November 2009

Terrorism Said Most Likely Cause of Russian Train Derailment That Kills 25

November 28, 2009

By Anastasia Ustinova Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Terrorism probably caused the deadly derailment of the Moscow to St. Petersburg express train late yesterday, killing at least 25 people and injuring dozens, Russian officials said. “Our main lead is an explosion of an unknown device, in other words terrorism,” Vladimir Yakunin , the head of OAO Russian Railways, the country’s railroad monopoly, told the government’s Vesti television station. The Prosecutor General’s Office opened a probe focusing on terrorism and illegal possession of an explosive device and arms, Vesti reported, citing spokeswoman Marina Gridneva. The Nevsky express, carrying 682 passengers and 29 railway personnel, was derailed at about 9:30 p.m. Moscow time, killing at least 25 people and injuring 96, the emergency ministry said on its Web site . Many more may be dead, as rescue workers are using cranes to cut through the wrecked carriages looking for trapped bodies, Russia’s emergency situations Minister Sergei Shoigu said during a televised video conference with President Dmitry Medvedev . Passengers reported hearing an explosion before the derailment, the station said. Investigators said they discovered a small “shell crater” at the scene. To contact the reporter on this story: Anastasia Ustinova in St. Petersburg at austinova@bloomberg.net .

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London Luxury Homes Post First Gain in 17 Months as Bankers Resume Buying

November 28, 2009

By Peter Woodifield Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Luxury-home prices in central London rose on an annual basis for the first time in 17 months as bank and hedge-fund executives bought houses and apartments in anticipation of bonuses, Knight Frank LLP said. Values of properties costing more than 1 million pounds ($1.6 million) were 1.6 percent higher in November than a year earlier, the first annual increase since June 2008, the London- based broker said in an e-mailed statement today. Still, prices are 15 percent below their peak in March 2008. “Anecdotal evidence from across our offices suggests that City money is becoming more apparent as we get closer to the end-of-year bonus season,” Liam Bailey , head of residential research at Knight Frank, said in the statement. “Demand from senior management is driving the market.” Bonuses for financial-services employees in the City of London and Canary Wharf, the two largest financial districts, may rise 50 percent this year to 6 billion pounds, according to Knight Frank. Finance industry workers account for half the demand for luxury homes. Prices rose 1.2 percent from in November from October, the eighth straight month-on-month increase, Knight Frank said. The most expensive homes didn’t start recovering in value until May, the broker said. While bonuses being paid by banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are likely to help the housing market, the number of properties available will remain low, Louise Hewlett, managing director of London-based Ayslesford International said by e- mail. False Bouyancy “It is the shortage of supply which has given the rather false impression of a buoyant market,” said Hewlett. “In some instances, high prices have been paid purely based on the lack of choice and competition from other buyers.” Prices increased the most among properties costing more than 10 million pounds, gaining 1.9 percent in November from a month earlier, Knight Frank said. Houses and apartments in Chelsea, Kensington and Knightsbridge, districts favored by bankers, rose the most. Luxury residences may return to peak prices in 2012, a year or two sooner than the rest of the U.K. housing market, Knight Frank and Savills Plc estimate. The pound’s 19 percent decline against a basket of currencies since the home market’s peak has revived demand from foreign investors. Prices in Kensington and Knightsbridge may also have been boosted by Italian buyers benefiting from the combination of the weak pound against the euro and a tax-evasion amnesty in July, according to Savills. Italians accounted for almost half of European buyers of London property this year, compared with 20 percent in 2008, Savills said. “With stock levels still 25 percent below normal at the current time and new buyer registrations up by 30 percent on last year, the pressure on prices in the short term at least is likely to be upwards,” Bailey said. For Related News and Information: Stories on the U.K. property industry: TNI UK REL Today’s top Bloomberg News real estate stories: TOP REL Stories on the London housing market TNI LONDON HSNG Luxury housing stories TNI LUX HSNG Stories on personal wealth: PERW

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What is pricing structure for commercial real estate brokers …

November 28, 2009

Is there a range of commissions or fees most commercial real estate brokers use? For example residential real estate varies but is between 5-7% depending upon.

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MadisonRealEstate's Blog | How some investors are using their cash

November 28, 2009

We’re working with one local investor group that has amassed a large sum of money for short-term real estate investment. The investor group uses its cash to buy distressed properties, which are then rehabbed and sold for a profit. … Dedicated to Madison, Dane County and South Central Wisconsin real estate – covering the single family home, condo, multifamily and commercial real estate markets. For more useful real estate information focused on Madison and Dane County, …

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European confidence highest since Lehman

November 28, 2009

European confidence highest since Lehman

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Hyundai to pull out of Japanese passenger vehicle market

November 28, 2009

Hyundai to pull out of Japanese passenger vehicle market

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Hyundai suspends passenger vehicle sales in Japan

November 28, 2009

Hyundai suspends passenger vehicle sales in Japan

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Asia markets plummet

November 28, 2009

Asia markets plummet

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Brown to push bank bailout plan at summit

November 28, 2009

Brown to push bank bailout plan at summit

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Real Estate Made EasyTax credit advance for first time home buyers revisited (The Phoenix)

November 28, 2009

The Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency (PHFA) discontinued their Tax Credit Advance Loan Program (TCA) in mid-October, 2009 as the First Time Home Buyers Tax Credit looked like it was coming to an end. GOOD NEWS! Not only has the First Time Buyers Tax Credit been extended but PHFA has put their TCA program back into effect.

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What is pricing structure for commercial real estate brokers …

November 28, 2009

Here is an interesting post from %sourceexcerpt% Read the original here here: What is pricing structure for commercial real estate brokers … Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers.

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CalPERS May Axe BlackRock

November 28, 2009

California Public Employees Retirement System is considering terminating BlackRock as a realestate adviser

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CalPERS May Axe BlackRock

November 28, 2009

California Public Employees Retirement System is considering terminating BlackRock as a realestate adviser

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Arizona Plan Administrator To Quit

November 28, 2009

James Hacking administrator of the Arizona Public Safety Personnel Retirement System will leave on Aug 31 2010

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Arizona Plan Administrator To Quit

November 28, 2009

James Hacking administrator of the Arizona Public Safety Personnel Retirement System will leave on Aug 31 2010

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Ohio TaftHartley Plan Taps MassMutual

November 28, 2009

Ironworkers District Council of Southern Ohio Vicinity Annuity Trust tapped MassMutual Retirement Services as the new bundled provider for its 243 million defined contribution TaftHartley plan replacing the incumbent Putnam Investments

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Ohio TaftHartley Plan Taps MassMutual

November 28, 2009

Ironworkers District Council of Southern Ohio Vicinity Annuity Trust tapped MassMutual Retirement Services as the new bundled provider for its 243 million defined contribution TaftHartley plan replacing the incumbent Putnam Investments

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Abu Dhabi to `Pick and Choose’ Which Dubai Debt to Support, Reuters Says

November 28, 2009

By Ayesha Daya Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Abu Dhabi, Dubai’s oil-rich neighbor, will “pick and choose” which of Dubai’s assets to underwrite, Reuters reported, citing an unidentified Abu Dhabi official. Abu Dhabi won’t fund all of Dubai’s debt, the official said, according to Reuters. Markets around the world have been roiled since Dubai World, with $59 billion of liabilities, said Nov. 25 it was seeking to delay debt payments. To contact the reporter on this story: Ayesha Daya in Dubai adaya1@bloomberg.net

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Abu Dhabi to `Pick and Choose’ Which Dubai Debt to Support, Reuters Says

November 28, 2009

By Ayesha Daya Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Abu Dhabi, Dubai’s oil-rich neighbor, will “pick and choose” which of Dubai’s assets to underwrite, Reuters reported, citing an unidentified Abu Dhabi official. Abu Dhabi won’t fund all of Dubai’s debt, the official said, according to Reuters. Markets around the world have been roiled since Dubai World, with $59 billion of liabilities, said Nov. 25 it was seeking to delay debt payments. To contact the reporter on this story: Ayesha Daya in Dubai adaya1@bloomberg.net

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Small REIT Bargains (Forbes)

November 28, 2009

If you want to buy a REIT at a recent price these days, settle for a little one.

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Saturday November 28 2009 (The Malaysian Insider)

November 28, 2009

NEW YORK, Nov 28 — Dubai’s debt woes could further unhinge an already fragile US commercial real estate, as it illustrates the importance of that tiny country to global investors in an increasingly interconnected world.

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Silicon Valley's Leader in Commercial Real Estate Operations …

November 28, 2009

Orchard Commercial has worked with investors, brokers, and developers to maximize the value of commercial real estate investments in Silicon Valley. For over 35 years, With regional expertise, distinct understanding, team of property …

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Realty IPOs in the pipeline may remain just pipedream

November 28, 2009

in Dubai, the desert state which over the last few years had gotten used to showcasing its grand real estate properties like Burj Dubai and The Palm to the world’s billionaires, could be a warning sign for all real estate investors. Afterall the

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Dubai debt woes may hit US property market (The Malaysian Insider)

November 28, 2009

NEW YORK, Nov 28 — Dubai’s debt woes could further unhinge an already fragile US commercial real estate , as it illustrates the importance of that tiny country to global investors in an increasingly interconnected world. … Intelligence on Real Estate , Private Equity & Funds. Distressed Assets. Distressed Assets Network · Distressed Marketplace · Distressed Recovery Alliance · Distressed Asset Specialist Designation (DAS). Conferences & Courses. Distressed -Events …

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Two-Year Treasuries Extend Rally Fifth Week on View Fed Rates Stay on Hold

November 28, 2009

By Daniel Kruger and Susanne Walker Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Treasury two-year notes advanced for a fifth week, the yield touching the lowest level in 11 months, on speculation the Federal Reserve will continue to hold interest rates near zero well into 2010. Two- and 10-year Treasuries yesterday posted their biggest gains this month after Dubai’s proposal to delay debt payments sparked a global slide in stocks and higher-yielding assets. The U.S. sold $118 billion in 2-, 5- and 7-year debt. The jobless rate held at a 26-year high of 10.2 percent in November, a Labor Department report is forecast to show on Dec. 4. “There continues to be incredible demand for Treasuries,” said Jeffry Feigenwinter , head of Treasury trading in New York at BNP Paribas Securities, one of the 18 primary dealers that trade with the Fed. “It’s incredible to be able to take down the supply at these levels. The data for the last couple of months have gotten a little bit better, but nobody believes in the sustainability of the recovery.” The yield on the benchmark two-year note fell four basis points on the week to 0.68 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. It yesterday touched 0.61 percent, the lowest level since Dec. 17. The debt’s five weeks of gains matches the longest rally so far in 2009. Ten-year notes rose for a third consecutive week. The yield fell 17 basis points to 3.20 percent, the biggest weekly decline since the five days ended Aug. 14. The U.S. economy expanded at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the third quarter, the Commerce Department reported on Nov. 24, compared with its prior estimate of 3.5 percent, as consumer spending, which makes up 70 percent of the economy, trailed forecasts. Auction Demand The U.S. economy shed 120,000 jobs in November, according to the median estimate of 67 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News before next week’s report. Treasuries gained this week as the Fed, under Chairman Ben S. Bernanke , indicated the benchmark lending rate would remain near zero “for an extended period” as long as inflation expectations are stable and unemployment fails to decline. “Most members projected that over the next couple of years, the unemployment rate would remain quite elevated and the level of inflation would remain below rates consistent over the longer run with the Federal Reserve’s objectives,” according to minutes of the Fed’s November meeting released Nov. 24. The central bank’s outlook drove strong demand at each of this week’s three note offerings. The ratio of bids to debt sold at the $42 billion sale of five-year notes on Nov. 24 was the highest since September 2007. The $44 billion of two-year notes auctioned on Nov. 23 drew a yield of 0.802 percent, the lowest on record. Dubai Debt ‘Standstill’ A $32 billion sale of seven-year notes on Nov. 25 drew a yield of 2.835 percent, below the 2.878 percent forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. The Treasury sold $1.917 trillion of notes and bonds through the first 11 months of 2009, compared with $827 billion during the same period last year. “Even given the good tone of the market, the results were stronger than the market in general had expected,” said Richard Bryant , senior vice president in fixed income at MF Global Inc. in New York, a broker of exchange-traded futures. Dubai World, the government investment company burdened by $59 billion of liabilities, will ask all creditors for a “standstill” agreement as it negotiates to extend debt maturities, Dubai’s Department of Finance said on Nov. 25 in an e-mailed statement. Japan’s currency appreciated to as much as 84.83 per dollar yesterday, the strongest since July 1995, increasing concern the nation’s monetary authorities will intervene to curb further appreciation of the currency. “People are scared and concerned about possible intervention,” said Yasutoshi Nagai , chief economist at Daiwa Securities SMBC Co. in Tokyo. The BOJ may sell the yen “and buy Treasuries, which will be a plus for Treasuries.” Yield Curve Japan last intervened on March 16, 2004, when the central bank sold the yen. Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said on Nov. 26 the government needs to take action on “abnormal” currency movements, and Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said the same day the yen’s appreciation was due to weakness in the dollar. The difference between rates on 10-year notes and Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, or TIPS, which reflects the outlook among traders for consumer prices, narrowed to 2.11 percentage points from 2.19 percentage points last week. Treasuries of all maturities have gained 1 percent so far this month, according to indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch & Co. The securities have handed investors a loss of 1.5 percent in 2009, headed for the first decline since 1999 as President Barack Obama borrows record amounts to fund spending programs and service deficits. U.S. marketable debt totaled $6.95 trillion in October, after reaching a record $7.01 trillion in September. To contact the reporters on this story: Daniel Kruger in New York at dkruger1@bloomberg.net ; Susanne Walker in New York at swalker33@bloomberg.net .

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CIT Group’s Revised Reorganization Plan Adds Incentives, Alters Recoveries

November 28, 2009

By Tiffany Kary and Linda Sandler Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — CIT Group Inc. , the bankrupt 101- year-old commercial lender, filed an amended reorganization that calls for management incentives and slight changes to creditors’ recoveries. The amended plan, filed Nov. 25 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, provides for noteholders to appoint three of the company’s 13 board members and for non-debtor subsidiaries to give cash collateral to lenders to secure the obligations of CIT’s Chinese units. Several classes of creditors will have their recoveries changed by fractions of a percent, according to court papers. Some noteholders will be paid interest accrued before the bankruptcy. CIT creditors voted earlier to accept the company’s prepackaged bankruptcy plan. The changes filed Nov. 25 will be reviewed by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Allan Gropper at a Dec. 8 hearing to consider confirmation of the bankruptcy plan. “The debtors reserve the right to make further changes” to the plan, CIT lawyers said in court filings. The changes include a clause requiring holders of Canadian senior unsecured notes that voted for the plan to dismiss lawsuits against CIT’s Delaware funding unit. When the company exits bankruptcy, it will have 13 directors , including five from the current board. Four will be nominated by a steering committee and three will be nominees from noteholders owning more than 1 percent of CIT’s bonds. CIT’s chief executive officer will be the 13th director. CEO Jeffrey Peek has said he will leave at the end of the year. His replacement hasn’t been announced. Incentive Program The incentive plan calls for awards of as much as $10 million a year for eligible individuals and might consist of stock options, restricted stock and other equity instruments. People eligible for the plan include officers, employees, directors, consultants, advisers and independent contractors, CIT said. “The purposes of the plan are to promote the long-term success of the company and its subsidiaries and to increase stockholder value by providing eligible individuals with incentives to contribute to the long-term growth and profitability of the company,” lawyers for CIT wrote. CIT filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 1, blaming losses on subprime mortgages and tightening credit markets. CIT listed assets of $71 billion and debt of $64.9 billion. The government probably won’t recover much, if any, of the $2.3 billion in taxpayer money used in a bailout of CIT, and shareholders will be wiped out, according to CIT’s plan. The lender , which funds about 1 million businesses, plans to exit court protection next month. None of CIT’s operating units, including CIT Bank, were included in the filing. The final two classes of creditors that voted on CIT’s turnaround plan, holders of Canadian senior unsecured notes and senior unsecured notes maturing after 2018, both supported the prepackaged bankruptcy, CIT said Nov. 19. The case is In re CIT Group Inc., 09-16565, U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan). To contact the reporter on this story: Tiffany Kary in New York at tkary@bloomberg.net ; Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net .

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Black Friday Crowds Snap Up Discounted TVs, Laptops for Themselves, Family

November 28, 2009

By Cotten Timberlake and Chris Burritt Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Retailers reported “strong” shopper traffic on Black Friday as discounts on televisions, toys and computers drew budget-conscious crowds across the U.S., the National Retail Federation said. High-definition TVs, laptops, Zhu Zhu Pets robotic hamsters and winter coats were among the most popular items, according to the federation, a Washington-based trade group. Sales probably met or exceeded retailers’ projections, David Schick , a Baltimore-based analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co., wrote in a note to investors after store visits and conversations with employees. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , the world’s largest retailer, drew crowds with $298 Hewlett-Packard laptop computers and other specials that went on sale at 5 a.m. Best Buy Inc. , the biggest electronics chain, used $547.99 42-inch Samsung flat-panel TVs to lure shoppers grappling with the highest unemployment in 26 years. The retailer had bigger early-morning crowds than last year, Chief Executive Officer Brian Dunn said. “The surprise news is that they are actually buying for themselves as well, due to pent-up demand and frugal fatigue,” Marshal Cohen , chief industry analyst with NPD Group Inc. said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday. “They are saying ‘Let’s loosen up the purse strings a little bit,’ but it is still cautious spending.” NPD, based in Port Washington, New York, is a market research firm. The day after U.S. Thanksgiving is known as Black Friday, the traditional beginning of holiday buying. Explanations of the phrase’s origins differ, one holding that it’s the weekend when retailers go to being in the black, profitable for the year. Stores open early on Black Friday and offer early-bird discounts to attract business. Black Friday Prediction Retailers’ chief marketing officers predicted Black Friday sales would climb an average 1.8 percent from a year ago at their own stores, according to a survey conducted by BDO Seidman LLP in October. Ninety-six of 100 executives said they would increase promotions this year, offering the biggest discounts on consumer electronics. “Retailers in all sectors have reported strong crowds,” according to an NRF statement yesterday. Walmart fell 33 cents to $54.63 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . Richfield, Minnesota-based Best Buy lost 43 cents to $42.83. Snapping Up TVs There seemed to be more discounts on TVs this year, and shoppers were snapping them up, said Charles O’Shea , a New York- based retail analyst with Moody’s Investors Service. In the four hours he spent checking retailers in northern New Jersey, he saw several shoppers standing at bus stops holding flat-panel sets. “It looks like everybody has caught the promotional bug,” O’Shea said in a telephone interview yesterday. The lines in front of Best Buy stores were longer and the company’s Web site attracted more visitors than in 2008, Best Buy’s Dunn said. “Those are both directionally important indicators for us,” he said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Samir Patel arrived at noon on Thanksgiving Day with his brother and cousin to claim the No. 1 spot in line at Best Buy in Jersey City, New Jersey. The 26-year-old, who has been unemployed since he graduated with a master’s degree in May, was waiting to buy a Sony Vaio laptop for $399.99 when the store opened at 5:30 a.m. the next day. ‘Best Deal’ “It’s the best deal for a laptop this year,” he said. “There’s a minimum of 10 in the store.” Holiday sales make up a third or more of retailers’ annual profit. The International Council of Shopping Centers, a trade group, predicted sales at stores open at least a year will advance 1 percent in November and December after a year-earlier 5.8 percent decline, the worst in 40 years. “There’s a little more traffic than last year across the board, maybe 10 percent,” Bill Taubman , chief operating officer of Taubman Centers Inc., a U.S. real estate investment trust with 24 malls, said in a telephone interview yesterday. Walmart, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, kept stores open all night so shoppers could grab items when they went on sale at 5 a.m. The world’s largest retailer cut some toy prices to $5. Toys “R” Us, based in Wayne, New Jersey, had an average of 1,000 people outside its stores before they opened at midnight, five hours earlier than last year, said Chairman and CEO Jerry Storch . The chains sold a “significant number” of Apple Inc. iPods and tens of thousands of Zhu Zhu Pets robot hamsters, he said. For the Kids “The last thing parents will cut back on is toys for their kids,” Storch said in a telephone interview yesterday. At the Macy’s Inc. store in New York’s Herald Square, shopper traffic appeared greater than a year ago, and continued to flow in after the initial rush, Macy’s Chairman and CEO Terry Lundgren said. Housewares and jewelry were selling “briskly,” he said. “Last year we were just getting rid of the inventory we bought six months before,” Lundgren said. “This year we’ve had a year to think through what is the sales trend.” Macy’s, based in Cincinnati, dropped 59 cents to $16.97 yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange. Promotions are shaping up to be less haphazard than last year when conditions were “downright dysfunctional” after the financial crisis forced retailers to clear out goods, Richard Hastings , a Charlotte, North Carolina-based consumer strategist for Global Hunter Securities LLC, said yesterday in an e-mail. After this weekend, sales may slip into a lull until mid- December when retailers push out more discounts, Hastings said. “The season has a long way to go,” Hastings said. To contact the reporters on this story: Cotten Timberlake in Washington at ctimberlake@bloomberg.net Chris Burritt in Greensboro, North Carolina, at 1348 or cburritt@bloomberg.net ;

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Bernanke Says Legislation Limiting Fed Independence Would `Impair’ Economy

November 28, 2009

By Craig Torres Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said removing the central bank from bank supervision and tampering with its political independence would “seriously impair” economic stability in the U.S. “A number of the legislative proposals being circulated would significantly reduce the capacity of the Federal Reserve to perform its core functions,” the Fed Chairman said in a commentary released yesterday on the Web site of the Washington Post. The measures “would seriously impair the prospects for economic and financial stability in the U.S..” Bernanke has presided over the most expansive use of Fed powers since the Great Depression. While the 55-year-old Fed chairman has said he averted a financial meltdown, lawmakers have voiced concern about taxpayer-sponsored bailouts and proposed the most sweeping dismantlement of Fed authority since the creation of the institution in 1913. Bernanke’s commentary is his first comprehensive answer to proposals in the House and Senate that would limit the Fed’s supervisory powers and exert more political oversight in the setting of interest rates. The issues are likely to be discussed when he faces the Senate Banking Committee on Dec. 3 for a hearing on his nomination to a second term as chairman. “Congress has a lot of public support for an attack on the Fed,” Allan Meltzer , a Fed historian and professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said in an interview Nov. 23. “They bailed out everybody in sight.” Lax Supervision Senate Banking Committee Christopher Dodd , a Democrat from Connecticut, has criticized the central bank for lax supervision and introduced legislation this month that would strip bank oversight from the Fed and create a single bank regulator. Dodd would also limit the central bank’s ability to loan to individual companies. “There is a strong case for a continued role for the Federal Reserve in bank supervision,” Bernanke said. “Because of our role in making monetary policy , the Fed brings unparalleled economic and financial expertise to its oversight of banks.” The Fed chairman pointed to capital adequacy tests the Fed performed in May which helped restore confidence in the banking system. The Standard and Poor’s 500 Financials Index has increased 34 percent since May 1, outperforming the S&P 500 by about 10 percentage points. Dodd and Representative Barney Frank , chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, want to take away the Fed’s rule- writing power on consumer financial products and give it to a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency. ‘Excessive Risk-taking’ “The Federal Reserve, like other regulators around the world, did not do all that it could have to constrain excessive risk-taking in the financial sector in the period leading up to the crisis,” Bernanke said. The Fed has reviewed its performance and “moved aggressively to fix the problems,” he added. As the subprime mortgage crisis began to trigger losses in bank portfolios, Bernanke used emergency authority last year to purchase securities from Bear Stearns Cos. and facilitate its merger with JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Fed chairman said that the government’s actions, while in some instances “distasteful and unfair,” were necessary to prevent “a global economic catastrophe that could have rivaled the Great Depression in length and severity.” Bernanke pushed the Fed’s backstop lending beyond banks, setting up programs to support the commercial paper and asset- backed securities markets. The Fed Board approved the bank holding company applications of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, giving them access to the Fed’s loan window. Propped Up Markets The former Princeton University economist and Great Depression scholar has more than doubled the Fed’s assets to $2.21 trillion and become the lender of last resort to government bond dealers, banks, Wall Street firms and U.S. corporations. The central bank has also propped up markets for mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities that support credit to consumers, small businesses and commercial real estate. A financial regulatory reform bill proposed by Frank, a Democrat from Massachusetts, would limit Fed emergency lending to broadly available credit programs. The Frank bill preserves the Obama administration’s proposal to make the Fed the lead regulator of risk across the financial system. The central bank’s independence is also under fire from both chambers of Congress. Frank’s committee advanced a proposal this month to remove a three-decade ban on congressional audits of Fed interest-rate decisions. The proposal was offered by Representative Ron Paul , a Republican from Texas, and based on a bill with more than 300 co-sponsors. Less Independent Bernanke said studies show that central banks independent of political influence tend to keep inflation and interest rates lower than their less independent counterparts. “The general repeal of that exemption would serve only to increase the perceived influence of Congress on monetary policy decisions, which would undermine the confidence the public and the markets have in the Fed to act in the long-term economic interest of the nation,” Bernanke said. Under the proposal by Dodd, commercial banks would lose their power to appoint directors of the 12 regional Fed banks. Instead, directors would be chosen by the Fed’s Senate-confirmed governors, and each board chairman would be appointed by the president of the United States and subject to Senate approval. The proposal would increase political oversight of the Fed bank presidents , who are among the most vocal proponents on the Federal Open Market Committee for keeping inflation low. ‘Financial Stability’ “Now more than ever, America needs a strong, nonpolitical and independent central bank with the tools to promote financial stability and to help steer our economy to recovery without inflation,” Bernanke said. Policy makers cut the benchmark lending rate to a range of zero to 0.25 percent almost a year ago and this month reiterated a pledge to keep the policy rate low for “an extended period.” While the economy expanded at a 2.8 percent annual pace in the third quarter, unemployment jumped to 10.2 percent in October. The Fed’s challenge is to support growth without unleashing expectations of higher inflation prompted by aggressive monetary stimulus. “The ultimate goal of all our efforts is to restore and sustain economic prosperity,” Bernanke said. “Our ability to take such actions without engendering sharp increases in inflation depends heavily on our credibility and independence from short-term political pressures.” To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net .

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Dollar Drops to 14-Year Low Against Yen, Falls Against Euro on Fed Outlook

November 28, 2009

By Liz Capo McCormick and Oliver Biggadike Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — The dollar dropped to the lowest level versus the yen since July 1995 and fell against the euro as the Federal Reserve’s signal it will tolerate a weaker greenback encouraged investors to buy higher-yielding assets outside the U.S. The dollar touched as low as 84.83 yesterday, the weakest in 14 years, spurring speculation Japan would intervene to curtail gains in its currency. For the week, the greenback fell 2.6 percent to 86.57 yen, the fifth consecutive weekly decline. The dollar and yen rallied against the Australian dollar and the South Korean won as Dubai’s attempt to delay debt repayments spurred investors to sell higher-yielding assets funded with the currencies. “The market has re-priced the risk it is willing to sit with, noticeably against the dollar-yen,” said Lane Newman , director of currency trading at ING Financial Services Corp. in New York. “My sense is that damage has been done, the market being not as liquid as it has been in a long time. It is going to trade in this way and when the market has to do something it’s going to be very, very ugly.” The dollar declined 0.7 percent to $1.4962 per euro from $1.4862 on Nov. 20. The yen rose 2 percent to 129.41 per euro, from 132.09. The U.S. currency fell 2.8 percent to 86.49 yen, from 88.88 yen. Rate Check Stocks and commodities dropped, Treasuries jumped and credit default swaps climbed after Dubai World, the government investment company burdened by $59 billion of liabilities, sought to delay repayment on much of its debt. The Persian Gulf emirate, which borrowed $80 billion in a four-year construction boom to transform its economy into a regional tourism and financial hub, suffered the world’s steepest property slump in the worst global recession since World War II. The yen declined yesterday against the dollar as Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said he will contact U.S. and European officials about exchange rates if needed, signaling his growing concern that the yen’s ascent will hurt the economy. The Bank of Japan checked rates at commercial banks in Tokyo, seen as a type of verbal intervention, Kyodo News Service reported. Japan hasn’t sold its currency since March 16, 2004, when it traded around 109 per dollar. The Bank of Japan sold 14.8 trillion yen ($172 billion) in the first three months of 2004, after record sales of 20.4 trillion yen in 2003. Japan last bought the currency in 1998, purchasing 3.05 trillion yen as the rate fell as low as 147.66. “If the dollar-yen falls below an 85 level the odds of intervention would rise materially,” said Vassili Serebriakov , a currency strategist at Wells Fargo & Co. in New York. “Clearly this is somewhat of an unfolding of events given previous signals of a strong yen policy but a strong yen will become a problem for the Japanese economy.” Extended Period The greenback fell earlier in the week on speculation the Fed will trail other central banks in increasing borrowing costs after policy makers said in the minutes of their November meeting that they will keep interest rates near zero for “an extended period” as long as inflation expectations are stable and unemployment fails to decline. The minutes, released on Nov. 24, also said the dollar’s depreciation was “orderly,” indicating policy makers are willing to tolerate a weaker U.S. currency. The economy probably lost 120,000 jobs in November, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg before the Labor Department report on Dec. 4. The jobless rate probably held at a 26-year high of 10.2 percent for a second month, according to a separate survey. Remain Dovish The dollar has depreciated 7 percent against the euro, 4.5 percent against the yen and 13 percent versus the pound in 2009. “The market has been readjusting to expectations that the Fed will remain dovish on monetary policy well into the first quarter of next year,” said Neil Jones , head of European hedge- fund sales in London at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. “Additionally, there is a global shift of the dollar increasingly being viewed as the funding currency of choice for the carry trades.” Investors use lower-yielding currencies for funding so- called carry trades, in which higher-yielding assets are purchased with funds borrowed in nations with low interest rates. The benchmark lending rate of zero to 0.25 percent in the U.S. makes its currency popular for funding such transactions. IntercontinentalExchange Inc.’s Dollar Index , which tracks the greenback against currencies of six major U.S. trading partners including the euro, yen and pound, dropped 0.9 percent on the week to 75. It has fallen 7.3 percent in 2009. To contact the reporter on this story: Liz Capo McCormick in New York at emccormick7@bloomberg.net ; Oliver Biggadike in New York at obiggadike@bloomberg.net .

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India Studying Effect of Dubai’s Debt Delay Plan on $1.2 Trillion Economy

November 28, 2009

By Anil Varma and Cherian Thomas Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) — India, the world’s top recipient of migrant remittances, is examining the effect Dubai’s attempt to delay debt repayments may have on Asia’s third-largest economy, central bank Governor Duvvuri Subbarao said. About 4.5 million Indians live and work in the Gulf region and remit more than $10 billion annually, according to government data. The turmoil may affect remittances, said Thomas Issac , finance minister of the southern state of Kerala, which accounted for about a quarter India’s migrant labor in 2005. Dubai World, the emirate’s investment company, roiled markets as it sought a “standstill” agreement to delay repayment on much of its $59 billion of debt. Dubai suffered the world’s steepest property slump in the global recession, with home prices dropping 50 percent from their 2008 peak, according to Deutsche Bank AG. Most Indian migrant workers are employed in the Gulf’s construction industry, according to the government. “It’s quite likely that Dubai will face a severe downturn in the real estate and financial sectors and that will affect remittances and jobs,” Issac said in an interview at his office in Thiruvananthapuram yesterday. Remittances from the Middle East account for about 25 percent of Kerala’s economy, Issac said. India received $52 billion of remittances last year, according to the World Bank , making it the world’s largest recipient of money from migrant workers. China got $49 billion. ‘Excesses’ “We’re bound to see a rise in risk aversion,” Arnab Das , the London-based head of market research and strategy at Roubini Global Economics said in an interview. “The Dubai situation signifies that although the major central banks around the world have stabilized the financial system, they can’t make all the excesses simply disappear.” India’s stocks, currency and bonds fell on concern investors may shy away from riskier emerging market assets over losses stemming from the turmoil in Dubai. India’s benchmark stock index dropped 1.3 percent yesterday, while the rupee lost 0.5 percent. Larsen & Toubro Ltd. , India’s biggest engineering company, has receivables of as much as $25 million from three companies in Dubai, Executive Vice President R. Shankar Raman said in a telephone interview. DLF Ltd. , India’s biggest property company, software-services providers Wipro Ltd. and Infosys Technologies Ltd. said the crisis in Dubai won’t affect them. Emaar MGF Land Ltd., the Indian joint venture of Emaar Properties PJSC, said the Dubai crisis has no impact on its local operations and its funding plans for property development in India are on track. “We must measure the extent of the problem there and how it might impact India,” India’s central bank Governor Subbarao said in Hyderabad, India, today. “On Dubai alone, I want to say, that we should not react to instant news like this.” Dubai is one of seven sheikhdoms in the U.A.E. The Gulf state had borrowed $80 billion in a four-year construction boom to transform its economy into a regional tourism and financial hub. To contact the reporter on this story: Cherian Thomas in New Delhi at Cthomas1@bloomberg.net ; Anil Varma in Mumbai at avarma3@bloomberg.net

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Analysis: Woes may hit U.S. prop mkt

November 28, 2009

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Dubai’s debt woes could further unhinge an already fragile U.S. commercial real estate, as it illustrates the importance of that tiny country to global investors in an increasingly interconnected world. A

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Banks, world leaders dampen Dubai debt threat

November 27, 2009

DUBAI/LONDON – World leaders expressed confidence in the global economic recovery on Friday despite fears about a debt default by Gulf emirate Dubai, while major banks played down their exposure to the debt. Stocks from Tokyo to New York were haunted by

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Banks, world leaders dampen Dubai debt threat

November 27, 2009

DUBAI/LONDON – World leaders expressed confidence in the global economic recovery on Friday despite fears about a debt default by Gulf emirate Dubai, while major banks played down their exposure to the debt. Stocks from Tokyo to New York were haunted by

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Michael Martin: Jamie Dimon’s World

November 27, 2009

I spoke with business journalist Duff McDonald on the release of his new biography on Jamie Dimon, Last Man Standing . That day, the blogosphere was awash with conjecture about Dimon becoming Secretary of the Treasury. “I don’t think so. Jamie Dimon does not have the temperament to be Secretary Treasury.” McDonald added, “To be the Secretary of the Treasury, you need to be political and have patience. McDonald said. “He doesn’t suffer fools or have patience for those who waste time. He might go nuts.” If McDonald is correct, it would be a big loss for the US because we need person with practical experience, but also someone who will make well thought out decisions without pandering to the White House and Wall Street, or worse, worry what other people are going to think about him. Dimon is staying put for now. Even if he was interested, the timing for a corporate Wall St. leader such as Dimon to make the move to the Hill, would probably be political suicide for the Obama Administration at this point. The President’s approval rating is slipping , for now at least, and although they change faster than foreign exchange rates, he won’t want to further hurt midterm elections. Dimon is on record as being no fan of the anti-corporate populism that was in overdrive before the Presidential Election in March 2008. Dimon said “I’m a Democrat. Democrats are the worst” – meaning the presidential candidates were playing to their audience or pandering. Dimon had a passion of Economics from his days in undergrad, sending Milton Friedman his paper on Friedman’s Capitalism and Freedom and getting a handwritten letter back from the esteemed Economist. After getting his MBA at Harvard Business School in 1982, he joined Sanford Weil in what would be the beginning of one of the most successful, if not the most inflammable, duo’s in the history of corporate America. No one can doubt that Weil was the visionary, however it’s my contention that without Dimon, Weil’s ascension might not have been what is was before the Citigroup collapse. Although McDonald disagrees with me on this, my opinion is that Weil was very aware of Dimon’s ability and kept him deliberately at arm’s length, knowing he’d get the younger Dimon to work harder for the attention and the esteem. He got it, as the book’s title suggests, and Weil’s firing of Dimon and removing him from the succession plan led to a catastrophic loss of capital that rivals that of the AOL / Time Warner marriage. Weil has since admitted he blew that trade, but he is also quoted as saying “My real mistake, though, was that I repeatedly missed the chance in our early years together to curtail his aggressive behavior and mentor him into becoming a team player.” Dimon thinks like a trader. He understands things like Mathematical Expectation and it’s in his thinking process. “…it’s more important to do 10 things and get eight of them right, than to do five and get them all right.” It’s ok to be wrong, but you can’t stay wrong. Wall St. needs successful traders who have a history of keeping losses small running Wall Street firms, not lawyers and investment bankers. And although intelligence, academic achievement, and professional designations matter, emotional intelligence in handing other people’s money is at the top of the list. That ability was sorely absent in recent years. McDonald has substantial investigative chops in this regard. In the book he delineates how many Wall St. CEO’s – who had parts of their balance sheets levered 100 to 1 – were walking around their offices like Fonzi at Arnold’s Drive-In thinking “things aren’t that bad. We’ll be ok.” Maybe if I bump the squawk box, the music will change? These guys were clueless. Dimon and his advisors held fast. When Warren Buffett sold long-term Put options on the S&P 500, a bullish trade, “he refused to post any collateral against the positions,” according to McDonald, “the banks would just have to take his word, and they did — except Dimon.” JPMorgan Chase lost the business. The last investors who demanded “no collateral” were John Meriwether and Myron Scholes of LTCM. (Both Meriwether and Scholes have blown up at least twice). To that point, it seems Buffett is conflicted : Dimon made the prudent decision that Buffett allegedly lives for, yet Buffett made the reckless trade and rewarded another firm for mandating collateral. The sub-prime morass is largely due to excessive leverage. With no collateral posted, your leverage is “undefined” mathematically. Dimon has his loyal army of decision makers who although don’t have cake-walk with Dimon given his drive, have his ear and as they’ve earned his trust. One such advisor is Bill Winters. In the summer of 2004, Winters suggested that their firm blow out of an $8 billion SIV ( structured investment vehicle ) that they’d acquired through the Bank One deal. “We sold it to someone who thought the best way to manage the risk was to take on twice as much of it. Scale is the answer every time except in the tail.” Someone has been reading their Nassim Taleb… JPMorgan Chase had the fortified Balance Sheet due to Dimon’s years with Weil and his understanding of disaster scenarios. “You don’t run a business hoping your don’t have a recession.” Dimon and his team spent countless hours strategizing work-arounds for bear markets according to McDonald, such as 10% unemployment or a 10% move in currency exchange rates for example. In the end, Dimon has a clear sense of self. When asked about his priorities in life, he said, “My family, humanity, my country, and the world. Way down here is JP Morgan.”

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EDITOR’S LETTER: The shark lives

November 27, 2009

pioneer of the great American gambling chain store, is out there with Icahn, Ruffin and Yemenidjian, playing the distressed asset game, mixing it up with Penn National and Pinnacle in Ohio, grabbing a chunk of a wobbling Planet Hollywood on the cheap,

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EDITOR’S LETTER: The shark lives

November 27, 2009

pioneer of the great American gambling chain store, is out there with Icahn, Ruffin and Yemenidjian, playing the distressed asset game, mixing it up with Penn National and Pinnacle in Ohio, grabbing a chunk of a wobbling Planet Hollywood on the cheap,

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Will Dubai’s debt crisis derail Indian property recovery?

November 27, 2009

The tremors from Dubai did not jolt the Indian real estate stocks too much. But will it derail the property recovery cycle? Priyanka Ghosh delves deeper. Here is a verbatim transcript of her comments on CNBC-TV18. Also watch the accompanying

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Will Dubai’s debt crisis derail Indian property recovery?

November 27, 2009

The tremors from Dubai did not jolt the Indian real estate stocks too much. But will it derail the property recovery cycle? Priyanka Ghosh delves deeper. Here is a verbatim transcript of her comments on CNBC-TV18. Also watch the accompanying

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Commercial Real Estate Debt Won't be the Next Shoe to Drop | Home …

November 27, 2009

Lastly, there is a market for distressed commercial real estate (as opposed to second homes). Investors have been amassing cash and REITs have been raising capital to acquire many of these troubled CRE assets. According to a NREI survey …

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30-year-loan rates match record low (Washington Post)

November 27, 2009

Average rates for 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages fell this week, matching a record low set last spring. Rates are more than a full percentage point below what they were a year ago, Freddie Mac said Wednesday.

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5 stocks in a half-off sale

November 27, 2009

after Dubai asked banks to allow its investment vehicle Dubai World to suspend for six months payments on debt of $59 billion. This comes as big bets on Persian Gulf real estate sour. The first concern is a $3.5 billion payment on Sukuk (Islamic bond)

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5 stocks in a half-off sale

November 27, 2009

after Dubai asked banks to allow its investment vehicle Dubai World to suspend for six months payments on debt of $59 billion. This comes as big bets on Persian Gulf real estate sour. The first concern is a $3.5 billion payment on Sukuk (Islamic bond)

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Early Reports On Black Friday Sales Show Signs Of Life

November 27, 2009

The nation’s shoppers took advantage of deals on toys and TVs with some renewed vigor in stores and online on Black Friday after a year of concentrating their spending on basic necessities. Though the first numbers won’t be available until Saturday, early reports indicated bigger crowds than last year, with people buying more and even throwing in some items for themselves. It was an encouraging sign for retailers, which have suffered through a year of sales declines, and perhaps also for the broader economy, which could use a kickstart from consumer spending. In Chicago, Dan Montgomery and his wife carted bulging Macy’s bags, proclaiming the department stores had “killer deals.” Their favorite buy? A set of two skillets for $19.99, marked down from $100. Still, mall operators said more shoppers were sticking to making purchases in cash and debit cards instead of credit. “I like cash because when you’re out of cash, you’re out of cash. And you don’t have the hangover in January,” Montgomery said. Worries about jobs clearly were on shoppers’ minds. Most people buying for themselves were picking up practical things that were deeply discounted such as pillows, pajamas and coffee makers, according to stores and analysts. “With the layoff there have been a few cutbacks, but with the great sales they’re offering this year, I think it’s, overall, going to be a great Christmas for my two granddaughters,” said Ernest Bell of Marietta, Ga., who was laid off in April from his job as an information technology support representative and was at the local Walmart on Friday. The nation’s retailers ushered in the traditional start of the holiday shopping season with expanded hours and deep discounts in hopes of getting people to spend. Online, Walmart.com, Amazon.com and other online retailers also grabbed for a piece of the action, pushing deals on Thursday and even earlier in the week. Several large retailers, including Walmart and many Old Navy locations, even opened on Thanksgiving. Those stores now have to figure out how to keep people coming back through Dec. 25. Though there were isolated reports of squabbles, the pre-dawn crowds were generally calm. Stores took extra precautions to control the throngs after a Walmart worker on Long Island was trampled to death last year on Black Friday. Analysts monitoring the malls said shoppers were less frenetic, having researched deals before going shopping. Extended hours also gave shoppers more time to grab deals both online and in stores than a year ago. Most Walmart stores were open on Thanksgiving to prevent the mad dash of shoppers for its Friday 5 a.m. specials. ShopLocal, a subsidiary of publisher Gannett Co., on Friday said traffic was up 27 percent at top retailers’ online sites featuring their Black Friday ads. Stores were encouraged that shoppers appeared to be a little freer with their spending. Best Buy, Sears Holdings Corp. and Mall of America, as well as mall operators Taubman Centers and Simon Property Group, offered signs people were buying more than last year. An average of about 1,000 people were in line for midnight openings at Toys R Us stores, CEO Gerald Storch said. After setting aside 100 Zhu Zhu Pets hamsters for each location, Toys R Us came back with several shipments of the hot toy for several of its stores Friday. Even luxury stores, which generally aren’t the big attractions for Black Friday, had brisk traffic, according to analysts. More than 5,000 people were at Macy’s Herald Square store in New York early Friday, slightly more than last year, Macy’s CEO Terry J. Lundgren said. Among the most popular items were Tommy Hilfiger $99 bomber jackets, marked down from $450. Dondrae May, a manager at a Best Buy in Framingham, Mass., said shoppers started lining up at 4 p.m. Thursday – 13 hours before opening. He said shoppers were filling their baskets with more items than a year ago, when they were shellshocked after the financial meltdown. The biggest draws were laptops, TVs and GPS systems, he said. The chain had sold out of all of its early morning specials within two hours of the 5 a.m. opening, spokesman Scott Morris said. While Black Friday is not a bellwether for the season, analysts are studying Friday’s receipts to better understand the mindset of shoppers like Laura Frankito, a nurse who found herself at Kohl’s outside Cleveland buying a Snuggie blanket-robe for her aunt and Tony Hawk T-shirts for her nephew. She’s only giving money to her two children, and she pointed out her newfound practicality by saying she wouldn’t get a $12.99 canine version of the Snuggie for her sister’s dog. “There would have been a year when I would have gotten that,” she said. ___ Associated Press Writer Lisa Cornwell in Cincinnati, AP Writer Kate Brumback in Atlanta and AP Retail Writers Betsy Vereckey and Mae Anderson in New York City, Ashley Heher in Chicago, Emily Fredrix in Cleveland, and Vinnee Tong in San Francisco contributed to this report. (This version CORRECTS to “Simon Property Group” instead of “Simon Properties.”)

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Bernanke Says `Strong Case’ Can Be Made for Fed Role in Bank Supervision

November 27, 2009

By Craig Torres Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said a “strong case” can be made for keeping the central bank involved in bank supervision, and subjecting interest rate policy to congressional audits may undermine confidence in monetary policy.     “There is a strong case for a continued role for the Federal Reserve in bank supervision,” the Fed Chairman said in a commentary released today on the Web site of the Washington Post. “Because of our role in making monetary policy , the Fed brings unparalleled economic and financial expertise to its oversight of banks.” Bernanke has presided over the most expansive use of Fed powers since the Great Depression. While the 55-year-old Fed chairman has said he averted a financial meltdown, lawmakers have voiced concern about potential taxpayer losses and proposed the most sweeping dismantlement of Fed authority since the creation of the institution in 1913. The Fed chairman said legislation under consideration in Congress would impair the ability of the central bank to fulfill its basic functions. “A number of the legislative proposals being circulated would significantly reduce the capacity of the Federal Reserve to perform its core functions,” he said. “Now more than ever, America needs a strong, nonpolitical and independent central bank with the tools to promote financial stability and to help steer our economy to recovery without inflation.” Lax Supervision Senate Banking Committee Christopher Dodd , a Democrat from Connecticut, has criticized the central bank for lax supervision and introduced legislation this month that would strip bank oversight from the Fed and create a single bank regulator. Dodd would also limit the central bank’s ability to loan to individual companies. “Congress has a lot of public support for an attack on the Fed,” Allan Meltzer , a Fed historian and professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said in an interview Nov. 23. “They bailed out everybody in sight.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 1.7 percent to 1,091.49 in New York while two-year Treasury yields fell to the lowest level since December. Dodd and Representative Barney Frank , chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, want to take away the Fed’s rule- writing power on consumer financial products and give it to a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency. “The Federal Reserve, like other regulators around the world, did not do all that it could have to constrain excessive risk-taking in the financial sector in the period leading up to the crisis,” Bernanke said. The Fed has reviewed its performance and “moved aggressively to fix the problems,” he added. Trigger Losses As the subprime mortgage crisis began to trigger losses in bank portfolios, Bernanke used emergency authority last year to purchase securities from Bear Stearns Cos. and facilitate its merger with JPMorgan Chase & Co. Bernanke also pushed the Fed’s backstop lending beyond banks, setting up programs to support the commercial paper and asset-backed securities markets. The Fed Board approved the bank holding company applications of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, giving them access to the Fed’s loan window. Under Bernanke, the Fed has more than doubled its assets to $2.21 trillion and become the lender of last resort to government bond dealers, banks, Wall Street firms and U.S. corporations. The central bank has also propped up markets for mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities that support credit to consumers, small businesses and commercial real estate. Reform Bill A financial regulatory reform bill proposed by Frank, a Democrat from Massachusetts, would limit Fed emergency lending to broadly available credit programs. The Frank bill preserves the Obama administration’s proposal to make the Fed the lead regulator of risk across the financial system. The central bank’s independence is also under fire from both chambers of Congress. Frank’s committee advanced a proposal this month to remove a three-decade ban on congressional audits of Fed interest-rate decisions. The proposal was offered by Representative Ron Paul , a Republican from Texas, and based on a bill with more than 300 co-sponsors. Bernanke said studies show that central banks independent of political influence tend to keep inflation and interest rates lower than their less independent counterparts. “The general repeal of that exemption would serve only to increase the perceived influence of Congress on monetary policy decisions, which would undermine the confidence the public and the markets have in the Fed to act in the long-term economic interest of the nation,” Bernanke said. Under the proposal by Dodd, commercial banks would lose their power to appoint directors of the 12 regional Fed banks. Instead, directors would be chosen by the Fed’s Senate-confirmed governors, and each board chairman would be appointed by the president of the United States and subject to Senate approval. The proposal would create political oversight of the Fed bank presidents , who are among the most vocal proponents on the Federal Open Market Committee for keeping inflation low. To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net .

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Dubai debt crisis rattles recovery

November 27, 2009

The Finance Ministry today said it did not expect the Dubai debt crisis to impact remittances to India, or affect the real estate sector in the country. RBI said it was studying the fallout of the developments, and would ask banks to

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Dubai debt crisis rattles recovery

November 27, 2009

The Finance Ministry today said it did not expect the Dubai debt crisis to impact remittances to India, or affect the real estate sector in the country. RBI said it was studying the fallout of the developments, and would ask banks to

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