June 2010

Video: Torrenzano Discusses BP’s Management of Its Public Image: Video

June 24, 2010

June 24 (Bloomberg) — Richard Torrenzano, chief executive officer of the Torrenzano Group, talks about BP Plc’s management of its public image following the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Torrenzano talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bloomberg’s Rich Jaroslovsky Reviews Apple’s IPhone 4: Video

June 24, 2010

June 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Rich Jaroslovsky reviews Apple Inc.’s new iPhone 4. Apple will probably sell a record 1 million iPhones today after introducing the new model, attracting crowds to stores in five countries. Jaroslovsky talks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bove Sees Recession Risk From U.S. Money Supply Rules: Video

June 24, 2010

June 24 (Bloomberg) — Richard Bove, an analyst at Rochdale Securities LLC, talks about U.S. money supply and the impact of financial regulations on the economy. Bove talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Radar Logic’s Feder Discusses Outlook for U.S. Housing: Video

June 24, 2010

June 24 (Bloomberg) — Michael Feder, chief executive officer of Radar Logic Inc., talks about the outlook for the U.S. housing market. Data yesterday showed that new-home sales sank to a record low in the U.S. Feder talks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Birmingham Faces $3 Million Fine For Massive Fish Kill

June 24, 2010

WASHINGTON — The federal government is proposing nearly $3 million in fines against the city of Birmingham, Ala., over an incident that officials say was one of the largest fish kills in the history of the Endangered Species Act. The penalty, proposed Thursday, stems from a 2008 accident in which a city maintenance crew breached a dam and drained a spring pool containing one of the world’s largest populations of the small, endangered watercress darter. Scientists estimated that 12,000 were killed, more than half of the pool’s population of about 20,000. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the city initially cooperated with efforts to restore and protect the darter’s habitat but has declined to address other threats posed by city facilities. Those include pollution from surrounding streets, storm sewers, parking lots and a golf course. A city spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Fish and Wildlife Service said the city has several options for responding, including contesting the penalty or seeking negotiations for protecting the fish. The watercress darter – a thin, colorful fish about two inches long at maturity – lives among aquatic vegetation in shallow springs. It is considered on the brink of extinction, and its only known habitats are a handful of springs in the Birmingham area. (This version CORRECTS to show that 12,000 is half of the pool’s population, not global population.)

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Morgan Stanley Subprime Settlement Costs Firm $102 Million

June 24, 2010

BOSTON — Morgan Stanley agreed Thursday to a nearly $103 million settlement with Massachusetts investigators who alleged the investment bank backed subprime mortgage lending that it knew to be risky. State Attorney General Martha Coakley, in announcing the settlement, said it called on Morgan Stanley to provide $60 million to borrowers and the rest to the state treasury and to state agencies that had invested in securities backed by the risky loans. Coakley said the majority of the risky loans were made by New Century Financial Corp. and backed by Morgan Stanley. Irvine, California-based New Century, once the No. 2 U.S. provider of subprime mortgage loans, was dissolved in August 2008 after filing for bankruptcy protection. Morgan Stanley funded and securitized New Century loans, Coakley said, and had “intimate knowledge” of the company’s loan portfolio. Morgan Stanley continued to back the loans despite signals as early as 2005 that New Century’s practices were unsound, including loans approved without documentation or supporting paperwork, she said. “Morgan discovered that New Century was making loans that we allege were designed to fail,” Coakley said. “They started with low teaser rates but then they kicked to higher interest rates that borrowers predictably could not afford.” Coakley alleged in the settlement that a senior Morgan Stanley banker purchased hundreds of loans that its own compliance team had initially rejected after New Century threatened to pull its business. In a brief statement, Morgan Stanley said it was “pleased to resolve this matter in a way that will help many Massachusetts homeowners stay in their homes.” The company declined to make further comment. In the settlement filed in Suffolk Superior Court in Boston, Morgan Stanley said it neither admits nor denies the allegations made by the attorney general. Under the settlement, Morgan Stanley would provide $58 million in direct relief to about 1,000 Massachusetts borrowers struggling to repay subprime loans or facing foreclosure. Borrowers could receive up to a 35 percent reduction in their principal depending on their property values, Coakley said. Morgan Stanley would also be required to pay $2 million to nonprofit agencies that assist foreclosure victims. The company would pay $19.5 million to the Massachusetts general fund and $23.4 million to state entities, including the Massachusetts Municipal Depository Trust and the Pensions Reserve Investment Trust, which according to the settlement purchased securities through an intermediary from Morgan Stanley that were backed by New Century loans, resulting in “significant losses” for those agencies. Morgan Stanley also agreed to make “structural changes” in the way it does business, Coakley said. The attorney general announced a $60 million agreement in May 2009 with Goldman Sachs, requiring the investment bank to pay $10 million to the state and allow more than 700 Massachusetts homeowners rework their mortgages.

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Olivier Blanchard: Ten Commandments for Fiscal Adjustment in Advanced Economies

June 24, 2010

Olivier Blanchard and Carlo Cottarelli are economists at the International Monetary Fund Advanced economies are facing the difficult challenge of implementing fiscal adjustment strategies without undermining a still fragile economic recovery. Fiscal adjustment is key to high private investment and long-term growth. It may also be key, at least in some countries, to avoiding disorderly financial market conditions, which would have a more immediate impact on growth, through effects on confidence and lending. But too much adjustment could also hamper growth, and this is not a trivial risk. How should fiscal strategies be designed to make them consistent with both short-term and long-term growth requirements? We offer ten commandments to make this possible. Put simply, what advanced countries need is clarity of intent, an appropriate calibration of fiscal targets, and adequate structural reforms. With a little help from monetary policy, and from their (emerging market) friends. Commandment I: You shall have a credible medium-term fiscal plan with a visible anchor (in terms of either an average pace of adjustment, or of a fiscal target to be achieved within four-five years). There is no simple one-size-fits-all rule. Our current macroeconomic projections imply that an average improvement in the cyclically-adjusted primary balance of some 1 percentage point per year during the next four-five years would be consistent with gradually closing the output gap, given current expectations on private sector demand, and would stabilize the average debt ratio by the middle of this decade. Countries with higher deficits/debt should do more, others should do less. Such a pace of adjustment must be backed-up by fairly specific spending and revenue projections, and supported by structural reforms (see below). Commandment II: You shall not front-load your fiscal adjustment, unless financing needs require it. For a few countries, frontloading may be needed to maintain access to markets and finance the deficit at reasonable rates–but, in general, a steady pace of adjustment is more important than front-loading, which could undermine the recovery and be reversed. Nonetheless, a non-trivial first installment is needed: promises of future action will not be enough. Current fiscal consolidation plans in advanced G-20 countries imply on average a reduction in the cyclically adjusted deficit of some 1¼ percentage point of GDP in 2011, with significant dispersion around this according to country circumstances. This seems broadly adequate, and consistent with commandment I, at least based on current projections on the recovery of aggregate demand. This said, while front-loading fiscal tightening is, in general, inappropriate, front-loading the approval of policy measures (which would become effective at a later date) will enhance the credibility of the adjustment. Commandment III: You shall target a long-term decline in the public debt-to-GDP ratio, not just its stabilization at post-crisis levels. High public debt tends to raise interest rates, lower potential growth, and impede fiscal flexibility. Since the early 1970s, public debt in most advanced countries has been the ultimate absorber of negative shocks, going up in bad times, not coming down in good times. In the G-7 average, gross debt was 82 percent of GDP in 2007, a level never reached before without a major war. The current fiscal doldrums are due not only to the crisis, but also to how fiscal policy was mismanaged during the good times. This time, it must be different: the final goal must be to lower public debt ratios, gradually but steadily. Commandment IV: You shall focus on fiscal consolidation tools that are conducive to strong potential growth. This will require a bias towards (current) spending cuts, as spending ratios are high in advanced countries and require highly distortionary tax levels. Some cuts should be no brainers: for example, shifting from universal to targeted social transfers would involve significant savings, while protecting the poor. Containing public sector wages–which have risen faster than GDP in several advanced countries in the last decade–will be necessary. This said, nothing should be ruled out. Countries with low revenue ratios and large adjustment needs–like the United States and Japan–will also have to act on the revenue side. Promising “no new taxes,” in all countries and circumstances, is unrealistic. Commandment V: You shall pass early pension and health care reforms as current trends are unsustainable. Increases in pension and health care spending represented over 80 percent of the increase in primary public spending to GDP ratio observed in the G-7 countries in the last decades. The net present value of future increases in health care and pension spending is more than ten times larger than the increase in public debt due to the crisis. Any fiscal consolidation strategy must involve reforms in both these areas. This includes Europe, where official projections largely underestimate health care spending trends. Given the magnitude of the spending increases involved, early action in these areas will be much more conducive to increased credibility than fiscal front-loading. And will not risk undermining the recovery. Indeed, some measures in this area–while politically difficult–could have positive effects on both demand and supply (for example, committing to an increase in the retirement age over time). Commandment VI: You shall be fair. To be sustainable over time, the fiscal adjustment should be equitable. Equity has various dimensions, including maintaining an adequate social safety net and the provision of public services that allow a level playing field, regardless of conditions at birth. Fighting tax evasion is also a critical component to equity. For VAT, a tax that is relatively resilient to fraud, tax evasion averages about 15 percent of revenues in G-20 advanced countries. Evasion for other taxes is likely to be higher. Commandment VII: You shall implement wide reforms to boost potential growth. Strong growth has a staggering effect on public debt: a one percentage point increase in potential growth–assuming a tax ratio of 40 percent–lowers the debt ratio by 10 percentage points within 5 years and by 30 percentage points within 10 years, if the resulting higher revenues are saved. An acceleration of labor, product and financial market reforms will thus be critical. In the current context of weak aggregate demand, reforms that increase investment are more desirable than reforms that increase saving. While both have positive long-run effects, investment friendly reforms increase demand and output in the short run, while saving friendly reforms do the opposite. A word of caution, though: the timing and magnitude of the effects of structural reforms on growth are uncertain: fiscal adjustment plans relying on faster growth would not be credible. Commandment VIII: You shall strengthen your fiscal institutions. Sustaining fiscal adjustment over time requires appropriate fiscal institutions. The current ones allowed a record public debt accumulation before the crisis. They are insufficient. This requires better fiscal rules, including in Europe; better budgetary processes, including in the United States, where, at least for Congress, the budget is essentially a one-year-at-a-time exercise; and better fiscal monitoring, including through independent fiscal agencies of the type recently created in the United Kingdom. Commandment IX: You shall properly coordinate monetary and fiscal policy. If fiscal policy is tightened, interest rates should not be raised as rapidly as in other phases of economic recovery. Calls for an early monetary policy tightening in advanced economies are misplaced. Commandment X: You shall coordinate your policies with other countries. In a number of advanced countries, the reduction in budget deficits must come with a reduction in current account deficits. Put another way, if the recovery is to be maintained, the initial adverse effects of fiscal consolidation on internal demand have to be offset by stronger external demand. But this implies that the opposite happens in the rest of the world. In a number of emerging market economies, current account surpluses must be reduced, and these countries must shift from external to internal demand. The recent decisions taken by China are, in this respect, an important and welcome step. Policy coordination will also be important in some structural areas: for example, over the medium term, it will be critical to protect fiscal revenues from rising tax competition. Obey these commandments, and chances are high that you will achieve fiscal consolidation and sustained growth. This post originally appeared at iMFDirect

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Hadi Partovi Joins TASER International Board of Directors

June 24, 2010

SCOTTSDALE, AZ–(Marketwire – June 24, 2010) –  TASER International, Inc. ( NASDAQ : TASR ), announced today that Hadi Partovi, has joined the Board of Directors of TASER International , Inc. effective June 21, 2010. Mr. Partovi has served in a multitude of positions ranging from general manager, senior vice president of technology, president, or co-founder at multiple software or internet companies including Microsoft. His past or present roles include advising numerous technology companies including Facebook, Dropbox, OPOWER, and Bluekai, and he has served on the Board of Directors for iLike, Tellme Networks, and Edusoft.

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Danny Schechter: As Financial Reform Goes Down to the Wire, Will There Be Change?

June 24, 2010

charade | sh əˈrād| noun an absurd pretense intended to create a pleasant or respectable appearance : talk of unity was nothing more than a charade. The plan was to get the financial reform bill “done” by this weekend so that President Obama could pull it out of the his back pocket at the G20 meeting in Canada to demonstrate American “leadership” on an issue the whole world is legitimately worried about: the real prospect of an even more serious global economic collapse. The Congress has been working on this deal for months. The Senate passed its version after the House adopted a different measure. It was then up to the Conference process to “reconcile” the two bills, and come up with a law all could live with before taking the summer off to prepare for killer elections in the fall. No one reminded these alleged public servants of that axiom about the best laid plans of men and mice as in “the best laid schemes o’ mice an’ men. Gang aft agley, … aft agley” (often paraphrased in English as “The best-laid plans of mice and men / Go oft awry”). Its hard to know how “gang aft agley” they really went since all of the legislators are masters of compromise and beholden to financial interests that have gone through the provisions with a fine tooth comb and a surgical pair of scissors. Already the proposed independent Consumer Protection Agency has been buried in the Federal Reserve Bank. The too big to fail provisions are history, and the wrangle over tough rules on derivatives have been targeted by liberals from New York who fear that the trading desks will move overseas. Forget about principles here. Exemptions are being carved out, as I write, for mutual funds and manufactures. Three “moderate” Republicans including Scott Brown of Massachusetts have demanded reforms that will make it a reform in name only. Scott is carrying water for Boston’s State Street Bank. Behind the scenes, the industry with 25 lobbyists for every member of Congress is intensifying the pressure at the federal and local level, putting the squeeze on. Every member has a little something they now need to vote yes. Explains Senate negotiator Chris Dodd, “I dredge votes on the floor of the US Senate. I come back and I feel like a bulletin board…I’ve got notes stuck in every pocket.” These lobbyists have poured hundreds of millions into the coffers of these politicians. As Senator Dick Durbin admitted last April, “[T] he banks–hard to believe in a time when we’re facing a banking crisis that many of the banks created–are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place.” According to MIT’s Simon Johnson who writes “The Baseline Scenario,” it’s the White House that’s doing Wall Street’s bidding while claiming the opposite. He writes, “The president signed off on the most generous and least The administration has scrambled to create some political cover in terms of “reform”–but the lack of substance here is already clear to people who follow it closely, and public perceptions will shift quickly.” And it’s not just the Congress that is backpedaling as I write. The Courts and the prosecutors are doing their share to issue ‘get out of jail cards” for suspected and convicted White Collar criminals. Dow Jones reports, “The U.S. Supreme Court found fault Thursday with the federal government’s high-profile convictions of Enron’s Jeffrey Skilling and former media mogul Conrad Black, rejecting the government’s use of a key white-collar crime law on which part of the prosecutions were based. The justices sent the cases back to two different lower courts to determine whether portions of Skilling and Black’s convictions should be thrown out.” A Congressional provision has insured that convicted white collar criminals cannot be sued by the people they ripped off. Joseph Collins, a corporate lawyer who worked for Refko will not have to pay back investors he helped defraud. Appeals Court Judge Gerald Lynch wrote, “It is perhaps dismaying that participants in a fraudulent scheme who may even have committed criminal acts are not answerable in damages to the victims of the fraud.” “It is perhaps dismaying.” Huh???? Even the people who enabled Bernie Madoff seem to be getting off. Writes the NY Times White Collar Crime blogger, Peter J. Henning: “Senior members of Mr. Madoff’s securities operation, including his brother and two sons, have not been charged with any crime to this point, and one wonders whether anyone will be charged with being an accomplice to the fraud. Mr. Madoff received his 150-year sentence nearly a year ago and little has happened on the criminal front since then.” The operative phrase: “One wonders…..” So, the criminals go free while the Congress and the courts compound the crimes. If this is not a vivid demonstration of corruption at the highest levels, what is? Meanwhile, in England, under a conservative government financial crime is being treated differently. Yesterday, according to news reports, “the UK government announced a complete overhaul of the financial services industry in the UK, increased focus on white-collar crime, and a review, with possible reform, of the banking industry.” And while all this is going on, the economy continues to fall into the crapper as Republicans sink a measure to extend unemployment benefits for working people who are already being designated “the new poor.” Writes, Mike Whitney, “Consumer spending is flat, home prices are set to fall, unemployment will likely edge higher, private sector credit is still contracting, capacity utilization is far below pre-crisis levels, the CPI is slipping, and yields on US Treasuries are priced for deflation. The government must pick up the slack or there will be a general fall in prices that will trigger more layoffs, larger deficits, and social unrest.” Don’t worry; each party will blame the other. Already Republican candidates are telling the unemployed “to get a job,” no matter how low it pays. Even as the bill went down to the wire, pro-reform activists believed they were winning. Let’s hope so, but there is more at stake. When some weakened bill is passed as, no doubt, one will, prepare for the TV spin by the punditocracy shilling for the status quo, and rationalizing it as the best law that could emerge under the circumstances in such a dysfunctional institution. And then watch as the Obama Administration hails it as the second coming. News Dissector Danny Schechter directed the film P LUNDER THE CRIME OF OUR TIME and wrote a companion book viewing the financial crisis as a crime story, Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org

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Chuck Collins: Finally, A Progressive Estate Tax Introduced

June 24, 2010

Would you trust Sens. Max Baucus and Blanche Lincoln to design the next estate tax, our country’s only levy on inherited wealth? Unless progressives stand up, Baucus and Lincoln will team with the GOP’s anti-tax point person, Senator John Kyl, to push through a bad estate tax reform. The Kyl-Lincoln reform proposal would gut the law and give additional tax breaks to multi-millionaires and billionaires. Fortunately, Senate progressives have just introduced an estate tax reform with some spine. The Responsible Estate Tax Act proposes graduated rates on larger estates, closes loopholes, exempts farms and small businesses, and encourages conservation easements. It imposes a “billionaire surcharge” rate of 65 percent on estates over $500 million. Led by Senators Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Tom Harkin (D-IA) Bernard Sanders (I-VT), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), this progressive estate tax would raise at least $264 billon over ten years. “At a time when we have a record-breaking $13 trillion national debt and a growing gap between the very rich and everyone else, people who inherit multi-million and billion dollar estates must not be allowed to avoid paying their fair share in estate taxes,” said Senator Sanders in a prepared statement. The politics within the Democrats on the estate tax are bizarre. In 2009, thanks to Senate inaction, the federal estate tax expired on January 1, 2010. In March, a Texas oilman became the first billionaire in U.S. history to die without any estate tax in place, costing the treasury billions. The good news is that on January 1, 2011, the estate tax returns at its year 2000 level — with a wealth exemption of $1 million and 55 percent rate. This is what will happen if the Senate takes no action, which seems to be the norm. Now to us common folks, it seems like a tremendous bargain position for Senate Democrats. If nothing happens, we get a strong estate tax law. So how is the Senate Democratic leadership using this huge leverage? You guessed it. They’re like poker players with three aces in their hand and are ready to fold. Instead of using their leverage to press for something like the Responsible Estate Tax Act, they’re allowing Lincoln and Baucus to dominate the stage. Fair tax advocates are mobilizing to build support for the Responsible Estate Tax Act. Wealth for the Common Good , a network of business leaders and wealthy investors, is backing the legislation and has compiled fact sheets and other resources . If Democrats are going to address the political impasse created by “deficit politics,” they have to step up and support progressive revenue proposals like the Responsible Estate Tax Act.

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Frank DiPascali Auction: Madoff Associate’s Possessions Up For Sale

June 24, 2010

MORRIS PLAINS, N.J. — A public viewing of items to be auctioned from the former home of jailed financier Bernard Madoff’s chief financial officer produced a diversity of agendas from prospective buyers Thursday. Some came in search of bargains, while simple curiosity drew others. Then there was Reenie Harris. “It’s a combination of things, but there’s a certain amount of outrage,” Harris said as she browsed through the belongings of Frank DiPascali that ranged from an ornate table with a built-in chess board to a snowblower and a couple of all-terrain vehicles. “I wanted to experience disgust at these people who blatantly took other people’s money,” Harris added as an explanation of her presence in the drab, humid garage where the items were displayed. “This kind of screams out how appalling the whole thing is.” Proceeds will go to a fund to compensate Madoff’s victims, said the U.S. Marshals Service, which is running the auction at the Morris County Public Safety Training Academy. DiPascali, who was released on bail this week, is awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty last August to money laundering, securities fraud and other crimes that could put him in prison for decades. As part of his $10 million bail package, DiPascali must remain under house arrest and forfeit all family assets, except for an agreed-upon dollar amount directed to be less than $300,000. DiPascali and his wife already have sold three cars and a yacht for a total of nearly $1 million, federal prosecutors have said. It is not clear whether the possessions to be auctioned Friday will equal that amount. Many appeared to be recreational in nature rather than high-ticket goods: Home-theater electronics, a vintage pinball machine, foosball game and video road racing game; plenty of pool or patio furniture, in addition to more formal dining room and bedroom sets. “It looks like they got all his fun stuff,” said Sharon Lee, who said she was looking for a bedroom set for her son. Lee and others said misgivings about buying items connected to an admitted swindler whose crimes remain incomprehensibly vast is balanced by the fact that the money will go to those who were victimized. “I’d be doing my part to see the losers win something, I hope,” said Agnes Gertz, a retiree from Wayne who said most of the furniture on display was either too bulky or too fancy for her tastes. “But at the same time, I now see how ornately people lived on other people’s money,” she said. Prosecutors have confirmed that DiPascali has cooperated in the investigation and that information he has provided has been partly responsible for the charges brought against Madoff’s former director of operations and the two computer programmers. The government said it expects to call DiPascali as a witness if those cases proceed to trial.

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Robert E. Scott: U.S. Jobs Depend on China Revaluing Its Currency Now

June 24, 2010

Growing trade deficits with China eliminated or displaced 2.4 million U.S. jobs between 2001 and 2008. China’s manipulation of its currency, the Renminbi (RMB), is responsible for at least 1 million of these displaced jobs. The best estimates show that the RMB (or yuan) is undervalued by at least 40%, which makes U.S. goods 40% more expensive for Chinese purchasers and makes Chinese goods artificially cheap in the United States (and to a lesser extent around the world). China said over the weekend that it will follow a more flexible exchange rate, but as we learned yesterday, this does not ensure that the RMB will increase in value. While the RMB rose slightly on Monday, China’s big, state-owned banks intervened to pull it back down to the level of last week’s peg in overnight trading. History shows that China will not allow its currency to rise significantly unless it is faced with the threat of real trade sanctions. In 2005, 67 members of the Senate approved legislation that would have imposed trade sanctions if China failed to revalue its currency. While the Senate measure never became law, that summer China did allow its currency to float, and it rose 20% over the next three years. The world economy cannot afford to wait another three years for China to revalue, nor can we depend on China’s central bank to act responsibly. Congress must set a firm target and deadline for China to achieve a 40% revaluation of its currency. China’s Central Bank announced that it will allow its currency to fluctuate 0.5% per day. Congress should give China until November 15 to raise the value of its currency by 40%, from the prior peg at 6.82 yuan per dollar to 4.85 (yuan per dollar). This will require the RMB to increase by 0.35% per day in this period. Senator Charles Schumer told the U.S. China Commission last week that he and other colleagues would push for a vote on China currency legislation (S.3134) ” within the next two weeks .” Congress should also impose a currency manipulation adjustment tariff that would raise the effective exchange rate to 4.85 yuan per dollar on any goods imported from China that arrive in the United States on or after November 15, 2010. No tariffs would be due if the RMB appreciates by 40% or more by that date. We also need to get tough with other currency manipulators such as Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan, but it will be much easier to work with those countries after China revalues. China would surely respond to the threat or imposition of such a tariff by rapidly revaluing its currency. This would be in the best interest of the United States, the European Union, and most other countries around the world. It would also be good for China. It would encourage China to liberalize labor unions, increase wages, and take other steps to raise domestic demand for goods made in that country. It would also help manufacturers from the United States and other countries to compete on a level playing field, for the first time in more than a decade, and set the stage for sustainable world growth. It is time for China to shoulder responsibility for its own growth in the G-20 and the world economy. This piece was originally posted to epi.org on June 23, 2010.

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Sahara Energy Ltd. Announces Approval of Creditors Proposal

June 24, 2010

CALGARY, ALBERTA–(Marketwire – June 24, 2010) – Sahara Energy Ltd. (” Sahara ” or the ” Company “) (TSX VENTURE:SAH) (PINK SHEETS:SAHRF) is pleased to announce that, further to its news release of June 8, 2010, the secured creditors and the unsecured creditors of Sahara voted in favor of Sahara’s proposal under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act at a meeting of the creditors held on June 22, 2010. The finalization of the proposal remains subject to court approval, which will be sought by Deloitte and Touché Inc. who is acting as trustee under Sahara’s proposal. The proposal is also subject to regulatory and shareholder approval.

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Billionaires Who’ve Lost BIG: 10 Titans Who’ve Watched Their Net Worth Plummet (PHOTOS)

June 24, 2010

For billionaires, suffering a massive loss of wealth probably has a different effect than for, say, a millionaire’s . But in relative terms, the global economic crisis has been a hard hit for this elite class. Last year Forbes noted 355 dropoffs from its annual roundup of billionaires, mostly from the United States. From bad loans and pre-crisis real estate purchases, to messy divorces and SEC investigations, billionaires–just like the rest of us–have watched their personal finances shrink to a fraction of their highest net worth. But don’t sulk, billionaires. Life will continue, with or without your McLaren F1 ‘s. We promise. Check out which billionaires who have lost a significant part of their fortunes in recent years.

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Henry Blodget: Actually, It’s Starting to Look More and More Like We Have "Japan Disease"

June 24, 2010

The big fear that occasionally wakes even die-hard bulls up screaming is that the US is en route to becoming Japan. If we’re Japan, any recovery in the economy and market will likely be temporary. In the case of the market, any recovery will also be followed by a plunge to lower lows. For another decade, at best. Japan’s economy has basically gone nowhere for the past decade, and its stock market is trading at about one-quarter of its level of 20 years ago. If the US were to suffer the same fate, the DOW will be trading at 4,000 in 2020. So be afraid, very afraid. Most bulls, of course, dismiss the Japan comparison as absurd. They note the speed with which we dealt with our banking crisis (at least partially), whereas Japan let its own drag on for more than a decade. They note that Japan’s population growth is stagnant and will soon start shrinking. They note that Japan’s economy is rigid and inflexible and that our more entrepreneurial culture will pull us out of our own doldrums. These points have some truth to them. And those who scoff at the idea that we’re becoming Japan will continue to hang their hopes on them. But there’s another area in which the two countries are very similar, one that could be the most important of all: At least for now, we’re both in the midst of a deflationary deleveraging, in which money supply growth is miniscule and bank credit continues to contract. Paul Kasriel of Northern Trust has put together a series of charts that show this comparison , and it’s not encouraging. Despite the Fed offering unlimited free credit to the banking system, banks continue to shrink the amount they’re lending (except to the Federal government). Thus, this free money is not making its way into the economy, the money supply is barely growing, and credit continues to shrink (for the first time in 60 years). Here’s Why We’re More Like Japan Than You Want To Know >

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Scholastic Names Shane Armstrong Executive Vice President, Scholastic Corporation and President, International Growth Markets

June 24, 2010

Former Executive of Times Publishing of Singapore to Lead Scholastic’s International Operations

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Scholastic Names Shane Armstrong Executive Vice President, Scholastic Corporation and President, International Growth Markets

June 24, 2010

Former Executive of Times Publishing of Singapore to Lead Scholastic’s International Operations

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Caleris Announces the Addition of Mark Burns as Vice President of Sales

June 24, 2010

Rapidly Growing Customer Support Outsourcing Firm Hires Experienced Contact Center Sales Professional Mark Burns

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EZ Grill Heats Up With New Board of Directors

June 24, 2010

Former Starbucks, MySpace and Thousand Trails Executives Join Forces to Dominate Grilling Industry With the Only Solution for Mess-Free, Portable and All Natural Grilling

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Daniel Cox Joins Trustmark Companies Board

June 24, 2010

LAKE FOREST, IL–(Marketwire – June 24, 2010) –  Daniel T. Cox, retired Managing Director of JPMorgan, has been elected to the board of directors of Trustmark Mutual Holding Company. The announcement was made by Trustmark Chairman, J. Grover Thomas Jr.

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Human Arc Promotes Holly Pelaia to Vice President of Operations

June 24, 2010

CLEVELAND, OH–(Marketwire – June 24, 2010) –  Human Arc Executive Vice President Robert W. Glaser has announced the promotion of Holly Pelaia to Vice President of Operations for the company’s Hospital Business Division. 

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Sanswire Corp. Appoints Michael K. Clark, Former Fidelity Investments and JPMorgan Chase Executive, as Chairman of the Board

June 24, 2010

New Chairman Appoints Longtime Fidelity and JP Morgan Colleague, Glenn D. Estrella as Chief Executive Officer/Chief Financial Officer

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FINANCE VIDEO: Direct Nickel Chairman Julian Malnic Speaks with Brian Carlton at Symposium Resources Roadshow in Sydney, June 2010

June 24, 2010

FINANCE VIDEO: Direct Nickel Chairman Julian Malnic Speaks with Brian Carlton at Symposium Resources Roadshow in Sydney, June 2010

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Australian Market Report of June 25,2010

June 24, 2010

Australian Market Report of June 25,2010

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WestSide Corporation Limited (ASX:WCL) Paranui Drilling Update

June 24, 2010

WestSide Corporation Limited (ASX:WCL) Paranui Drilling Update

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Bauxite Resources Limited (ASX:BAU) Confirms Plans For 2Mtpa Mining Operation And Withdraws Previous EPA Application And EPA Appeal

June 24, 2010

Bauxite Resources Limited (ASX:BAU) Confirms Plans For 2Mtpa Mining Operation And Withdraws Previous EPA Application And EPA Appeal

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Magnetic Resources (ASX:MAU) Total Iron Ore Targets Extended To 312km And Significant New Drill Target Recognised At Jubuk

June 24, 2010

Magnetic Resources (ASX:MAU) Total Iron Ore Targets Extended To 312km And Significant New Drill Target Recognised At Jubuk

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D’Aguilar Gold Limited (ASX:DGR) Successful Completion Of Capital Raisings

June 24, 2010

D’Aguilar Gold Limited (ASX:DGR) Successful Completion Of Capital Raisings

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Lend Lease (ASX:LLC) Top Bidder for Singapore Jurong Site

June 24, 2010

Lend Lease (ASX:LLC) Top Bidder for Singapore Jurong Site

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S&P 500 Declines in Fears from Greece’s Credit Default Swaps

June 24, 2010

S&P 500 Declines in Fears from Greece’s Credit Default Swaps

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U.S. Equity Indices Extend Losses by Closing Amid Rising Pessimism

June 24, 2010

U.S. Equity Indices Extend Losses by Closing Amid Rising Pessimism

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European stocks end in red zone  

June 24, 2010

European stocks end in red zone

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Consolidated movements…

June 24, 2010

Consolidated movements…

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S&P 500 Drops for a Third Day as Greece Continues to Weigh Down on Confidence

June 24, 2010

S&P 500 Drops for a Third Day as Greece Continues to Weigh Down on Confidence

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Australian PM Rudd Ousted; Sterling Outperforms

June 24, 2010

Australian PM Rudd Ousted; Sterling Outperforms

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Euro Continues To Trend Sideways, British Pound Extends Rally

June 24, 2010

Euro Continues To Trend Sideways, British Pound Extends Rally

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Daily Sound Bites 06.24

June 24, 2010

Daily Sound Bites 06.24

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Euro-Zone Industrial New Orders in April Advances for a Third Straight Month

June 24, 2010

Euro-Zone Industrial New Orders in April Advances for a Third Straight Month

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US Dollar Index

June 24, 2010

US Dollar Index

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Never Trade Without a Protective Stop

June 24, 2010

Never Trade Without a Protective Stop

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The Federal Open Market Committee attests that the US recovery is undergoing gradually but many challenges persist

June 24, 2010

The Federal Open Market Committee attests that the US recovery is undergoing gradually but many challenges persist

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The U.S orders for durable goods excluding transportation rose while the deteriorated labor market shows slender signs of enhancement…

June 24, 2010

The U.S orders for durable goods excluding transportation rose while the deteriorated labor market shows slender signs of enhancement…

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Sovereign Debt Woes Still Dominate Markets

June 24, 2010

Sovereign Debt Woes Still Dominate Markets

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Aabar Investments buys share in UniCredit SpA

June 24, 2010

Aabar Investments buys share in UniCredit SpA

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The yen strengthens versus majors

June 24, 2010

The yen strengthens versus majors

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Swiss Market Index recoils at midday 

June 24, 2010

Swiss Market Index recoils at midday

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European stocks plummet on debt woes  

June 24, 2010

European stocks plummet on debt woes

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STOXX falls by midday  

June 24, 2010

STOXX falls by midday

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Euro resumes slide from debt worries in Europe

June 24, 2010

Euro resumes slide from debt worries in Europe

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Canada’s retail sales decline 2% in April

June 24, 2010

Canada’s retail sales decline 2% in April

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