January 2010

Video: Molchanov Says Chevron’s Strategy Is on The Right Track: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Pavel Molchanov, an analyst at Raymond James & Associates, talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about the outlook for Chevron Corp. after it said fourth-quarter net income dropped 37 percent as slumping demand for diesel and gasoline outweighed gains from oil production and prices. Molchanov also discusses prospects for the company’s refineries and the outlook for Exxon Mobil Corp.’s earnings. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Distressed investors face greater risk

January 29, 2010

Debt investors will have to check options carefully as a broad rally has left fewer options Distressed strategies returned about 30 per cent last year, according to an index from Hedge

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Video: Bank of Tokyo’s Rupkey Discusses U.S. Economy Outlook: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Christopher Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd., talks with Bloomberg Television about the outlook for the U.S. economy. The economy expanded in the fourth quarter at the fastest pace in six years as factories cranked up assembly lines, a Commerce Department report showed today. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bove Discusses Bank Regulation, Goldman, Citigroup: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Dick Bove, an analyst at Rochdale Securities LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Lori Rothman about President Barack Obama’s proposal to limit bank trading activities and its impact on Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Bove also discusses the performance of Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit and investment strategy in banking stocks. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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New Monopoly Board: Credit Cards Replace Money, Boards Get Circular In ‘Revolutions’

January 29, 2010

Monopoly, which turns 75 this year, is celebrating with a modern redesign . The game’s anniversary edition, which features a circular board, eliminates cash altogether: instead of pastel-colored paper money, little real estate magnates will gobble up house and hotel pieces with credit cards. And gone, too, are the game’s classic metal playing pieces, which are replaced with small, engraved plastic slabs. Monopoly’s owner, Hasbro, debuted the updated edition at at this year’s Toy Fair in New York City. It’s slated to go on sale sometime later this year, but the company promises to keep a traditional version of the game on the market.

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Alan Meese: The New DOJ: Lessons Learned From the Ticketmaster Live Nation Decision

January 29, 2010

The Obama administration’s announcement yesterday to approve, with some modifications, the merger between Live Nation and Ticketmaster marked a fittingly undramatic end to what many hoped would be the watershed to a new economic policy. The administration’s decision instead reflected a commitment to principle over politics and pragmatism over populism. Many hoped that the Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger would fall prey to a new economic populism. When the companies announced their plans to merge, some characterized the merger as a consolidation of “entertainment powerhouses” designed to inflate ticket prices and squeeze consumers. Public figures, including none other than Bruce Springsteen, condemned the combination. Members of Congress piled on, characterizing the transaction as a naked combination of industrial titans and demanding action from antitrust enforcers. The history of antitrust policy is replete with such populist anger towards supposed industrial power, and the Sherman Act itself was largely created in response to a screaming public. Typical demands for rigorous enforcement come from small and technologically obsolete companies resisting the onslaught of new competitive forces. Typical demands for restrained enforcement come from politically-connected professional establishments that disdain competition and decry enforcement as unwanted government interference. This politicization of antitrust, from all ideological corners, rarely results in sound economic policy and has led both to overzealous enforcement, protecting inefficient firms from more efficient rivals, and to permissive restraints, giving sanction to destructive cartels and monopolies. The Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger would have been another procompetitive victim to an angry public. Our careful analysis of the proposed merger reveals that it is much more a response to Schumpeterian technological change than an effort to concentrate market power. In other words, the companies are combining forces to pursue an innovative business model, one that pursues new consumer demands and responds to the rise of electronic music. It is not an attempt to acquire a stranglehold over an industry that technological change has made increasingly resistant to strangleholds. The populist anger directed at the proposed merger — which was in no small part fueled by the companies’ smaller competitors who feared having difficulty competing effectively against the new company– characteristically did not discern the complexities of the industry and evaluate the merger’s likely competitive impact. Of course, few in Washington brake for complexity. Which is why it is a relief the Obama administration did. Despite being ridiculed as “the dismal science,” economics is a necessary ingredient to policies that enhance consumer welfare and disperse the plentiful benefits of market competition. Even while the Obama Administration might engage in antitrust saber rattling, its approval the Live Nation-Ticketmaster and the associated consent decree shows the triumph of economic reasoning that is often counterintuitive to policy advocates. Its settlement further extracts concessions that further enhances competition, promotes innovation, and protects consumers. It is the commendable product of careful analysis reflects a deliberate navigation across the minefield of antitrust politicization. While reasonable minds might differ with both our own analysis of the merger and the administration’s conclusion, such differences should focus on the merits the transaction and not rhetoric from politicos. Bruce Springsteen himself admonished all of us to avoid leaping to compulsive conclusions when he observed, “God have mercy on the man who doubts what he’s sure of.” Effective antitrust requires nothing less. Alan Meese is the Ball Professor of Law at William and Mary. Barak Richman is a Professor of Law and Business at Duke University.

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Alan Meese: The New DOJ: Lessons Learned From the Ticketmaster Live Nation Decision

January 29, 2010

The Obama administration’s announcement yesterday to approve, with some modifications, the merger between Live Nation and Ticketmaster marked a fittingly undramatic end to what many hoped would be the watershed to a new economic policy. The administration’s decision instead reflected a commitment to principle over politics and pragmatism over populism. Many hoped that the Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger would fall prey to a new economic populism. When the companies announced their plans to merge, some characterized the merger as a consolidation of “entertainment powerhouses” designed to inflate ticket prices and squeeze consumers. Public figures, including none other than Bruce Springsteen, condemned the combination. Members of Congress piled on, characterizing the transaction as a naked combination of industrial titans and demanding action from antitrust enforcers. The history of antitrust policy is replete with such populist anger towards supposed industrial power, and the Sherman Act itself was largely created in response to a screaming public. Typical demands for rigorous enforcement come from small and technologically obsolete companies resisting the onslaught of new competitive forces. Typical demands for restrained enforcement come from politically-connected professional establishments that disdain competition and decry enforcement as unwanted government interference. This politicization of antitrust, from all ideological corners, rarely results in sound economic policy and has led both to overzealous enforcement, protecting inefficient firms from more efficient rivals, and to permissive restraints, giving sanction to destructive cartels and monopolies. The Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger would have been another procompetitive victim to an angry public. Our careful analysis of the proposed merger reveals that it is much more a response to Schumpeterian technological change than an effort to concentrate market power. In other words, the companies are combining forces to pursue an innovative business model, one that pursues new consumer demands and responds to the rise of electronic music. It is not an attempt to acquire a stranglehold over an industry that technological change has made increasingly resistant to strangleholds. The populist anger directed at the proposed merger — which was in no small part fueled by the companies’ smaller competitors who feared having difficulty competing effectively against the new company– characteristically did not discern the complexities of the industry and evaluate the merger’s likely competitive impact. Of course, few in Washington brake for complexity. Which is why it is a relief the Obama administration did. Despite being ridiculed as “the dismal science,” economics is a necessary ingredient to policies that enhance consumer welfare and disperse the plentiful benefits of market competition. Even while the Obama Administration might engage in antitrust saber rattling, its approval the Live Nation-Ticketmaster and the associated consent decree shows the triumph of economic reasoning that is often counterintuitive to policy advocates. Its settlement further extracts concessions that further enhances competition, promotes innovation, and protects consumers. It is the commendable product of careful analysis reflects a deliberate navigation across the minefield of antitrust politicization. While reasonable minds might differ with both our own analysis of the merger and the administration’s conclusion, such differences should focus on the merits the transaction and not rhetoric from politicos. Bruce Springsteen himself admonished all of us to avoid leaping to compulsive conclusions when he observed, “God have mercy on the man who doubts what he’s sure of.” Effective antitrust requires nothing less. Alan Meese is the Ball Professor of Law at William and Mary. Barak Richman is a Professor of Law and Business at Duke University.

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Michael J. Panzner: A Growing Share of Americans’ Income Comes from the Government

January 29, 2010

While most eyes were focused on the better-than-expected gross domestic product data for last year’s fourth quarter , this week’s report from the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis also included details on U.S. personal income . Along with wages and salaries, dividends and interest income, this category includes personal current transfer receipts, which the BEA defines as “income payments to persons for which no current services are performed and net insurance settlements.” That is, government social benefits (and, to a very minor extent, net transfers received from businesses). As you can see from the following graph, while the relationship between personal income and GDP has not changed all that much over the course of the past six decades, the share of income accounted for by transfer payments has jumped more than 200 percent. The latest data also confirms that the financial crisis has played a major role in boosting Americans’ dependence — for lack of a better word — on government largesse, with the run-up over the past two years accounting for around a quarter of the relative increase since 1947. With an ever-greater share of Americans receiving some sort of financial assistance from the government, the obvious question is how — or whether — this shift will affect the political landscape, especially when it comes to making tough choices about social programs, in particular, and public finances, in general. If and when policymakers decide, for example, that the time is right to rein in spending and cut back on public sector borrowing, will the political will be there to see those efforts through? Or, as cynics might suggest, is a financial crash landing the only real “exit strategy” that is on the table right now? I guess we’ll find out soon enough.

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Michael J. Panzner: A Growing Share of Americans’ Income Comes from the Government

January 29, 2010

While most eyes were focused on the better-than-expected gross domestic product data for last year’s fourth quarter , this week’s report from the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis also included details on U.S. personal income . Along with wages and salaries, dividends and interest income, this category includes personal current transfer receipts, which the BEA defines as “income payments to persons for which no current services are performed and net insurance settlements.” That is, government social benefits (and, to a very minor extent, net transfers received from businesses). As you can see from the following graph, while the relationship between personal income and GDP has not changed all that much over the course of the past six decades, the share of income accounted for by transfer payments has jumped more than 200 percent. The latest data also confirms that the financial crisis has played a major role in boosting Americans’ dependence — for lack of a better word — on government largesse, with the run-up over the past two years accounting for around a quarter of the relative increase since 1947. With an ever-greater share of Americans receiving some sort of financial assistance from the government, the obvious question is how — or whether — this shift will affect the political landscape, especially when it comes to making tough choices about social programs, in particular, and public finances, in general. If and when policymakers decide, for example, that the time is right to rein in spending and cut back on public sector borrowing, will the political will be there to see those efforts through? Or, as cynics might suggest, is a financial crash landing the only real “exit strategy” that is on the table right now? I guess we’ll find out soon enough.

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Norb Vonnegut: Holden Caulfield on Banking

January 29, 2010

“If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is who made all the lousy decisions leading up to the banking disaster of 2008, and how the government was out to lunch during the entire bailout, and all that Neil Barofsky kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into the blame game, if you want to know the truth.” Holden Caulfield won’t weigh in on banking reform. But I’m sure he’d strike the right tone of frustration with attempts, either from government or Wall Street, to fix our finances. Do you get the sense it’s like one massive free-for-all out there? Where the combatants, all snarling and backbiting each another, will stymie true and productive reform and turn it “phony?” First, we have governments gorging at the trough of populist outrage. The US is considering a $120 billion levy on banks. The UK is taxing 2009 bank bonuses at 50 percent. And Jean-Claude Trichet, in an uncharacteristic display of support from a French civil servant, says the US regulatory plans are “relevant and interesting.” At least I think that’s support. Then, we have the investigations. There’s Congress. They’re hopping mad about the Fed’s indirect payments to AIG counterparties during the bailout. There’s Neil Barofsky. He’s trying to piece together what happened: why the Fed won’t disclose more details; or why Goldman’s alumni were everywhere as the bailout deals (and the markets) were going down. And finally we have the bankers, who are clueless when it comes to courting public opinion. The decision to pay monster bonuses on 2009 earnings ranks as Wall Street’s biggest mistake in fifty years. Now, financiers can’t say or do anything right, which is a problem because they’re the ones who will be taxed and regulated, their organizations dismantled. Or is it dismembered? The problem with a melee is nobody wins. Can anybody out there strike the right tone–a mix between cooperation and the reform our financial sector so desperately needs? Norb Vonnegut

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Norb Vonnegut: Holden Caulfield on Banking

January 29, 2010

“If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is who made all the lousy decisions leading up to the banking disaster of 2008, and how the government was out to lunch during the entire bailout, and all that Neil Barofsky kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into the blame game, if you want to know the truth.” Holden Caulfield won’t weigh in on banking reform. But I’m sure he’d strike the right tone of frustration with attempts, either from government or Wall Street, to fix our finances. Do you get the sense it’s like one massive free-for-all out there? Where the combatants, all snarling and backbiting each another, will stymie true and productive reform and turn it “phony?” First, we have governments gorging at the trough of populist outrage. The US is considering a $120 billion levy on banks. The UK is taxing 2009 bank bonuses at 50 percent. And Jean-Claude Trichet, in an uncharacteristic display of support from a French civil servant, says the US regulatory plans are “relevant and interesting.” At least I think that’s support. Then, we have the investigations. There’s Congress. They’re hopping mad about the Fed’s indirect payments to AIG counterparties during the bailout. There’s Neil Barofsky. He’s trying to piece together what happened: why the Fed won’t disclose more details; or why Goldman’s alumni were everywhere as the bailout deals (and the markets) were going down. And finally we have the bankers, who are clueless when it comes to courting public opinion. The decision to pay monster bonuses on 2009 earnings ranks as Wall Street’s biggest mistake in fifty years. Now, financiers can’t say or do anything right, which is a problem because they’re the ones who will be taxed and regulated, their organizations dismantled. Or is it dismembered? The problem with a melee is nobody wins. Can anybody out there strike the right tone–a mix between cooperation and the reform our financial sector so desperately needs? Norb Vonnegut

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JOAN HARNED Earns NAR Short Sales and Foreclosure Certification

January 29, 2010

Buyers and Sellers Benefit from REALTOR® Expertise in Distressed Sales. Joan Harned with TEAM BLACK BEAR at Keller Williams Mountain Properties is your Short Sales & Foreclosure Resource! FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PR Log (Press Release) – Jan 29, 2010

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Huff TV: Arianna Huffington At Davos: Obama Still Not Doing Enough For Jobs (VIDEO)

January 29, 2010

In an interviews with CNBC and Bloomberg TV at the World Economic Forum’s annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland, Arianna said the Obama administration is still not doing enough to help on the jobs front, despite new proposals announced in the President’s State of The Union speech on Wednesday. Davos attendees in the financial sector have called for global uniformity on banking reforms, but Arianna noted that the economy is in dire need of effective job creation efforts. “We still don’t see how growth is going to be filled,” Arianna told CNBC. “Where is consumption going to come from? And where jobs are going to come from? I think that’s the fear.” Arianna added that the Obama administration is still not adequately communicating the severity of the financial crisis for most Americans: “The administration, at least the majorities in Congress need to make it very clear to the public that we are not out of the woods, that we don’t see a clear path to job growth…So what they need to bring to the table is the same kind of urgency that they brought to the table a year ago, when some how they put everybody in a room and made things happen. That urgency is missing now.” Responding to the President’s recent proposal for a child care tax credit, Arianna said “the problem isn’t that you can’t find a babysitter, the problem is that there are six applicants for every job.” “The middle class is suffering and there is a kind of downward mobility,” she added. WATCH the full interview: WATCH Arianna’ interview with Bloomberg TV:

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Huff TV: Arianna Huffington At Davos: Obama Still Not Doing Enough For Jobs (VIDEO)

January 29, 2010

In an interviews with CNBC and Bloomberg TV at the World Economic Forum’s annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland, Arianna said the Obama administration is still not doing enough to help on the jobs front, despite new proposals announced in the President’s State of The Union speech on Wednesday. Davos attendees in the financial sector have called for global uniformity on banking reforms, but Arianna noted that the economy is in dire need of effective job creation efforts. “We still don’t see how growth is going to be filled,” Arianna told CNBC. “Where is consumption going to come from? And where jobs are going to come from? I think that’s the fear.” Arianna added that the Obama administration is still not adequately communicating the severity of the financial crisis for most Americans: “The administration, at least the majorities in Congress need to make it very clear to the public that we are not out of the woods, that we don’t see a clear path to job growth…So what they need to bring to the table is the same kind of urgency that they brought to the table a year ago, when some how they put everybody in a room and made things happen. That urgency is missing now.” Responding to the President’s recent proposal for a child care tax credit, Arianna said “the problem isn’t that you can’t find a babysitter, the problem is that there are six applicants for every job.” “The middle class is suffering and there is a kind of downward mobility,” she added. WATCH the full interview: WATCH Arianna’ interview with Bloomberg TV:

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David Fiderer: Sham Transactions That Led to AIG’s Downfall: The Ugly Truth Was Hiding In Plain Sight

January 29, 2010

If you want to understand the deals that wiped out AIG, the best place to start is the website of the New York Fed . In the financial statement of Maiden Lane III, published last April, we see the gory details of the three largest CDO investments – Max 2008-1, Max 2007-1, and TRIAXX 2006-2A – acquired from AIG’s banks at par. Those deals, which totaled $10.7 billion, offer a template for evaluating the other sham transactions in the portfolio. Initially, the business deal between AIG and the banks was that AIG sold credit default swap protection. Banks buy credit default swaps for two reasons: They want to slice and their dice credit risk, and/or they want to hide something. Here’s a simple, fairly innocuous, illustration: Suppose you’re a banker who tells his client, Procter & Gamble, “We want to expand the relationship and do more business with you.” P&G then says, “Fine, lend us $100 million.” Back at the office, your senior credit management says, “The maximum risk exposure we approve for P&G is $80 million.” How do you keep in P&G’s good graces? You lend the company $100 million, and simultaneously offload $20 million in risk exposure by purchasing a credit default swap from another bank. P&G’s understanding is that you’ve lent them $100 million. When Deutsche Bank bought a credit default swap from AIG in 2008, its primary motivation was not to slice up the credit risk, but to hide virtually all of it. Max 2008-1 , a CDO that Deutsche arranged and closed on June 25, 2008, was huge. The total debt issue was $5.8 billion, of which 94%, or the entire $5.4 billion Class A-1 tranche, was covered by one credit default swap issued by AIG Financial Products. The Class A-1 tranche was considered “supersenior” because it was ahead of two other tranches, both originally rated Aaa, which totaled $200 million. (The remaining debt $200 million worth of debt was rated Aa, a and Baa at closing.) Put another way, Deutsche Bank did not bring Max 2008-1 to “the marketplace,” where investors might consider buying the deal on its own merits. By normal standards, the “market” for this CDO never really existed. Nor did Deutsche sell the deal to AIG, which could have assumed both the risks and rewards of owning a huge CDO. (In all fairness, we do not know where the remaining 6%, or $400 million, of less-senior tranches ended up. Deutsche could have kept them in inventory to be stuffed into a yet another CDO.) Almost all circumstances surrounding Max 2008-1 seem weird. We do not know much about the $5.4 billion Class A-1 tranche, except that it was never downgraded below its initial Aaa rating. Yet, according to Deutsche Bank, AIG and Maiden Lane III’s accountants, the underlying value of Max 2008-1 collapsed within a matter of months. By the time that the government agreed to acquire the CDO at par, the Class A-1 tranche purportedly had a negative “mark-to-market” of $2.5 billion . (As noted earlier , accountants, both for AIG and the Fed, determined that that there was no market benchmark for valuing any of the CDOs.) So did AIG turn over $2.5 billion in cash collateral to Deutsche? No. It turned over $4 billion, as revealed in AIG’s filing with the SEC , dated May 15, 2009. Among the hundred plus CDO deals to which AIG extended credit protection, the only ones which received collateral postings in excess of the “negative market-to-market” were the two biggest: Max 2008-1 and Max 2007-1, as revealed in the SEC filing of May 15, 2009 . Together, those two CDO tranches had a par value of $7.5 billion and a “negative market-to-market” of $3.5 billion at the time Maiden Lane III closed. But AIG had already turned over $5.6 billion in collateral to Deutsche Bank, $2 billion more than what anyone thought to be necessary. Everything about Max 2008-1 suggests that the parties were not acting on an arms-length basis, that they had something to hide. A deal rated Aaa doesn’t decline in value by 40% within months after closing and still retain its Aaa rating. (The more junior tranches received moderate downgrades on March 19, 2009.) A cash-strapped insurance conglomerate does not turn over $2 billion in excess cash collateral for no reason. AIGFP had unsuccessfully struggled for the better part of a year to establish an agreed-upon method for calculating the amounts of cash collateral postings on these credit default swaps. It seems more than a little odd that it would choose to expand this problem with a credit derivative more than twice the size of its next largest CDO exposure. And it seems especially odd that it would close such a deal in June 2008, one month after Moody’s and S&P had downgraded AIG, and issued warnings that further downgrades could be coming. What becomes obvious, after reviewing Max 2008-1, Max 2007-1, and TRIAXX 2006-2A, is that these deals never could have been done but for AIG’s willingness to assume the lion’s share of the credit risk. TRIAXX 2006-2A was a $5 billion deal, of which AIGFP assumed $3.2 billion, or 64%, of the credit risk. AIGFP provided credit protection in three different tranches, all of which were rated AAA at closing. The sole underwriter and arranger for the $5 billion CDO, which closed in December 2006, was an outfit called ICP Securities LLC , a private firm owned by its employees. In retrospect, it seems remarkable that AIG would have assumed such a large exposure in a deal structured by a relatively small private company. Nonetheless, ICP was able to sell its deal into the marketplace, if that’s the correct way to characterize it. Of the $3.2 billion in credit protection sold by AIG, $2.5 billion was purchased by Goldman Sachs, another $0.4 billion was acquired by an affiliate of Dresdner bank, and $.03 billion was acquired by a company of unknown origin, called CORAL Purchasing (Ireland) Limited. All of this information was disclosed by AIG to the SEC on May 15, 2009. The Aaa ratings at TRIAXX 2006-2A remained in effect at the time AIG collapsed, and at the time the CDOs were sold at par to Maiden Lane III. Nonetheless, Goldman had demanded, and received about $1 billion in cash collateral postings prior to the date when the New York Fed took the exposure off of AIG’s books. About a month after Maiden Lane III closed out its books for the year, on December 31, 2008, TRIAXX 2006-2A suffered a downgrade, to Caa . Those eight-month-old public disclosures are very incomplete, but they reveal a lot. They indicate that these CDO deals were not, by any stretch of the imagination, conducted on an arms-length basis, and that the these transactions took forms that were designed to conceal the true economic interests of the parties. I’m always amazed by what people, especially people not from the financial world, don’t know. Big banks are not like the Pentagon or the Coalition Provisional Authority. Billion dollar amounts do not just slip through the cracks. There is no way that the very top people at AIG and Deutsche Bank would not be thoroughly briefed about every aspect of a $5.4 billion credit default swap for a CDO called Max 2008-1. The newly disclosed information , which reveals the redacted parts of AIG’s May 15, 2009 filing, serves to confirm what we already realized. At AIGFP’s CDO business, nothing was what it seemed.

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David Fiderer: Sham Transactions That Led to AIG’s Downfall: The Ugly Truth Was Hiding In Plain Sight

January 29, 2010

If you want to understand the deals that wiped out AIG, the best place to start is the website of the New York Fed . In the financial statement of Maiden Lane III, published last April, we see the gory details of the three largest CDO investments – Max 2008-1, Max 2007-1, and TRIAXX 2006-2A – acquired from AIG’s banks at par. Those deals, which totaled $10.7 billion, offer a template for evaluating the other sham transactions in the portfolio. Initially, the business deal between AIG and the banks was that AIG sold credit default swap protection. Banks buy credit default swaps for two reasons: They want to slice and their dice credit risk, and/or they want to hide something. Here’s a simple, fairly innocuous, illustration: Suppose you’re a banker who tells his client, Procter & Gamble, “We want to expand the relationship and do more business with you.” P&G then says, “Fine, lend us $100 million.” Back at the office, your senior credit management says, “The maximum risk exposure we approve for P&G is $80 million.” How do you keep in P&G’s good graces? You lend the company $100 million, and simultaneously offload $20 million in risk exposure by purchasing a credit default swap from another bank. P&G’s understanding is that you’ve lent them $100 million. When Deutsche Bank bought a credit default swap from AIG in 2008, its primary motivation was not to slice up the credit risk, but to hide virtually all of it. Max 2008-1 , a CDO that Deutsche arranged and closed on June 25, 2008, was huge. The total debt issue was $5.8 billion, of which 94%, or the entire $5.4 billion Class A-1 tranche, was covered by one credit default swap issued by AIG Financial Products. The Class A-1 tranche was considered “supersenior” because it was ahead of two other tranches, both originally rated Aaa, which totaled $200 million. (The remaining debt $200 million worth of debt was rated Aa, a and Baa at closing.) Put another way, Deutsche Bank did not bring Max 2008-1 to “the marketplace,” where investors might consider buying the deal on its own merits. By normal standards, the “market” for this CDO never really existed. Nor did Deutsche sell the deal to AIG, which could have assumed both the risks and rewards of owning a huge CDO. (In all fairness, we do not know where the remaining 6%, or $400 million, of less-senior tranches ended up. Deutsche could have kept them in inventory to be stuffed into a yet another CDO.) Almost all circumstances surrounding Max 2008-1 seem weird. We do not know much about the $5.4 billion Class A-1 tranche, except that it was never downgraded below its initial Aaa rating. Yet, according to Deutsche Bank, AIG and Maiden Lane III’s accountants, the underlying value of Max 2008-1 collapsed within a matter of months. By the time that the government agreed to acquire the CDO at par, the Class A-1 tranche purportedly had a negative “mark-to-market” of $2.5 billion . (As noted earlier , accountants, both for AIG and the Fed, determined that that there was no market benchmark for valuing any of the CDOs.) So did AIG turn over $2.5 billion in cash collateral to Deutsche? No. It turned over $4 billion, as revealed in AIG’s filing with the SEC , dated May 15, 2009. Among the hundred plus CDO deals to which AIG extended credit protection, the only ones which received collateral postings in excess of the “negative market-to-market” were the two biggest: Max 2008-1 and Max 2007-1, as revealed in the SEC filing of May 15, 2009 . Together, those two CDO tranches had a par value of $7.5 billion and a “negative market-to-market” of $3.5 billion at the time Maiden Lane III closed. But AIG had already turned over $5.6 billion in collateral to Deutsche Bank, $2 billion more than what anyone thought to be necessary. Everything about Max 2008-1 suggests that the parties were not acting on an arms-length basis, that they had something to hide. A deal rated Aaa doesn’t decline in value by 40% within months after closing and still retain its Aaa rating. (The more junior tranches received moderate downgrades on March 19, 2009.) A cash-strapped insurance conglomerate does not turn over $2 billion in excess cash collateral for no reason. AIGFP had unsuccessfully struggled for the better part of a year to establish an agreed-upon method for calculating the amounts of cash collateral postings on these credit default swaps. It seems more than a little odd that it would choose to expand this problem with a credit derivative more than twice the size of its next largest CDO exposure. And it seems especially odd that it would close such a deal in June 2008, one month after Moody’s and S&P had downgraded AIG, and issued warnings that further downgrades could be coming. What becomes obvious, after reviewing Max 2008-1, Max 2007-1, and TRIAXX 2006-2A, is that these deals never could have been done but for AIG’s willingness to assume the lion’s share of the credit risk. TRIAXX 2006-2A was a $5 billion deal, of which AIGFP assumed $3.2 billion, or 64%, of the credit risk. AIGFP provided credit protection in three different tranches, all of which were rated AAA at closing. The sole underwriter and arranger for the $5 billion CDO, which closed in December 2006, was an outfit called ICP Securities LLC , a private firm owned by its employees. In retrospect, it seems remarkable that AIG would have assumed such a large exposure in a deal structured by a relatively small private company. Nonetheless, ICP was able to sell its deal into the marketplace, if that’s the correct way to characterize it. Of the $3.2 billion in credit protection sold by AIG, $2.5 billion was purchased by Goldman Sachs, another $0.4 billion was acquired by an affiliate of Dresdner bank, and $.03 billion was acquired by a company of unknown origin, called CORAL Purchasing (Ireland) Limited. All of this information was disclosed by AIG to the SEC on May 15, 2009. The Aaa ratings at TRIAXX 2006-2A remained in effect at the time AIG collapsed, and at the time the CDOs were sold at par to Maiden Lane III. Nonetheless, Goldman had demanded, and received about $1 billion in cash collateral postings prior to the date when the New York Fed took the exposure off of AIG’s books. About a month after Maiden Lane III closed out its books for the year, on December 31, 2008, TRIAXX 2006-2A suffered a downgrade, to Caa . Those eight-month-old public disclosures are very incomplete, but they reveal a lot. They indicate that these CDO deals were not, by any stretch of the imagination, conducted on an arms-length basis, and that the these transactions took forms that were designed to conceal the true economic interests of the parties. I’m always amazed by what people, especially people not from the financial world, don’t know. Big banks are not like the Pentagon or the Coalition Provisional Authority. Billion dollar amounts do not just slip through the cracks. There is no way that the very top people at AIG and Deutsche Bank would not be thoroughly briefed about every aspect of a $5.4 billion credit default swap for a CDO called Max 2008-1. The newly disclosed information , which reveals the redacted parts of AIG’s May 15, 2009 filing, serves to confirm what we already realized. At AIGFP’s CDO business, nothing was what it seemed.

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Confidence Among U.S. Consumers Gains a Second Month Amid Fewer Job Cuts

January 29, 2010

By Vincent Del Giudice Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Confidence among U.S. consumers improved in January to the highest level in two years as the economic expansion prompted companies to limit job cuts. The Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment rose to 74.4 from December’s 72.5. The figure exceeded a preliminary reading for January of 72.8. Additional gains in sentiment that may help fuel purchases and sustain the recovery are dependent on job creation. Federal Reserve policy makers this week said that while consumer spending is expanding, it is partly being “constrained by a weak labor market.” “Signs of a recovery are becoming increasingly visible to consumers,” said Ryan Sweet , a senior economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “We’re seeing some of the improvements in consumer confidence paying dividends to spending.” Still, “consumers are still nervous about their jobs because of the lack of hiring,” he said. The consumer sentiment index was forecast to rise to 73, according to the median of 58 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Estimates ranged from 70 to 74. Investors track the data because spending by consumers accounts for about 70 percent of the U.S. economy. Stocks rose after the report and separate figures showing faster economic growth in the fourth quarter and a stronger- than-anticipated Chicago purchasing managers’ survey. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index increased 1 percent to 1,094.86 at 10:26 a.m. in New York. Fourth-Quarter Growth The Commerce Department earlier today said the world’s largest economy grew at a 5.7 percent annual rate in the final three months of 2009, the fastest pace in six years, as factories boosted production and companies invested in new equipment. Companies expanded in January at the quickest pace in more than four years as orders and employment increased. The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said today its business barometer climbed to 61.5, the highest level since November 2005, from 58.7 last month. Readings greater than 50 signal expansion. The figure was higher than the median estimate of 57.2 in a Bloomberg survey. Further improvement in growth during the current quarter “should lead to positive job gains, our baseline forecast,” Joseph LaVorgna , chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York, said in a note to clients yesterday. “The turn in the labor market should have a powerful impact on consumer attitudes, and in turn the broader economy.” Sentiment Average The Michigan consumer sentiment index averaged 66.3 in all of 2009, compared with 63.8 in 2008. During the expansion that began in late 2001 and ended in December 2007, the index averaged 89. In today’s report, the University of Michigan’s measure of current conditions , which reflects Americans’ perceptions of their own finances and whether it’s a good time to buy big- ticket items such as cars and homes, rose to 81.1 this month from 78 in December. The preliminary measure was 81. The index of expectations six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, increased to 70.1 in January, the highest since September, from 68.9 last month. The preliminary gauge was 67.5. Fed policy makers, who met this week, said “economic activity has continued to strengthen and that the deterioration in the labor market is abating.” At the same time, unemployment close to a 26-year high, lower housing wealth and limited credit underscored the need for the central bankers to keep interest rates low. Interest Rates They repeated a pledge to keep the benchmark interest rate low for an “extended period.” The Fed held the overnight bank lending rate in a range near zero, where’s been for more than a year. Consumers in the survey said they expect an inflation rate of 2.8 percent over the next 12 months, compared with 2.5 percent in the December survey. Over the next five years, the figure tracked by Fed policy makers, Americans expected a 2.9 percent rate of inflation, up from 2.7 percent in the December survey and a January preliminary figure of 2.8 percent. Companies have slowed the rate of job cuts, with initial jobless claims holding below 500,000 since mid-November. First- time filings for unemployment benefits rose as high as 674,000 in March of last year. At the same time, employers have been hesitant to add to payrolls. Obama and Jobs President Barack Obama used his first State of the Union address two days ago to affirm his plan for new jobs. The economy has lost 7.2 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007, the most in the post-World War II era. Union Pacific Corp. , the U.S. railroad with the biggest locomotive fleet, may have reached the bottom of the industry freight slump and has “a chance for some growth” this year, Chief Executive Officer James Young said. “It’s going to be a longer recovery,” Young said in an interview on Jan. 21. “Until you see positive news on the jobs front, consumers are going to stay on the sidelines. And the chance of any strong recovery — I just don’t think it’s there.” To contact the reporter on this story: Vincent Del Giudice in Washington vdelgiudice@bloomberg.net

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Pandit Says Citigroup’s Goal `Profitability Now’ After Two Years of Losses

January 29, 2010

By Erik Schatzker and Michael J. Moore Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit said his goal is “profitability now” as the bank works through credit costs after two years of losses. “We’ve come a very long way as a company and 2010 is an important year, because we can start to see the underlying strength of our operating businesses ,” Pandit, 53, said today in an interview on Bloomberg Television at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “Our goal is profitability now and sustainable profitability.” Citigroup, which is 27 percent owned by the Treasury Department, last week reported its second straight annual loss on costs to repay $20 billion of government funds in December. Pandit said it was “the right time” to repay taxpayers and said the government and the bank have “the same objectives.” Pandit, a former hedge-fund manager who took over at Citigroup in December 2007 after the ouster of Charles O. “Chuck” Prince , said while the credit crisis in the capital markets is likely finished, lenders will still face issues in consumer credit and commercial real-estate. The size of credit losses at the bank will probably depend on the broader economy and jobs creation , he said. “We’re just now in the process of peaking, or close to peaking in the consumer cycle,” Pandit said. “The commercial real-estate cycle is just starting to happen, that’s ahead of us.” Obama Plan President Barack Obama ’s reform proposals are “aligned” with the steps Citigroup has taken to reduce its size and shed proprietary trading businesses, Pandit said. Obama announced plans last week that may force large banks to limit their size and curb investments in hedge funds and private equity. The bank unloaded its Phibro LLC commodities- trading unit last year, and Pandit said it plans to sell several hedge funds. “We have to admit that not everything bankers did worked in the last few years, so there is a need for reform,” Pandit said. “We shouldn’t confuse the need for reform necessarily with bashing.” Pandit, who last year said Citigroup would focus on emerging markets for growth, said consumers in those regions are set to spend more and that returns on emerging-market investments are likely to be “robust.” “We were in these markets way before it was cool to be in the emerging markets, and so we have a lot of experience and a lot of relationships, and frankly we like what we’re seeing,” Pandit said. To contact the reporters on this story: Erik Schatzker in Davos, through the London newsroom at eschatzker@bloomberg.net ; Michael J. Moore in New York at mmoore55@bloomberg.net

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Plentiful-Job Gauge Shows Imminent Rebound in U.S. Payrolls: Chart of Day

January 29, 2010

By David Wilson Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Economists who expect a revival of U.S. employment growth this month have history on their side, according to Thomas J. Lee , a JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategist. Lee cited an index derived from the Conference Board’s monthly consumer-confidence surveys as evidence that a rebound is imminent. The indicator tracks the percentage of respondents who say jobs are plentiful. The CHART OF THE DAY shows the index’s readings since 1967 and highlights six times that they rebounded from a low. In each case, payrolls started to rise within two months after the gauge turned higher, Lee noted in a report yesterday. The jobs index rose to 4.3 percent this month after two straight months at 3.1 percent, its lowest reading since 1983. The rebound signals the number of jobs will start climbing by February, the report said. Employment will rise by 20,000 this month, according to the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Two-thirds of the 24 participants expected an increase. Payrolls dropped in December by 85,000, the 23rd decline in 24 months. Lee recommended that investors buy so-called domestic cyclicals, or shares of companies that have the most to gain from U.S. economic growth. He singled out financial stocks as especially attractive. (To save a copy of the chart, click here.) To contact the reporter on this story: David Wilson in New York at dwilson@bloomberg.net

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Clinton Rejects Russia’s Call for New Europe Treaties, Says Troops to Stay

January 29, 2010

By Indira A.R. Lakshmanan Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton rejected Russia’s calls for new European security treaties and said American forces will remain on the continent to “deter attacks and to respond quickly if any occur.” “European security remains an anchor of U.S. foreign and security policy,” Clinton said in a speech today in Paris, adding that “some questions” had been raised in recent months about the depth of the Obama administration’s commitment to Europe. Clinton dismissed two Russian initiatives seen as a bid to boost Russian influence over countries once part of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact and to halt the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s expansion. A plan put forward last month would have effectively given Russia a veto over allied military planning, especially in eastern Europe, said four allied officials who declined to be named. “The Russian government has put forth proposals for new security treaties for Europe,” Clinton said. “However, we believe that these common goals are best pursued in the context of existing institutions, such as the OSCE and the NATO-Russia Council, rather than by negotiating new treaties, as Russia has suggested.” The OSCE is the Vienna-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe . Clinton said that a “cornerstone” of European security is the “sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states.” She repeated U.S. calls on Russia to honor the terms of a cease-fire agreement that ended the August 2008 Russia-Georgia war and the administration’s refusal to recognize Russia’s claims of independence for the breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Spheres of Influence “More broadly, we object to any spheres of influence in Europe in which one country seeks to control another’s future,” Clinton said, adding that even amid Russian opposition, “ NATO must and will remain open to any country that aspires to become a member and can meet the requirements of membership.” Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has accused NATO of violating a 1998 pledge not to permanently station “substantial combat forces” on former Warsaw Pact territory. NATO absorbed former Soviet allies starting in 1999 — including three former Soviet republics, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — at a time when a Russia shorn of its Cold War satellites was struggling to regain its economic footing after defaulting on $40 billion of debt. Under Putin since 2000, energy-rich Russia has seized on an oil price that peaked at $147 per barrel in July 2008 to revive its economy and gain leverage over oil- and gas-importing states in Europe. Russia Pushes Back Russia pushed back against further NATO enlargement with its 2008 invasion of Western-leaning Georgia and attempts to reassert control over Ukraine. The U.S. will maintain its “unwavering commitment” to Article 5 of the NATO treaty “that an attack on one is an attack on all,” said Clinton. “As proof of that commitment, we will continue to station American troops in Europe, both to deter attacks and to respond quickly if any occur,” she said. To be sure, Clinton underlined that even when Russia and the U.S. don’t agree “we will seek constructive ways to discuss and manage our differences.” She noted that “Russia is no longer our adversary” and pointed to Russian-U.S. cooperation on Afghanistan, Iran and North Korea. She also highlighted progress in discussions on a new START treaty to reduce the size of the Russian and U.S. nuclear arsenals. Cooperate With Russia Clinton said the U.S. is serious about exploring ways to cooperate with Russia to develop a missile defense system that would provide security for both Europe and Russia. “Missile defense we believe will make this continent a safer place,” said Clinton. “That safety could extend to Russia, if Russia decides to cooperate with us.” Clinton called on Russia to back the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty and urged the Russian leadership to lift its two- year-old suspension of the implementation of the CFE Treaty. She said an updated treaty should take into account developments since the original treaty was signed in 1990 and include “the right of host countries to consent to stationing foreign troops in their territory.” The OSCE’s ability to defend and promote human rights needs to be strengthened and it needs a “Crisis Prevention Mechanism” that would allow it to send rapid humanitarian aid and provide impartial monitoring, Clinton said. NATO has pointed to the 56-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe , an East-West forum created in 1975, as the best arena for discussing Russia’s security concerns. “We are continuing the enterprise we began at the end of the Cold War to expand the zone of democracy and stability across Europe,” Clinton said. To contact the reporter on this story: Indira Lakshmanan in London at ilakshmanan@bloomberg.net .

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Obama Tells Republicans Voters Weary of Partisanship, Seek Job Security

January 29, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston and James Rowley Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama told House Republicans voters are weary of political bickering in Washington and that both parties must work harder to find common ground in issues such as the deficit, jobs and health care. “I don’t believe the American people want us to focus on our job security, they want us to focus on their job security,” Obama said at an annual retreat the Republican lawmakers were holding in Baltimore. The president, a Democrat, is seeking to keep momentum going for his agenda in Congress. Republicans have stalled his health-care initiative and opposed measures that the administration says are needed to help the economy recover. The president is confronting approval ratings hovering at 50 percent or less and voter anger over the bailouts of companies like Citigroup Inc . and General Motors Co . Republicans are seeking to cut into the Democratic majorities in the House and Senate in November’s congressional elections. In his Jan. 27 State of the Union address, Obama said he has endorsed some policies backed by Republicans, such as tax cuts and a government spending freeze, and called on the opposition party to reciprocate. “Just saying no to everything may be good short-term politics, but it’s not leadership,” Obama said in the address. Stimulus Opposition Obama today criticized Republicans for not supporting his economic stimulus plan while still attending “ribbon cuttings” for some of the projects in their communities that were funded by the legislation. He said he “didn’t understand then and still don’t understand” why Republicans opposed the $300 billion in tax cuts, infrastructure projects and provisions that allow laid off workers to keep their health insurance that were in the stimulus. House Minority Leader John Boehner , in his introduction of Obama at the retreat, said that Republicans promised to support him on issues where they agreed, such as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and measures to improve public schools. Republicans are “not just the party of opposition” and are offering their own solutions to health care and the economy, he said as he offered Obama a copy of the party’s proposals. “We don’t expect you to agree with us on every one of our solutions,” Boehner, of Ohio, said. “But we do hope that you and your administration will consider them.” Deficit Commission Obama asked for Republican support in creating a bipartisan commission to examine federal spending and look for ways to lower the budget deficit , which has been blocked by Senate Republicans. Obama said he plans to create the panel by executive order. “No single party is going to make the tough choices on its own” to reduce the deficit, Obama said. The Congressional Budget Office has forecast this year’s shortfall will be $1.35 trillion. Obama spoke at the Republican conference after an event at a small manufacturing company in Baltimore where outlined a proposal to give small businesses $33 billion worth of incentives to hire more workers and provide higher wages. The plan, which Obama is seeking as part of a jobs bill from Congress, would give businesses a $5,000 tax credit for each new hire this year and reimburse the 6.2 percent Social Security tax for wage increases beyond inflation. Obama said the measures will help 1 million small businesses add employees or raise pay. Indiana Republican Representative Mike Pence , who questioned Obama at the retreat, dismissed the incentives as “just another boutique tax credit.” In addition to the proposals being announced today, Obama has outlined $38 billion in business tax breaks to encourage equipment purchases and proposed using $30 billion of the money paid back by banks bailed out by the Troubled Asset Relief Program to assist community banks that lend to small businesses. To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Baltimore at njohnston3@bloomberg.net ; James Rowley in Baltimore at jarowley@bloomberg.net

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Goldman Sachs Sees Russia `Temporary Correction’ as Commodity Prices Fall

January 29, 2010

By Michael Patterson and Jason Corcoran Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Russian stocks risk a “temporary correction” as commodity prices fall on concern China will increase interest rates, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said. “We see this as no more than a temporary correction, yet we would recommend tactically to diversify with a more defensive exposure,” strategists led by Moscow-based Sergei Arsenyev wrote in a research report. Russia is unlikely to outperform in the “very short term,” he wrote. Russia’s Micex Index has retreated 5.5 percent from its 2010 high on Jan. 19 as crude oil prices sank 6.4 percent. Investors are concerned that interest-rate increases by China will restrain a recovery in the world’s fastest-expanding major economy that helped spur a surge in global equities since March including in Russia, the world’s largest energy exporter. Russian equity funds posted their first net outflows in 12 weeks as investors withdrew $608.5 million from emerging markets on concern the global recovery will slow, research company EPFR Global said. Net outflows from Russia were $87 million for the week ended Jan. 27. “We believe the outflow of cash from Russian assets might lead to additional pressure on the market and exacerbate the downward correction,” Mark Robinson , head of equity research at UniCredit SpA in London, said in a report dated today. The Micex advanced 0.2 percent, reversing an earlier decline, to 1,408.10 at 4:39 p.m. in Moscow. The Micex level is equivalent to 8.7 times analysts’ 2010 earnings estimates for its traded companies, the lowest among major equity markets in developing countries, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. ‘Cheap’ Valuations Russia is still the most attractive emerging market in the “medium term” given “cheap” valuations and the potential for the central bank to lower borrowing costs over the next 12 months, Goldman’s Arsenyev wrote. OAO Rosneft, Russia’s largest oil company , was added to Goldman’s “focus sell” list for central and east Europe, the Middle East and Africa, according to the report dated yesterday, which cited the potential elimination of tax breaks in eastern Siberia. Rosneft shares fell as much as 1.9 percent and last traded 0.9 percent lower. Telkom South Africa Ltd. was included in the “focus buy” list to boost holdings of so-called defensive companies with less reliance on economic growth. “We are concerned about short-term headwinds for emerging markets,” Arsenyev wrote. “Our key concern is potential China tightening and its negative impact on short-term commodities prices.” To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Patterson in London at mpatterson10@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Faces U.S. Congressional Investigation on Accelerator-Pedal Recalls

January 29, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane and Roger Runningen Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. ’s handling of defective gas pedals that led to a record recall of vehicles in the U.S. will be investigated by Congress amid criticism that the automaker may not have acted quickly enough. The House Energy and Commerce Committee plans to hold a hearing on Feb. 25 on the sudden acceleration of Toyota vehicles, which has been linked to 19 deaths in the past decade, said U.S. Representative Henry Waxman , California Democrat and chairman of the panel. Lawmakers will examine what the company knew and what it’s doing to resolve the problem, Waxman said in a statement posted on the committee’s Web site . “Like many consumers, I am concerned by the seriousness and scope of Toyota’s recent recall announcements,” Waxman said. Toyota recalled 2.3 million U.S. cars and light trucks on Jan. 21 for pedal-related problems linked to sudden acceleration. The company separately recalled more than 5 million vehicles to prevent pedals from getting trapped by floor mats. It stopped U.S. production and sales on eight models this week. Toyota officials met with committee lawmakers and staff this week but “we continue to have questions about what was done to investigate and resolve this safety issue both by Toyota” and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, said U.S. Representative Bart Stupak , Democrat of Michigan and chairman of the subcommittee on oversight and investigations. ‘Simply Unacceptable’ “Incidents of sticking accelerators have been ongoing with Toyota vehicles for up to a decade, and have led to a disproportionately high number of deaths,” Stupak said. “Failure to take every possible step to prevent future deaths or injuries is simply unacceptable.” “Toyota appreciates the opportunity to inform the committee” about the problem and the company’s efforts to address it, Ed Lewis , a Toyota spokesman in Washington, said in a statement today. U.S. dealers who sell Toyota’s namesake brand may lose as much as $2.47 billion in combined monthly revenue because of the sales halt, said John McEleney, the chairman of the National Automobile Dealers Association and owner of McEleney Toyota in Clinton, Iowa. The Toyota City, Japan-based automaker said today it would also recall eight models in Europe, including some Corolla and Avensis cars. The move may cover as many as 1.8 million vehicles. Toyota’s effort to fix the pedals doesn’t extend to Japan, where it uses different parts makers. Questions on Enforcement Waxman and Stupak said they asked Toyota North America President Yoshimi Inaba and David Strickland , NHTSA administrator, for more information on the matter. The regulator and Toyota both moved too slowly to pinpoint the problem and advise consumers about dangerous pedal-related defects, Joan Claybrook , a former NHTSA administrator, said in an interview yesterday. “They weren’t doing much with enforcement,” Claybrook, a former head of the Washington-based advocacy group Public Citizen, said of the safety agency. “They’re supposed to review, analyze and go back to the companies and say, ‘What’s going on here?’” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood defended the automaker and the safety agency yesterday. “I don’t know of another time a car manufacturer has stepped up the way Toyota has,” LaHood said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “NHTSA did exactly what it should’ve done, meet with Toyota and discuss this.” Public Clash The accelerator pedals drew attention after a California Highway Patrol officer and three family members were killed in an August accident. A floor mat on a Lexus sedan he was driving may have jammed the pedal and caused the car to speed out of control, according to Toyota. NHTSA and Toyota clashed publicly over the recalls last year. In November, the safety agency said Toyota was “inaccurate and misleading” in comments the company made on the problem. Toyota had issued a statement two days earlier saying U.S. safety investigators found no defect existed in vehicles “in which the driver’s floor mat is compatible with the vehicle and properly secured.” The agency said Toyota’s remedy didn’t “correct the underlying defect,” which it said was related to the accelerator pedal and floor pan design. LaHood urged Toyota owners to remove floor mats. Underdog Role LaHood told reporters yesterday in Washington that he has “no criticism of Toyota on this. They followed the law, and they did what they’re supposed to do.” He said he’s “absolutely” satisfied with the performance of NHTSA, which until this month lacked an administrator under President Barack Obama . “The problem is that NHTSA always has the underdog role” in dealing with automakers, said Sean Kane , president of Safety Research & Strategies Inc., a safety advocacy group in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. NHTSA’s office of defects investigation has a staff of only 20, has no expertise in electronics and has a “long history of missing unintended-acceleration complaints that can’t be easily identified,” Kane said in an interview yesterday. “They relied a lot on Toyota to tell them what the issues are and that’s not uncommon. The sophistication of Toyota is at a much greater level than that of the agency.” NHTSA has been in “constant contact” with Toyota throughout the course of the recalls, said Karen Aldana , an agency spokeswoman. “NHTSA’s been constantly monitoring the situation and investigating the issue of Toyotas and sudden acceleration, even back to 2007 when they had the other recall on floor mats,” she said. That year, the automaker recalled 55,000 Camrys and Lexus ES 350s in the U.S. for a similar defect. Toyota’s American depositary receipts, each representing two ordinary shares, fell 50 cents to $77.17 at 12:25 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The receipts dropped 7.7 percent this month through yesterday. To contact the reporters on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net ;

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Vivendi Is Found Liable on 57 Counts in Investor Suit Over Share Inflation

January 29, 2010

By David Glovin Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Vivendi SA, the Paris-based owner of the world’s largest music company, acted recklessly and inflated its shares, a jury found in finding the company liable on all 57 counts with which it was charged. Individual Vivendi defendants including former Chief Executive Officer Jean-Marie Messier weren’t found to have been liable. The Manhattan federal court jury wasn’t asked to provide a damages figure at the end of a trial. That will be calculated later, after shareholders submit claims. The jurors determined that at least one statement made by the company or its top executives about liquidity from 2000 to 2002 was misleading. Vivendi was founded in France in the 1800s as a water utility. Its units today include the world’s largest music company, Universal Music Group. The case is In Re Vivendi Universal SA Securities Litigation, 02-cv-5571, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). To contact the reporter on this story: David Glovin in New York federal court at dglovin@bloomberg.net .

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Stocks in U.S. Advance as Economic Growth Data, Earnings Exceed Estimates

January 29, 2010

By Nikolaj Gammeltoft and Elizabeth Stanton Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks swung between gains and losses as disappointing results at technology companies offset a government report showing the economy grew last quarter at the fastest pace in six years. Microsoft Corp. led technology shares to the biggest drop among 10 groups as Chief Financial Officer Peter Klein said the company has yet to see a recovery in spending on enterprise software. SanDisk Corp., the biggest maker of flash-memory cards, slid 10 percent after its sales forecast fell short of some estimates. Amazon.com Inc. rose after predicting faster sales growth, while Wal-Mart Stores Inc. gained as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. advised buying the shares. The S&P 500 added less than 0.1 percent to 1,085.2 at 12:30 p.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 27.43 points, or 0.3 percent, to 10,147.89. The Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.3 percent to 2,173.18. “This is a sector where competition is fierce,” Leo Grohowski , who oversees $154 billion as the New York-based chief investment officer at BNY Mellon Wealth Management, said of technology companies. “We’re looking for stabilization of pricing power as the economy has improved, and not only is pricing not stabilizing, it’s still deteriorating. Investors don’t see visibility of earnings power driven by pricing pressure.” January Retreat U.S. shares retreated yesterday, sending the S&P 500 to an almost three-month low, after Qualcomm Inc. lowered its sales forecast and speculation mounted Greece won’t be able to finance its budget deficit. The S&P 500 , poised for its third straight weekly drop, has tumbled 5.7 percent from a 15-month high on Jan. 19 after President Barack Obama called for limits on risk- taking by banks and China moved to restrict lending and cool economic growth. The index is down 2.7 percent year-to-date, poised for its first monthly decline since October and the biggest since it plunged 11 percent in February 2009. The performance of the S&P 500 in January is a reliable predictor of how it will perform during the year, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac. Before last year, when the index dropped 8.6 percent in January and rose 23 percent for the year, the so-called January barometer registered only five major errors since 1950, according to the almanac. Chicago Purchasing Managers Stocks extended gains earlier after the Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said its business barometer climbed to 61.5 from 58.7 in December. The median forecast was for a drop to 57.2. The U.S. economy is recovering from its longest recession since the Great Depression, caused by bank losses stemming from the collapse of the subprime mortgage market. Corporate profits are estimated to have increased in the fourth quarter from the year-earlier period for the first time since the second quarter of 2007, ending a record nine-quarter earnings slump. SanDisk, the biggest maker of flash-memory cards for digital cameras and mobile phones, fell 10 percent to $25.79. The company anticipates sales of $875 million to $950 million in the first quarter, Chief Financial Officer Judy Bruner said yesterday on a conference call with analysts. The average estimate in a Bloomberg survey is $931 million. S&P 500 companies that have released results posted an estimated combined profit of $16.83 a share, according to Bloomberg data. That compares with a loss of 9 cents a share in the year-ago quarter, according to S&P. Of the 196 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported earnings since Jan. 11, 156 have beaten analysts’ estimates, according to Bloomberg data. ‘Negative Nabobs’ “The negative nabobs are just wrong,” said William Smead , chief executive officer of Smead Capital Management in Seattle, which oversees $170 million. “These companies are all so lean that as the economy surprises to the upside, the earnings power is going to be incredible.” Amazon.com rose 2.4 percent to $129.11 in New York. The world’s biggest online retailer forecast first-quarter sales that beat some analysts’ estimates and said it will buy back as much as $2 billion of its shares. Wal-Mart gained 2.3 percent to $53.81. The shares were raised to “buy” from “neutral” at Goldman Sachs, which forecast earnings at the U.S. retailer will increase on the back of cost-cutting and profit margin growth, while the valuation of the shares is “compelling.” To contact the reporters on this story: Nikolaj Gammeltoft in New York at ngammeltoft@bloomberg.net Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net

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Stacy Mitchell: Move Your Borrowing Along with Your Money

January 29, 2010

The New Rules Project, in partnership with HuffPost’s Move Your Money campaign, is using its Community Banking Initiative to get out the word that banking locally can put the power back in the hands of individuals and communities, rather than Wall Street’s CEOs. As more of us ditch the big banks in favor local banks and credit unions, we need to give thought to both the saving and lending sides of a bank. Each is crucial. On the savings side, community-based financial institutions need our deposits much more than the big banks do. Big banks have access to other capital. While deposits account for 82% of the funds small banks have to work with, their share at the biggest banks is just 66% (and deposits made in the U.S. account for even less: just 39%). But to be profitable community banks need to convert those deposits into loans. “Deposits are extremely important to small banks. But the only way we can be successful is if we turn those into loans,” said Frank Coumides, senior vice president for lending at Sonoran Bank, a small, locally owned bank in Phoenix. When it comes to consumer lending, however, community-based financial institutions have lost a lot of ground over the last two decades as big banks raided two large segments of this market: mortgages and credit cards. Since 1985, community banks (those with under a $1 billion in assets) have seen their share of mortgage and credit card lending fall much faster than their share of deposits. While their share of all bank deposits fell 41%, their share of bank-owned mortgages dropped 63% and their share of consumer credit, including credit cards, fell 71%. Big banks went after mortgage and credit card lending because these loans were easier to turn into mass-produced commodities (and toxic derivatives) and offered major profit potential. Credit cards, in particular, became highly concentrated and incredibly lucrative, as the big banks devised new fees and manipulated terms for cardholders, while also jacking up the hidden fees they charge merchants each time your card is swiped. By 2006, credit card revenue had skyrocketed to $115 billion. Just ten banks control 90% of this market and the top three — Citibank, Bank of America, and JP Morgan Chase — control a staggering 63%. It’s not hard to see how, for many households, the interest and fees we pay on our mortgage, credit cards, and other loans generate far more income for the financial industry than what a bank can make on our deposits. So, as we start down the path of breaking up with the big banks and exercising our economic citizenship on behalf of our own interests and that of our communities, we should think about the whole range of financial services we use. Credit cards are one place to start. About three-quarters of community banks and just over half of credit unions offer credit cards. Unlike big banks, these smaller institutions generally do not view their credit cards as major profit centers (you have to do a lot of volume in credit cards to make real money), but rather as a service for customers with whom they often already have a relationship. That means that the fees and interest rates are often lower. Although data for small banks is hard to come by, a recent Pew study compared a group of credit unions with the largest banks and found that the credit unions had significantly lower interest rates, penalty fees that were half the cost, and “fewer dangers associated with unfair or deceptive practices.” “We never participated in the kinds of abusive practices common in the industry, because our credit card clients are also our depository clients,” explained Kathy Fitzcharles of the 60-year-old Delaware County Bank in Ohio, which stepped up its marketing of credit cards this year as public hostility toward big card issuers spiked. The bank saw a 15% increase in the number of cards issued. It’s not alone. In an open letter to customers, Nancy Ruyle president of the Citizens Bank of Rogersville in Missouri, wrote, “We don’t employ such tactics as short billing cycles that can cost you a late fee, or raising your interest rate because you were late paying some other bill. We believe in treating our customers fairly.” Some small banks and credit unions do their own underwriting and retain credit card loans on their books. Others rely on a third-party to manage the risk, such as TCM Bank, a subsidiary of the Independent Community Bankers of America that handles credit cards only on behalf of community banks. But even then, the local bank typically services the card, meaning that if you have a problem, you call the bank and deal directly with their staff, not an automated phone-tree. (Except for lost or stolen cards: there’s a 24-hour 800-number for that.) Moving your mortgage is more involved, but there are community banks and credit unions, like the 83-year-old Coast Line Credit Union in South Portland, Maine, that have been refinancing mortgages this past year for customers who were motivated in part by a desire to have their interest payments working in their local economy, not on Wall Street. While some community banks do a robust mortgage business, others offer very little mortgage lending. And, among those who do, some keep mortgages on their books for the duration of the term, while others sell all or part of them into the secondary market to free up capital to lend again in their communities (in which case, they may still continue to service your mortgage). So the key is to talk with several local banks and credit unions to find the right fit. Other types of consumer loans, like car and home equity loans (if you are fortunate enough to still have home equity), are often readily available from credit unions and banks. A good rule of thumb for these types of loans is to always shop local banks and credit unions first. Depending on the institution, you may be able to get a substantially better rate than you’d find at a big bank, especially if you already have a relationship with it (i.e., an account there and a history of timely payments on a credit card or other loan). Where you bank matters a great deal, but many community bankers told me this week that perhaps the most significant thing you can do to help their bottom line and your local economy is to shift some of your spending away from chains and other big businesses. “One of the most important things people can do is support local small businesses. When they start to expand, they’ll come back to community banks for loans,” explained Mary Anne Carson, senior vice president of the Santa Cruz County Bank in Santa Cruz, California, which has seen a cascade of people looking to move their money and asking the bank’s staff, “Are you truly local?” Small business lending is the bread-and-butter of many community banks. Small business growth, in turn, is the key to pulling out of recession, say many economists. I’ll take a closer look at this symbiotic relationship in an upcoming post. Stacy Mitchell , author of Big-Box Swindle, is a senior researcher with the New Rules Project and its newly launched Community Banking Initiative .

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Ellen Brown: JPMorgan vs. Goldman Sachs: Why the Market Was Down for 7 Days in a Row

January 29, 2010

We are witnessing an epic battle between two banking giants, JPMorgan Chase (Paul Volcker) and Goldman Sachs (Geithner/Summers/Rubin). Left strewn on the battleground could be your pension fund and 401K. The late Libertarian economist, Murray Rothbard , wrote that U.S. politics since 1900, when William Jennings Bryan narrowly lost the presidency, has been a struggle between two competing banking giants, the Morgans and the Rockefellers. The parties would sometimes change hands, but the puppeteers pulling the strings were always one of these two big-money players. No popular third party candidate had a real chance at winning, because the bankers had the exclusive power to create the national money supply and therefore held the winning cards. In 2000, the Rockefellers and the Morgans joined forces, when JPMorgan and Chase Manhattan merged to become JPMorgan Chase Co. Today the battling banking titans are JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, an investment bank that gained notoriety for its speculative practices in the 1920s. In 1928, it launched the Goldman Sachs Trading Corp., a closed-end fund similar to a Ponzi scheme. The fund failed in the stock market crash of 1929, marring the firm’s reputation for years afterwards. Former Treasury Secretaries Henry Paulson, Robert Rubin, and Larry Summers all came from Goldman, and current Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner rose through the ranks of government as a Summers/Rubin protégé. One commentator called the U.S. Treasury “Goldman Sachs South.” Goldman’s superpower status comes from something more than just access to the money spigots of the banking system. It actually has the ability to manipulate markets. Formerly just an investment bank, in 2008 Goldman magically transformed into a bank holding company. That gave it access to the Federal Reserve’s lending window; but at the same time it remained an investment bank, aggressively speculating in the markets. The upshot was that it can now borrow massive amounts of money at virtually 0% interest, and it can use this money not only to speculate for its own account but to bend markets to its will. But Goldman Sachs has been caught in this blatant market manipulation so often that the JPMorgan faction of the banking empire has finally had enough. The voters too have evidently had enough, as demonstrated in the recent upset in Massachusetts that threw the late Senator Ted Kennedy’s Democratic seat to a Republican. That pivotal loss gave Paul Volcker, chairman of President Obama’s newly formed Economic Recovery Advisory Board, an opportunity to step up to the plate with some proposals for serious banking reform. Unlike the string of Treasury Secretaries who came to the government through the revolving door of Goldman Sachs, former Federal Reserve Chairman Volcker came up through Chase Manhattan Bank, where he was vice president before joining the Treasury. On January 27, market commentator Bob Chapman wrote in his weekly investment newsletter The International Forecaster : A split has occurred between the paper forces of Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase. Mr. Volcker represents Morgan interests. Both sides are Illuminists, but the Morgan side is tired of Goldman’s greed and arrogance… Not that JP Morgan Chase was blameless, they did their looting and damage to the system as well, but not in the high handed arrogant way the others did. The recall of Volcker is an attempt to reverse the damage as much as possible. That means the influence of Geithner, Summers, Rubin, et al will be put on the back shelf at least for now, as will be the Goldman influence. It will be slowly and subtly phased out… Washington needs a new face on Wall Street, not that of a criminal syndicate. Goldman’s crimes, says Chapman, were that it “got caught stealing. First in naked shorts, then front-running the market, both of which they are still doing, as the SEC looks the other way, and then selling MBS-CDOs to their best clients and simultaneously shorting them.” Volcker’s proposal would rein in these abuses, either by ending the risky “proprietary trading” (trading for their own accounts) engaged in by the too-big-to-fail banks, or by forcing them to downsize by selling off those portions of their businesses engaging in it. Until recently, President Obama has declined to support Volcker’s plan, but on January 21 he finally endorsed it. The immediate reaction of the market was to drop – and drop, day after day. At least, that appeared to be the reaction of “the market.” Financial analyst Max Keiser suggests a more sinister possibility. Goldman, which has the power to manipulate markets with its high-speed program trades, may be engaging in a Mexican standoff. The veiled threat is, “Back off on the banking reforms, or stand by and watch us continue to crash your markets.” The same manipulations were evident in the bank bailout forced on Congress by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson in September 2008. In Keiser’s January 23 broadcast with co-host Stacy Herbert, he explains how Goldman’s manipulations are done. Keiser is a fast talker, so this transcription is not verbatim, but it is close. He says: High frequency trading accounts for 70% of trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Ordinarily, a buyer and a seller show up on the floor, and a specialist determines the price of a trade that would satisfy buyer and seller, and that’s the market price. If there are too many sellers and not enough buyers, the specialist lowers the price. High frequency trading as conducted by Goldman means that before the specialist buys and sells and makes that market, Goldman will electronically flood the specialist with thousands and thousands of trades to totally disrupt that process and essentially commandeer that process, for the benefit of siphoning off nickels and dimes for themselves. Not only are they siphoning cash from the New York Stock Exchange but they are also manipulating prices. What I see as a possibility is that next week, if the bankers on Wall Street decide they don’t want to be reformed in any way, they simply set the high frequency trading algorithm to sell, creating a huge negative bias for the direction of stocks. And they’ll basically crash the market, and it will be a standoff. The market was down three days in a row, which it hasn’t been since last summer. It’s a game of chicken, till Obama says, ‘Okay, maybe we need to rethink this.’ But the President hasn’t knuckled under yet. In his State of the Union address on January 27, he did not dwell long on the issue of bank reform, but he held to his position. He said: We can’t allow financial institutions, including those that take your deposits, to take risks that threaten the whole economy. The House has already passed financial reform with many of these changes. And the lobbyists are already trying to kill it. Well, we cannot let them win this fight. And if the bill that ends up on my desk does not meet the test of real reform, I will send it back. What this “real reform” would look like was left to conjecture, but Bob Chapman fills in some blanks and suggests what might be needed for an effective overhaul: The attempt will be to bring the financial system back to brass tacks… That would include little or no MBS and CDOs, the regulation of derivatives and hedge funds and the end of massive market manipulation, both by Treasury, Fed and Wall Street players. Congress has to end the ‘President’s Working Group on Financial Markets,’ or at least limit its use to real emergencies… The Glass-Steagall Act should be reintroduced into the system and lobbying and campaign contributions should end… No more politics in lending and banks should be limited to a lending ratio of 10 to 1… It is bad enough they have the leverage that they have. State banks such as North Dakota’s are a better idea. On January 28, the predictable reaction of “the market” was to fall for the seventh straight day. The battle of the Titans was on.

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Video: Citigroup’s Pandit Discusses Obama’s Bank Proposals: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Vikram Pandit, chief executive officer of Citigroup Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker about President Barack Obama’s proposals on U.S. banking regulation and the potential impact on Citigroup. Pandit, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, also discusses the government criticism of the banking industry. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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UPDATE: Treasury Says PPIP Funds Hold $3.4 Billion In Mortgage Bonds

January 29, 2010

JONES NEWSWIRES WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- Private sector firms participating in a government program to buy soured real estate assets were holding $3.4 billion in mortgage bonds at the end of 2009, the Treasury Department said. The Treasury on Friday

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Easton Lynd to Manage Distressed Properties for Warren Buffet-Own…

January 29, 2010

Easton Lynd to Manage Distressed Properties for Warren Buffet-Owned Berkadia Commercial Mortgage SAN ANTONIO, TX, Jan 29, 2010 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — Company: Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRK/A) Easton Lynd Management, the commercial property management

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Video: Gogel Not Sure Obama Bank Rules to Affect Private Equity: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Donald Gogel, chief executive officer of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan and Francine Lacqua about the potential impact of U.S. President Barack Obama’s plan to impose new rules on bank size and risk on private-equity funds. Gogel, speaking from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, also discusses the role of private-equity funds in the global economic recovery, the risk appetite of investors now compared to a year ago and the impact of sovereign wealth funds on the industry. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Tanaka, Gabrielli Discuss Oil Production, Demand, Prices: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the International Energy Agency, and Jose Sergio Gabrielli, chief executive officer at Petrobras Brasileiro SA, talk with Bloomberg’s Francine Lacqua and Margaret Brennan about the outlook for oil. (This report is an excerpt of full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Arianna Huffington Sees `Deficit of Trust’ at Davos: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Arianna Huffington, author and editor-in-chief of the Huffington Post, talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about sentiment among participants at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Neiderauer Sees `Minimal’ Impact From Prop-Trading Ban: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Duncan Niederauer, chief executive officer of NYSE Euronext, talks with Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker about the outlook for proprietary trading. Niederauer said U.S. President Barack Obama’s plan to restrict proprietary trading at banks would have little impact on the exchange’s business. They speak at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Easton Lynd to Manage Distressed Properties for Warren Buffet-Owned Berkadia Commercial Mortgage First Assignment Is a 44,000 ..

January 29, 2010

Easton Lynd to Manage Distressed Properties for Warren Buffet-Owned Berkadia Commercial Mortgage First Assignment Is a 44,000 Square Foot Retail Building in Clearwater, Florida Refer to a friend © Marketwire 2010 SAN ANTONIO, TX

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Easton Lynd to Manage Distressed Properties for Warren Buffet-Owned Berkadia Commercial Mortgage First Assignment Is

January 29, 2010

of The Lynd Company, has been tapped by Berkadia Commercial Mortgage LLC to manage a portion of its distressed property portfolio throughout the United States. Berkadia, based out of Horsham, Pennsylvania, is a top-rated, special servicer of commercial

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Easton Lynd to Manage Distressed Properties for Warren Buffet-Owned Berkadia Commercial Mortgage

January 29, 2010

of The Lynd Company, has been tapped by Berkadia Commercial Mortgage LLC to manage a portion of its distressed property portfolio throughout the United States. Berkadia, based out of Horsham, Pennsylvania, is a top-rated, special servicer of commercial

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Mattson Technology Names New Board Member

January 29, 2010

Richard Dyck Elected as Board Member

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Video: Lamy Says WTO Must Be `Vigilant’ Against Protectionism: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — World Trade Organization Director-General Pascal Lamy talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about protectionism in the global economy. Lamy, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, also discusses U.S.-China trade relations and global trade flows. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Troika’s Freeman Says Russia Rating Held Back by Energy: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Ronald Freeman, an adviser at Troika Dialog, talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about Russia’s credit rating. Freeman said that Russia’s credit rating is held back by its focus on a single export of oil and gas. They speak at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.(Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Jordan’s Queen Rania Discusses Aid for Education: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Jordan’s Queen Rania talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about the importance of maintaining aid for education in developing countries. Rania speaks at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Scaramucci Sees `Global Policy Fatigue’ From Governments: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Anthony Scaramucci, managing partner at SkyBridge Capital, talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about the outlook for banking regulation. They speak from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (Source: Bloomberg)

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MorrisAnderson Promotes Steven F. Agran to Managing Director of New York Office

January 29, 2010

CHICAGO, IL–(Marketwire – January 29, 2010) – MorrisAnderson is pleased to announce that Steven F. Agran , from MorrisAnderson’s New York office, has been promoted to Managing Director. Dan Dooley, Principal and COO of MorrisAnderson, states, “Steve joined the firm a little less than two years ago, and during that time he has proved himself as an excellent consultant and a developing new business generator. Steve’s depth of industry experience in trucking, consumer products and retail has been integral to the success of several major projects.”

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Video: Romer Expects Positive Jobs Growth by `Spring’ in U.S.: Video

January 29, 2010

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Christina Romer, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu about fourth-quarter U.S. economic growth and the outlook for jobs creation. The U.S. economy expanded a rate of 5.7 percent in the fourth quarter, the fastest pace in six years. Romer also discusses the confirmation of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke to a second term. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Memo to Lloyd: The Morts Need Your Attention: Michael Lewis

January 29, 2010
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Housing `On Life Support’ as Foreclosures, Unemployment Thwart Obama Plans

January 29, 2010

By Kathleen Howley Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama’s efforts to bolster the U.S. housing market, the trigger of the worst recession since the 1930s, may be undone by record unemployment and repossessions by lenders. Foreclosures probably will reach 3 million this year, surpassing the record of 2.82 million in 2009, according to Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc. That would more than offset an estimated 448,000-unit rise in home sales, based on the average forecast of the National Association of Realtors, the Mortgage Bankers Association and Fannie Mae. The housing industry remains a challenge for Obama as he enters his second year of office and government assistance programs near expiration. Data this week showed home sales tumbled after the expected end of an $8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers boosted transactions the prior month. “The housing market is still on life support, and if government measures are withdrawn too quickly it could sink it, taking the economy down with it,” said Mark Zandi , chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “Households have such high debt loads, in addition to their mortgages, that any reduction in income, including a job loss, could trigger a foreclosure.” Employers have cut more than 7 million jobs in the last two years, the biggest employment loss since the Great Depression. The U.S. jobless rate probably will average 10 percent in 2010, according to the median estimate of 59 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. That would be the highest yearly rate in government records dating to 1948. Unemployment was 9.3 percent in 2009, the most in 26 years. Mortgage Modifications The Obama administration’s primary anti-foreclosure plan , the Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP, resulted in 66,465 permanent modifications by the end of December, compared with goal of up to 4 million by 2012. In total, 1.16 million offers were extended to borrowers and the terms of about 900,000 mortgages were changed on either a trial or permanent basis, the Treasury Department said in a Jan. 15 report. “We’re working to lift the value of a family’s single largest investment — their home,” Obama said in his Jan. 27 State of the Union speech to Congress. For HAMP to succeed, the program will have to be changed to include principal reductions on mortgages to offset value declines, according to Karen Weaver , global head of securitization research at Deutsche Bank AG in New York, and Laurie Goodman , the New York-based senior managing director at Amherst Securities Group. Principal Reductions In its current version, HAMP lowers mortgage payments to about a third of borrowers’ income by reducing interest, lengthening repayment terms and deferring principal repayments. “If the other measures in HAMP aren’t working, the government will have to look at principal reductions,” said Brian Bethune , chief financial economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts. In addition to modifications, the government’s Making Home Affordable program was responsible for refinancing 3.8 million loans in the portfolios of government-run Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The program, known among mortgage brokers as Obama refis, allows borrows who have balances higher than their home’s value to renew their loans at lower rates. One in Four One in four U.S. homeowners holds a mortgage with a balance higher than the property’s value. The number of borrowers with so-called negative equity reached 10.7 million, or 23 percent, at the end of the third quarter, according to a Nov. 24 report by First American CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, California-based real estate research firm. Government programs to help underwater borrowers exclude jumbo mortgages that aren’t eligible to be purchased by Washington-based Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac of McLean, Virginia. The government spent $230 billion to support HAMP and other housing programs in the 12 months ended Sept. 30, according to the Congressional Budget Office in Washington. The Federal Reserve has pledged to spend $1.25 trillion buying mortgage- backed securities in an effort to reduce fixed-mortgage rates. That program is set to end this quarter. The 30-year mortgage rate dropped to an all-time low of 4.71 percent during the first week of December, according to Freddie Mac. It was at 4.98 percent in the week ended yesterday. The Federal Reserve said Jan. 27 it will keep the target rate for overnight bank lending near zero to help nurture the recovery. “Household spending is expanding at a moderate rate but remains constrained by a weak labor market, modest income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit,” the Federal Open Market Committee said this week in a statement. Dropped Reference The statement dropped the previous reference to real estate that said housing “has shown some signs of improvement.” National home prices rose 1.5 percent last month from a year earlier, the first annual gain since August 2007, the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors said Jan. 25. The median price fell 12 percent in 2009 to $173,500, compared with a 9.5 percent drop in 2008, NAR data show. While the tax credit spurred a 4.9 percent rise in home resales last year, the first annual gain since 2005, sales of existing homes in December slumped 17 percent, the biggest drop on record. The tax benefit originally scheduled to expire Nov. 30 was extended into 2010 and expanded to all buyers by a bill Obama signed on Nov. 6. The extension gives buyers until April 30 to have a signed contract on a home, and until July 1 to close on it. New-Home Sales Purchases of new homes fell 7.6 percent to an annual pace of 342,000 in December, the fourth drop in the past five months, the Commerce Department said Jan. 27 in Washington. Sales declined 23 percent to 374,000 in 2009, the lowest level since records began in 1963. The median price of a new house fell 3.6 percent from the year-earlier month to $221,300, the agency said. Currently, 6.5 million households are either in default or at least one payment behind on their mortgages, according to the Center for Responsible Lending based in Durham, North Carolina. If enough of those are seized by lenders, it could lead to a “double-dip recession or at least to a slower recovery,” said Julia Gordon , senior public policy counsel for the research and policy group, in testimony before the House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services last month. “Housing is going to have a bumpy ride this year because of foreclosures,” said Bethune, of IHS Global Insight. To contact the reporter on this story: Kathleen M. Howley in Boston at kmhowley@bloomberg.net .

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Chicago Purchasing Managers Index Increases More Than Estimated to 61.5

January 29, 2010

By Bob Willis Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Companies in the U.S. expanded in January at the fastest pace in more than four years as orders and employment increased. The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said today its business barometer climbed to 61.5, the highest level since November 2005, from 58.7 last month. Readings greater than 50 signal expansion. Government stimulus has spurred gains in demand here and abroad that are reducing inventories, paving the way for manufacturers to step up output. Ford Motor Co . is among companies that are beginning to hire again, setting the stage for stronger spending in coming months. “Coming into the new year we had an incredible amount of momentum in the industrial side of the economy,” said Ellen Zentner, a senior economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, whose forecast a reading of 62.2. “That’s a reaction to pentup demand coming forward. Those are the things that recoveries are made of.” Economists projected the Chicago index would drop to 57.2 from 58.7 in December, based on the median estimate of 52 projections in the Bloomberg survey. Forecasts ranged from 55 to 62.2. More Orders, Jobs The group’s gauge of orders climbed to 66.4 from 64.4 the prior month and its measure of employment jumped to 59.8, the highest level since April 2005, from 47.6. The index of production increased to 66.6 from 64.2 the prior month, while the gauge of inventories rose to 48.7 from 38.6, showing a diminishing pace of inventory drawdown. Economists watch the Chicago index for an early reading on the outlook for overall U.S. manufacturing, which makes up about 12 percent of the economy. The group has said its membership includes both manufacturers and service providers, making the gauge a measure of overall growth. Its members have operations across the country as well as abroad. The Tempe, Arizona-based Institute for Supply Management’s factory index probably rose this month to 55.6 from 54.9 in December, according to a survey median. That report is due Feb. 1. The world’s largest economy expanded at a 5.7 percent pace from October through December, its fastest growth in six years, the Commerce Department reported today. Economists surveyed this month forecast the world’s largest economy will grow 2.7 percent this year. Inventory Drawdown Slower drawdown of inventories last quarter contributed 3.4 percentage points to growth. A gain in exports helped shrink the trade deficit, adding another 0.5 point, while consumer spending grew 2 percent, contributing 1.4 points to overall growth. Another report showed consumers gained confidence this month. The Reuters/University of Michigan sentiment index increased to 74.4 in January, the highest level in two years. Among companies hiring, Ford Motor Co. said Jan. 26 it will spend about $400 million and add 1,200 jobs at two Chicago plants to build a new, more fuel-efficient Explorer sport- utility vehicle. The program will be partly funded by an Energy Department program for advanced vehicle technology. “This investment underscores Ford’s commitment to building world-class, fuel-efficient vehicles in America and creating new jobs that will contribute to our nation’s economic recovery,” Mark Fields , the Dearborn, Michigan-based company’s president for the Americas, said in a statement. Growing Exports Growing foreign demand is also helping U.S. manufacturers. Waltham, Massachusetts-based Raytheon Co ., the world’s largest missile maker, said fourth-quarter profit rose 20 percent on higher sales of the Patriot weapon system and repeated its 2010 earnings forecast. “We did have a very strong year in international awards and we expect that to be the case as we go into 2010,” Chief Financial Officer David Wajsgras said yesterday in a phone interview. Taiwan’s order for Patriot missile systems and Japan’s airborne radar systems were examples of foreign sales in the quarter, he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

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BlackRock Hires Ex-Goldman Sachs Banker Kendrick Wilson as Vice Chairman

January 29, 2010

By Zachary R. Mider Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — BlackRock Inc. , the world’s biggest money manager, hired former Treasury official and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. banker Kendrick Wilson III as a vice chairman to work with the firm’s clients. Wilson, 63, was one of the world’s top advisers to banks and other financial institutions during more than two decades as an investment banker at Goldman Sachs and other firms. He joined the U.S. Treasury Department in 2008 to help Secretary Henry Paulson grapple with the global financial crisis. “His unique perspective, informed by his vast experience in the industry, will be valuable to our clients as they consider the changing landscape and their investment and risk management strategies,” said Laurence Fink , BlackRock’s chief executive officer, in the statement. As an investment banker at Goldman Sachs, Wilson helped arrange some of the biggest rescues of the financial crisis, including Countrywide Financial Corp.’s sale to Bank of America Corp. and a $7 billion cash infusion for National City Corp. Wilson had been advising banks since working for Salomon Brothers Inc. in the 1980’s. He joined the former Lazard Freres & Co. in 1989 and switched to Goldman Sachs in 1998. To contact the reporter on this story: Zachary R. Mider in New York at zmider1@bloomberg.net

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Carbon Emissions Cut of 28% Set by Obama in Bid for Clean-Energy Economy

January 29, 2010

By Edwin Chen Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama directed the federal government to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions 28 percent by 2020. The federal government is the single largest energy consumer in the U.S., spending more than $24.5 billion on electricity and fuel in 2008, the administration said in a statement. Meeting the targets would reduce federal energy consumption by the equivalent of 646 trillion BTUs, equal to 205 million barrels of oil, and taking 17 million cars off the road for one year, according to a statement from the White House press office. That would save $8 billion to $11 billion in energy costs through 2020, according to the administration. “The move will ensure that the federal government leads by example in building the clean-energy economy,” the statement said. Federal agencies are to achieve the greenhouse-gas pollution reductions by measuring their current energy and fuel use, becoming more energy efficient and shifting to clean energy sources like solar, wind and geothermal. To contact the reporter on this story: Edwin Chen in Washington at EChen32@bloomberg.net ;

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