million were made available to the north Atlantic island from Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden and Poland. The funds will be used to strengthen Iceland’s reserves as the capital restrictions are scaled back, Economic Affairs Minister Gylfi Magnusson said on Oct. 29. “It was clear we needed it to strengthen our reserves, prior to abolishing the capital controls,” said Magnusson. “Without the funds, abolishing the restrictions would have taken longer.” Opportunities The central bank’s main challenge is to “find opportunities to bring down interest rates with domestic economic circumstances in mind without putting pressure on the exchange rate of the krona and at the same time start the process of removing capital controls,” said central bank Governor Mar Gudmundsson on Aug. 25. All restrictions on capital flows will be dropped in two to three years, the then interim Governor Svein Harald Oygard told reporters in August. Iceland’s economy will contract 9.1 percent in 2009 as household spending falls 19.7 percent and investment slumps 48.4 percent, the central bank said on Aug. 13. To contact the reporter on this story: Omar R. Valdimarsson in Reykjavik valdimarsson@bloomberg.net .

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CIT Group Approaches Bankruptcy After Striking Icahn, Goldman Sachs Deals

October 31, 2009

By Pierre Paulden and Linda Shen Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — CIT Group Inc. , the 101-year old commercial lender seeking to avoid collapse, may file for a prepackaged bankruptcy as soon as this weekend after striking deals with billionaire Carl Icahn and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. A prepackaged bankruptcy “is probably going to go through,” Icahn said yesterday. He will supply a $1 billion loan for “supplemental liquidity” that can be used as bankruptcy financing, the New York-based company said. CIT also said it reached an agreement with Goldman Sachs to keep a credit line open should the lender file for court protection. The accords were disclosed the day after a deadline passed for CIT to solicit votes in support of either a $30 billion out- of-court debt exchange or a prepackaged bankruptcy . CIT is seeking to reduce debt by at least $5.7 billion after being locked out of credit markets it relies on for funding and posting nine quarters of losses totaling more than $5 billion. “CIT has gotten its ducks in a row for filing,” Adam Steer , an analyst with CreditSights Inc. in New York, said in a telephone interview. “They can hopefully get out of the bankruptcy court faster, which may be better for debt recoveries.” Under the prepackaged plan, CIT bondholders will get 70 cents on the dollar in the form of new notes and equity in the reorganized company. If CIT is forced into a “free-fall” bankruptcy, unsecured claims may fetch as little as 6 cents on the dollar, according to Jeffrey Peek , the company’s chief executive officer. $4.5 Billion Loan CIT arranged a $4.5 billion term loan that can be used in bankruptcy, the company said Oct. 28. The lender said “through the substantial deleveraging featured in CIT’s restructuring plan, whether completed in or out of court, the company is confident that CIT will emerge as a strong bank-holding company with improved capital, liquidity and earnings potential.” CIT spokesman Curt Ritter declined to comment yesterday. While CIT said it’s still counting the more than 150,000 ballots, bond and credit-default swap prices show that investors are betting the lender will file for court protection. Since Peek started the debt swap Oct. 1, the company’s notes due Nov. 3 dropped 12 cents to 68 cents on the dollar, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Holders of the $500 million in notes were offered 90 cents on the dollar in new debt and equity in an out-of-court exchange that expired at 11:59 p.m. in New York on Oct. 29. Bondholder Protection The cost to protect CIT debt against default for five years has risen 4.5 percentage points to 38.5 percent upfront since Sept. 30, according to CMA DataVision. That means it would cost $3.85 million initially and $500,000 annually to protect $10 million of CIT bonds from default for five years. The cost of the credit-default swaps implies that traders have priced in an 85.5 percent chance that the company will default within five years, a standard pricing model used by Bloomberg shows. The model assumes investors could recover 40 cents on the dollar in a bankruptcy proceeding. CIT dropped 23 cents, or 24 percent, to 72 cents in New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday. The shares, which traded at more than $61 each in February 2007, have declined 84 percent this year. If the prepackaged plan is approved, the company plans to file for bankruptcy before $800 million of bonds mature next week, according to people familiar with the situation who declined to be identified because the talks are private. Noteholder Control Icahn, 73, who says he’s CIT largest bondholder with $2 billion of its debt, initially opposed CIT’s plan, contending the investments were worth more in a traditional bankruptcy. The New York-based investor proposed this week to buy CIT holders’ bonds for 60 cents on the dollar in a tender offer lasting 30 days if they rejected the plan. CIT’s agreement to “give control to the noteholders” and an accelerated process for appointing directors “significantly improve corporate governance and cash flow protections, and are positive for the company and all noteholders,” Icahn said in a statement yesterday, explaining why he changed his vote in favor of the prepackaged bankruptcy. “The board in general acted responsibly by saying, ‘We’re willing to do this.” Icahn said in a telephone interview. Icahn also said he’s changing the terms of the tender offer for bondholders who voted against the prepackaged bankruptcy. “Whether or not the Exchange Offer/Prepackaged Plan fails, they will still be protected at $600 per note for 30 days,” the statement said. Icahn’s Goals “Icahn had two goals in mind: Influence over the board and participation in the expansion loan facility,” said Kevin Starke , an analyst at CRT Capital Group LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, said in a telephone interview. “He’s won on both counts.” CIT finances about 1 million businesses from Dunkin’ Brands Inc. in Canton, Massachusetts, to Eddie Bauer Holdings Inc., the clothing chain in Bellevue, Washington, that’s operating under bankruptcy protection. The company says it’s the third-largest U.S. railcar-leasing firm and the world’s third-biggest aircraft financier. Icahn Associates Corp. is the largest shareholder of American Railcar Industries Inc. , which depended on CIT for 31 percent of its business as of June 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Icahn is chairman of the St. Charles, Missouri-based railcar maker. CIT’s agreement with New York-based Goldman Sachs will reduce a $3 billion credit facility to $2.13 billion and keep the line open should CIT file for bankruptcy. Goldman Sachs Agreement In exchange, Goldman Sachs received $285 million in termination fees, CIT said yesterday in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the terms of the two companies’ original agreement, Goldman Sachs would have been due a $1 billion termination payment to close the credit line after a CIT bankruptcy. The agreements should make the bankruptcy process easier by removing opposition to the bondholder plan, Michael Taiano , an analyst at Sandler O’Neill & Partners LP said in a telephone interview. “They’re effectively in control and there’s not really a bankruptcy judge that has to approve everything,” he said. “It creates less disruption to the business because you’re in bankruptcy a shorter period of time.” To contact the reporters on this story: Pierre Paulden in New York at ppaulden@bloomberg.net ; Linda Shen in New York at lshen21@bloomberg.net

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India- RBI says legal cover needed against future financial crisis

October 31, 2009

India- RBI says legal cover needed against future financial crisis

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Japan leaves key interest rate at 0.1%

October 31, 2009

Japan leaves key interest rate at 0.1%

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BP ordered to pay $87m fine for 2005 blast

October 31, 2009

BP ordered to pay $87m fine for 2005 blast

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Airbus to open logistics center in China

October 31, 2009

Airbus to open logistics center in China

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Russia, Poland agree on gas supply terms

October 31, 2009

Russia, Poland agree on gas supply terms

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Typhoon Mirinae Rolls Across Philippines, Leaves 11 Dead Before Weakening

October 31, 2009

By Clarissa Batino and Francisco Alcuaz Jr. Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — At least 11 people are dead and six missing after Typhoon Mirinae roared across Manila and southern Luzon island before weakening into a storm and moving west of the Philippines toward the South China Sea. Mirinae, which knocked out power, washed away a bridge and toppled trees, was 170 kilometers (106 miles) southwest of Manila as of 1 p.m. local time, according to the weather bureau. Winds had weakened to 105 kilometers an hour from 130 kilometers earlier today. “The worst is over, but we cannot be complacent,” Ernesto Torres, National Disaster Coordinating Council spokesman, said by phone. One man drowned and his 1-year-old child is missing in Pililia province, the military said. At least seven people have died in the Bicol region, Civil Defense Director Raffy Alejandro said by phone today, and three more were killed in flash floods in Laguna, Provincial Police Commander Manolito Labador said. A man is missing in Muntinlupa City after a shanty washed into a nearby creek, Torres said. As many as 700 families in Taytay, Rizal province, who had been evacuated from a previous storm, had to be moved again after Mirinae knocked down their makeshift shelters made of tarpaulins and other light materials, Gwen Pang, a Red Cross spokeswoman, said by phone today. A man and his son are missing and feared drowned, after a bridge in Batangas City collapsed under their car, Police Commander Jesus Gatchalian said. The boy’s mother was rescued. Thousands Stranded Thousands were stranded in ports and bus stations as flooding closed some provincial roads. Some of the areas that were badly flooded after tropical cyclone Ketsana, which carried the heaviest rainfall in at least 40 years on Sept. 26, were flooded again today. Parts of Marikina and Taguig, both in eastern Manila, were waist-deep in water, Pang said. Towns around Laguna Lake, southeast of Manila, remained “critical” because Mirinae’s winds generated strong waves, she said. “It was furious,” said Efren Aguilar, a staff member of the disaster coordinating council at Quezon province where Mirinae, known locally as Santi, struck earlier today. “There was heavy rain and strong wind for two hours. Things have calmed down now.” The weather bureau cut the storm signal in metropolitan Manila from three to one, the lowest level, earlier today. Manila Electric Co. aims to restore electricity within the day to most of the 1.6 million customers who lost power, and Philippine Airlines Inc. said flights have resumed. “By tomorrow, it will be safe to go out,” Torres said. All Saints’ Day The typhoon coincides with the All-Saints’ weekend, when many Filipinos travel to their home provinces in the archipelago of more than 7,000 islands. Holidaymakers visit cemeteries to pay respects to their ancestors during the three-day weekend. The Philippines has been battered by more than 10 cyclones this year. More than 121,000 people remain in evacuation centers in the wake of cyclones Ketsana and Parma in the past month. Hundreds were killed in floods and landslides, and farm damage forced the world’s biggest importer of rice to schedule a supply auction for this week. Rice-producing regions in central and northeastern Luzon were spared this time, said Frisco Malabanan, national rice program director. Some rice crops may have been damaged in Camarines Sur and Mindoro provinces, and any damage in Batangas would be minimal, Malabanan said. Vessels weighing more than 1,000 gross tons may sail by tomorrow, Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo said. “While the typhoon is here, travel has to be stopped,” Tamayo said by phone. As many as 800 people were killed in June last year when Typhoon Fengshen slammed into the Philippines. Ketsana left about 80 percent of Manila, a city of almost 12 million people, underwater. To contact the reporter on this story: Clarissa Batino in Manila at cbatino@bloomberg.net ; Francisco Alcuaz Jr . in Manila at falcuaz@bloomberg.net .

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Clinton `Broke the Ice’ With Pakistanis Angry Over U.S. Actions in Region

October 31, 2009

By Indira A.R. Lakshmanan Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton ended a three-day visit to Pakistan in which she confronted intense anti-American sentiment in a nuclear-armed country that has become a central front for violent extremists. Wielding the celebrity she enjoys in Pakistan as a former first lady who first visited in 1995, Clinton tried to close the trust deficit that strains U.S.-Pakistani ties. She appeared on live television and in newspaper pages pledging to support democracy and development and praising the military for its five-month campaign against Taliban strongholds. Clinton “broke the ice” by risking her security to visit Lahore and Islamabad, two cities that have suffered terrorist attacks, and listening to “suspicion, anger and aggression” from Pakistani audiences, Jugnu Mohsin, publisher of the Lahore- based Friday Times newspaper group, said in an interview. Meetings with hundreds of Pakistani students, professionals, community leaders and journalists exposed Clinton to public ire over the use of air strikes on suspected terrorist hideouts in Pakistan’s tribal areas and over perceived heavy- handed conditions attached to billions of dollars of U.S. aid. Clinton’s willingness to hear out the tirades and try to explain the U.S. point of view won her respect, said Mohsin, who was among leading editors invited to air their opinions. “Whether the charm offensive works,” she added, “will depend on how consistent America’s commitment is to impact peoples’ livelihood.” $7.5 Billion In her remarks, Clinton sought to highlight the $7.5 billion in aid the U.S. has authorized for upgrading roads, electricity, education and other projects. The top American diplomat’s efforts to dispel the view that the U.S. is dictating to Pakistan and doesn’t care about its people or prosperity proved an uphill battle. An August survey by the Washington-based Pew Research Center showed 64 percent of Pakistanis regard the U.S. as an enemy. On chairs arranged on red tribal carpets at an arts center in Islamabad yesterday, Clinton listened to leaders from border areas caught in the cross-fire between government and Taliban forces. Faiysal Alikhan, a community organizer in Dera Ismail Khan, an area hard hit by extremist violence, praised Clinton for holding a meeting in the circular format typical of a tribal council. “The way she interacted, looked everyone in the eye, her body language demonstrated a level of trust,” he said in an interview. A larger gathering that followed with female professionals was “a sort of hostile environment,” he said, “and she handled that in a very honest and straightforward way.” Terror Attacks At the forum hosted by women television anchors, Clinton sought to deflect criticism over what Pakistan’s government says have been 528 civilian deaths in an unspecified period from missile strikes on suspected terrorist targets by U.S. remote- controlled drone aircraft. Clinton told women who critiqued such strikes as an infringement on Pakistani sovereignty that al-Qaeda “is in league with the people who are attacking Pakistan.” Suicide bombings and commando raids by Taliban guerrillas have killed at least 280 people in the country this month. Just hours after Clinton arrived in Islamabad on Oct. 27, a car bomb shattered a crowded market in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing at least 117 people, many of them women and children, in the deadliest attack since October 2007. Sixty others are still missing. Some Praise After the forum, Begum Salma Ahmed, the founding president of the Women’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said she felt Clinton’s “visit has gone down better than any by a U.S. official.” Clinton didn’t mince words when challenged about why the war on terror focuses so much on Pakistan. Clinton told editors in the eastern city of Lahore that al-Qaeda has a safe haven in Pakistan and she found “it hard to believe that nobody in your government knows where they are and couldn’t get them if they really wanted to.” Pakistan’s army has launched its largest offensive yet against Taliban who control parts of the rugged, autonomous tribal zone along the Afghan border. The campaign is concentrated in South Waziristan, the base of the Taliban faction that Pakistan blames for 80 percent of terrorist attacks in the country. U.S. Spending Clinton asked her audience at the women’s forum how many knew that the U.S. had spent $300 million so far to help Pakistanis uprooted by their army’s assaults on the Taliban. Neither that contribution nor recently passed legislation to authorize $1.5 billion annually for economic development in Pakistan seems to have been taken in the cooperative spirit it was intended, she said. “We feel like we’re doing things and we are not getting through,” she said. One tribal leader complained to Clinton that Pakistan was “fighting your war.” Speaking in Pashto, Mufti Kifayatullah , a member of the local assembly in the North West Frontier Province, complained “the blood spilled is ours.” Talks, not military assaults, are needed, he urged. “I certainly hope there will be an opportunity for negotiations,” Clinton said, reminding him that the U.S. had tried to avert war in 2001 by urging the Afghan Taliban to hand over the al-Qaeda leaders who perpetrated the Sept. 11 attacks. To contact the reporter on this story: Indira Lakshmanan in Islamabad at ilakshmanan@bloomberg.net .

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U.S. Bancorp Acquires Nine Banks Seized by Regulators, Accelerating Growth

October 31, 2009

By Vivek Shankar and Dakin Campbell Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Bancorp , the Minneapolis-based lender expanding amid the financial crisis, agreed to acquire nine failed banks owned by closely held FBOP Corp. as regulators seize more companies hobbled by real-estate loans. FBOP’s banks in California, Texas, Arizona and Illinois were closed yesterday by regulators, raising the tally of bank failures to 115 this year, according to a statement from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. U.S. Bancorp agreed to assume all the deposits and essentially all the assets of the banks, the FDIC said. U.S. Bancorp Chief Executive Officer Richard Davis is adding branches, acquiring deposits and seeking to gain share in the mortgage market. The lender, which in June repaid $6.6 billion in funds from the Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, said earlier this month that third-quarter profit rose 4.7 percent on higher net interest margins and fees from mortgage banking and transactions at automated teller machines. “This transaction is consistent with the growth strategy that we have outlined many times in the past,” Rick Hartnack , vice chairman of consumer banking for U.S. Bancorp, said yesterday in a statement. “We also view this type of acquisition as an efficient means of leveraging U.S. Bank’s strong capital base.” U.S. Bancorp fell 99 cents, or 4 percent, to $23.22 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading , and has dropped 19 percent in the past 12 months. Earlier this month, the lender purchased Nevada bank branches and $800 million in deposits from BB&T Corp. One of the ‘Winners’ “U.S. Bancorp has clearly distinguished itself as one of the “winners” to emerge from the cycle — managing to stay profitable in each quarter, repay TARP and add to its normalized earnings per-share power through small fill-in bank and non-bank acquisitions,” John McDonald , an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., said in a note to investors this month. In yesterday’s transactions, U.S. Bancorp picked up 153 branches with combined assets of $19.4 billion and deposits of $15.4 billion as of Sept. 30, according to the FDIC. Almost three-quarters of Oak Park, Illinois-based FBOP’s total loans were for construction and land development or commercial real estate, FDIC data show. Since 2000, FBOP had tripled its assets, according to the agency. FBOP wasn’t closed, the FDIC said. The nine banks will cost the FDIC’s deposit insurance fund a combined $2.5 billion, the agency said. The surge in failures depleted the agency’s reserves, prompting it to propose that banks prepay three years of premiums to raise $45 billion. Closed Banks The banks seized were: Bank USA, National Association of Phoenix; California National Bank of Los Angeles; San Diego National Bank; Pacific National Bank of San Francisco; Park National Bank of Chicago; Community Bank of Lemont, Illinois; North Houston Bank; Madisonville State Bank of Madisonville, Texas; and Citizens National Bank, of Teague, Texas. The FDIC included 416 banks on its confidential list of problem institutions as of the second quarter. The FDIC, the Federal Reserve and other bank regulators have released guidelines to banks on arranging modifications of commercial real estate loans with borrowers who show a willingness to repay the debt. To contact the reporters on this story: Vivek Shankar at vshankar3@bloomberg.net ; Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at dcampbell27@bloomberg.net .

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a Great 1 BD/1 BA Loft Style Condo in the heart of Buckhead (Facebook) $109,000

October 31, 2009

3655 Habersham Rd, #364B, Atlanta ~ 30305 Loft bedroom overlooks bright 2-story living room with fireplace and 10′ window. Kitchen with breakfast bar has views to the dining room and living room. Wood floors on the main level, new paint throughout and new carpet on second level. Stacking washer/dryer on second level included in sale. Fantastic complex with beautiful pool, fitness room and gated parking with 1 assigned space. Close to GA400, Chastain Park, Lenox Mall and Phipps Plaza. Walk to shopping and restaurants. For recorded information on this property call 678-436-3786 and enter code 1364. You may also contact Jackie Gasparre directly at 404-421-2910 or jgasparre@kw.com for additional information or to schedule a showing. http://www.mlsfinder.com/kwls/kw/index.cfm?action=listing_detail&property_id=01223882692&searchkey=41b9a715-b8c2-0708-c90c-fea506439ee4&npp=10&sr=61

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CRE Dominoes: FDIC Takes Over Three California Banks

October 30, 2009

The FDIC has shut down three California banks: Pacific National Bank, California National Bank, and San Diego National Bank. The three banks all were invested heavily in commercial real estate. Pacific National, as it was mentioned in The Registry article as being a lender on Moffett Towers (phase 2), was also involved in other development deals

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Dollar Rises Most Since April on Reduced Risk Demand Before Fed Statement

October 30, 2009

By Matt Townsend Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — The dollar gained the most against the euro in six months on concern the global recovery may stall as economic stimulus winds down, reducing demand for higher- yielding assets funded by the greenback. The pound touched the strongest level against the euro this week since September after gains in consumer confidence and mortgage approvals added to signs an economic recovery is taking hold in the U.K. The advance in the dollar before next’s week Federal Reserve announcement pared a fourth consecutive monthly loss, part of the longest losing streak since 2004. “There’s this increasing recognition that much of the recovery we’ve seen so far was due to the temporary boost from various government programs,” said Michael Hart , a currency strategist at Citigroup Global Markets in London. “The optimism is kind of guarded at this point.” The dollar advanced 2 percent to $1.4719 per euro yesterday, from $1.5008 on Oct. 23. It was the biggest gain since a 2.3 percent rise in the five days ended April 10. The dollar rallied from a 14-month low of $1.5063 on Oct. 26. New Zealand’s dollar was the biggest loser against the greenback this week as the Reserve Bank signaled the target rate will stay at a record low of 2.5 percent until the second half of 2010. The kiwi tumbled 4.8 percent to 71.81 U.S. cents, from 75.45 a week earlier, the largest five-day drop since January. The greenback gained 4.5 percent to 7.815 South African rand and 2.5 percent to 1.7612 Brazilian reais on speculation investors reduced carry trades, in which they sell the currency of a nation with low borrowing costs and buy assets where returns are higher. Borrowing Costs The Fed’s target lending rate of zero to 0.25 percent in the U.S. makes the dollar a favored target for investors seeking to fund such trades. The benchmark rates are 7 percent in South Africa, 8.75 percent in Brazil. The euro decreased 4.2 percent to 132.61 yen, from 138.15, in the biggest drop since May. The dollar fell 2.1 percent to 90.09 yen, from 89.64. It touched a level lower than 90 yesterday for the first time since Oct. 15. The Bank of Japan decided this week to end purchases of commercial paper and corporate bonds from lenders as scheduled, while extending unlimited collateral-backed lending through March 31. Policy makers kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.1 percent. European Central Bank council member Axel Weber said that policy makers may scale back the bank’s “very long-term” loans to banks. The ECB will leave benchmark lending rates at a record low of 1 percent at its meeting on Nov. 5, according to all 34 economists in a Bloomberg survey. Norwegian Rate Norway’s central bank lifted its target lending rate by a quarter-percentage point to 1.5 percent this week, becoming the first in Europe to increase borrowing costs this year. “Central banks are slowly withdrawing emergency stimulus,” Toronto-based strategists Shaun Osborne and Jacqui Douglas at TD Securities Inc. wrote in a research note to clients yesterday. That “perhaps accounts for the modest risk- averse undertone.” The Dollar Index , which IntercontinentalExchange Inc. uses to track the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, gained 1.2 percent to 76.39. It was the biggest increase since June. Investors remained skeptical that the Federal Reserve will increase borrowing costs early next year. Fed funds futures indicated a 29 percent chance that the central bank will lift its target lending rate from a range of zero to 0.25 percent at its March meeting, compared with a 41 percent chance last week. Fed’s Statement The Fed completed its $300 billion Treasury purchase program, ending the seven-month buying spree that helped stabilize the housing market and capped increases in borrowing costs. It will release its monetary policy statement on Nov. 4. Sterling rallied 2.8 percent to 89.44 pence per euro as reports showed U.K. mortgage approvals climbed in September to the highest level in 18 months and consumer confidence rose. The pound touched 89.12 on Oct. 29, the strongest level since Sept. 17. Britain’s currency gained 0.9 percent to $1.6452. The Bank of England will probably decide next week to increase its bond-purchase program as the U.K. lags behind other industrialized countries in shaking off its longest recession on record. Policy makers may expand the plan to 225 billion pounds ($372 billion) on Nov. 5 after this week reaching the current 175 billion pound limit for buying bonds with newly created money, the median estimate of 48 economists in a Bloomberg News survey showed. Bank of England The central bank will leave the benchmark rate at a record low of 0.5 percent, according to all 60 economists in a separate Bloomberg survey. Employers in the U.S. cut fewer jobs this month than in September while the unemployment rate rose to 9.9 percent in October, according to the median forecast in a survey of economists. The Labor Department’s report is due Nov. 6. The U.S. currency slid 0.5 percent versus the euro in October in its fourth monthly decline, the longest losing streak since December 2004, as investors piled onto carry trades. The yen weakened 0.4 percent this month versus the dollar. The yen slid 1 percent versus the euro in October. “Everyone is thinking about the exit strategy,” said Hidetoshi Yanagihara , senior currency trader at Mizuho Corporate Bank in New York. “Once they stop these stimulus measures, we are not going to see excessive money awash in the market. Carry trade may be arrested in the near future.” To contact the reporter on this story: Matt Townsend in New York at mtownsend9@bloomberg.net

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Buffett’s Berkshire Cuts Moody’s Stake Again, Remains Biggest Shareholder

October 30, 2009

By Andrew Frye Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the biggest shareholder in Coca-Cola Co. and Wells Fargo & Co., reduced its stake in credit-rating company Moody’s Corp. by 2.9 percent, the third cut in just over three months. Berkshire sold 1.15 million shares and remains Moody’s biggest stockholder with 38.07 million, according to a regulatory filing yesterday. The stake sold for about $28.7 million, Berkshire said. The Omaha, Nebraska-based firm cut its Moody’s holding by 17 percent in July and 2 percent last month. Moody’s, whose founder John Moody created credit ratings in 1909, is suffering from reduced demand for debt analysis after the economic decline curbed fixed-income issuance. The firm and rival Standard & Poor’s have been criticized by regulators and lawmakers for not foreseeing the wave in homeowner defaults that brought down the value of securities once awarded gold-standard AAA credit grades. Moody’s fell 59 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $23.68 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. It has slipped 20 percent in the past six months, trailing the 19 percent gain in the S&P 500 Index. Berkshire declined $1,180 to $99,000 and has gained 5.3 percent in six months. Buffett didn’t respond to a request for comment e-mailed to his assistant, Carrie Kizer , after normal business hours. To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Frye in New York at afrye@bloomberg.net .

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