July 2010

Katherine V.W. Stone: Banks, Babies and Biases

July 29, 2010

Twenty years ago, banks had a reputation for being very conservative. Then came the high flying world of casino banking, with its high roller, risk-embracing culture. Beneath it all, though, the core of the banking industry mentality is deeply conservative — not the good kind of conservative that makes sure that loans are collateralized and deposits are protected. Rather, it is a conservative mentality produced by an out-of-date understanding of the world in which the loans — particulary mortgage loans — operate. And that misunderstanding will continue to spell trouble for all of us. Here is one telling case in point. In their new efforts to be cautious, banks and other mortgage-lenders are reportedly refusing to give loans to pregnant women. (Tara Siegal Bernard, Need a Mortgage? Don’t Get Pregnant , New York Times, July 20, 2010) The refusals are based on the lenders’ fear that pregnant women may decide not to return to work, or may not have a job to return to, after childbirth. What this policy reveals is not that the banks are sexist or family-hostile — which they are — but that they are about seriously of touch with the reality of the labor market. When was the last time any applicant for a thirty year mortgage had the same job, and income, for thirty years? Fixed-rate, self-amortizing mortgages were designed for a workplace in which workers stayed with their employers for their entire careers. These types of mortgages arose in the 1930 and 1940s, a time when employers wanted workers to stay with them a long time so they could develop loyalty, learn in-house skills and progress gradually up an orderly job ladder until retirement. Long-term mortgages assume that borrowers have reliable and long-term employment relationships. For much of the 20th century, this was true, much of the time. America’s great post-war middle class was comprised of blue-collar workers who enjoyed long-term, stable jobs and predictable promotion paths that extended from hiring to retiring. Auto companies, insurance companies, the steel industry, and other industries dominated by large firms offered their workers de facto job security, orderly promotion opportunities, a rising wage trajectory, dependable benefits and a reliable pension upon retirement. Such jobs were by no means universal — they eluded most African Americans, women, and rural Americans — but they formed the template upon which 20th-century social policy was built. Over the past two decades, the reality of long-term stable employment has vanished for all but a lucky few. Employers have created new types of employment arrangements that do not rely on a stable and loyal workforce, but which provide them flexibility instead. Sometimes this means using temporary workers or independent contractors to perform tasks previously performed by regular employees. But more frequently it means altering employees expectations and repudiating the culture of permanency that employers used to foster. Employers want to be able to bring in new employees with new skills at any level, eliminate those with obsolete skills, and reassign incumbent employees across departmental and functional lines. These changes are not all nefarious — they have unleashed creativity and enabled many to escape the deadening drone of dull, repetitive work. However, the change in the nature of employment has undermined many crucial elements of our social safety net, including our housing policy. The problem now is that few people have the kind of long-term job security that our housing policies take for granted. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median length of time a worker spends with a particular employer has decreased in every age group since 1980, except for women ages 35-44, who saw a slight increase. Today, more and more people have an episodic experience in the labor market, moving from employer to employer, with periods of employment often followed by periods of unemployment and transition. When unemployment strikes, mortgage payments that once had been manageable become impossible. So banks that refuse loans to pregnant women for fear that childbirth will disrupt the employment relationship are worrying about the wrong problem. Almost no one has safe, reliable employment these days. All workers are at risk of termination and seeing their jobs outsourced to temporary workers, independent contractors, or simply to new blood. The answer is not to single out one group whose employment relationship is precarious — nearly everyone’s is. Instead, banks and other lending institutions need to rethink their lending practices to meet the new reality of people’s work life cycles. For example, they should redesign mortgages to have flexible resets that permit mortgage holidays or interest rate dips during spells of unemployment. Some commercial loans currently have this feature for businesses that are in temporary difficulties. Because the nature of employment has changed profoundly, it is time to revisit the structure of housing finance. Katherine V.W. Stone is the Arjay and Frances Miller Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law. She specializes in labor and employment law, and her book, From Widgets to Digits: Employment Regulation for the Changing Workplace was awarded the Michael Harrington Award for linking scholarship to current issues of social policy.

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David Berri: Why Macroeconomists — and Some Politicians — Should Watch Sports

July 29, 2010

Britt Robson of CNNSI.com recently wrote a column examining the worse offseason moves in the NBA. A perusal of the list reveals some familiar patterns. Decision-makers in the NBA have given significant dollars to scorers like Amare Stoudemire, Joe Johnson, and Rudy Gay. Darko Milicic — a player whose “size”, “youth”, and “potential” hasn’t vanished yet — received $20 million from the Minnesota Timberwolves. Such moves illustrate documented biases in decision-making in the NBA. Specifically, scoring is overvalued and teams have trouble abandoning evaluations made during the NBA draft. These moves, though, also tell a different story. The column Robson offered is essentially written by sports writers each off-season in the NBA. In fact, similar columns are written in the off-seasons of each sport. Year after year, sports writers — and of course, the fans — are convinced decision-makers in sports are getting it wrong. Now sometimes the writers — and of course, the fans — are incorrect. But published research in economics makes it clear that some of the criticism of decision-makers in sports is on target. People in sports will make the make the same mistakes over and over again (shameless self-promotion — Martin Schmidt and I report many of these stories in Stumbling on Wins ). Obviously these stories are important to sports fans. But these stories also inform our understanding of macroeconomic policy. Yes, I know. That seems like quite a leap. A quick review of recent Congressional testimony by Nobel Laureate Robert Solow provides us with the connection. Solow’s testimony — “Building a Science of Economics for the Real World” — focused on how certain macroeconomic models inform the economic policies some people prefer. Here is a quick summary of what Solow had to say: Certain macroeconomic models — specifically the DSGE models — are based on the idea that the economy is comprised entirely of rational people. An implication of this approach: The DSGE story — as Solow emphasizes — “has no real room for unemployment of the kind we see most of the time.” In the DSGE world, the unemployed are people who are rationally volunteering to avoid work; because of a preference to consume more leisure or a desire to retain some flexibility for the future. In other words, there is no involuntary unemployment. Because everyone in the economy is rational and making the best decision given their circumstance, there is no room for government policy. In other words, stimulus packages and unemployment benefits are not necessary in the DSGE world. In fact, these policies can only make things worse. So if you believe people are perfectly rational, it leads you to a certain set of policies. But are people perfectly rational? Behavioral economists and cognitive psychologists have offered ample evidence from laboratory experiments that people are not perfectly rational. Sports fans, though, can see that these experiments may not have been necessary. To be clear, people who work in sports are not stupid. Decision-makers in sports are generally very educated and well-trained for the industry where they are employed. Furthermore, these decision-makers have an abundance of information and very clear incentives. Specifically, when you get it wrong in sports, you not only get fired, you also are the subject of public ridicule. In sum, if there was an industry where decision-makers should be perfectly rational, the sports industry should be it. But people in sports are not perfectly rational. Again, scoring is consistently overvalued by NBA decision-makers. Furthermore, on draft night, NBA decision-makers place too much emphasis on Final Four appearances and not enough emphasis on rebounding. And the NBA is not the only place where decision-making has problems. In the NFL, Cade Massey and Richard Thaler have offered evidence that first round draft picks are overvalued ; while David Romer has emphasized that coaches have problems with decision-making on fourth down . In Soccernomics – by Simon Kuper and Stefan Szymanski – evidence is presented that decision-makers in soccer make systematic mistakes. One of my favorites: Kuper and Szymanski argue that scouts overvalue blond soccer players. And let’s not leave out baseball and hockey. In baseball, decision-makers historically undervalued on-base percentage and over-valued stolen bases. And on the ice, Stacey Brook and I have published research that argues the performance of goalies is not quite as different as their salaries would suggest. The examples cited are but a sample of what we find in the academic research. And one suspects that fans of any team can find more examples just thinking about the decisions made by their favorite team. Despite this evidence, some macroeconomists insist that decision-makers are perfectly rational. This suggests that these people are simply not sports fans. So if you meet one of these macroeconomists, please take them to a game. Remember, some policy makers listen to these economists. And maybe the advice they give would improve if they spent less time playing with DSGE models and more time watching sports.

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Alfred Gingold: CHASE HOME FINANCE: RABID WEASEL

July 29, 2010

Our mortgage bank says we have to pay our next door neighbor’s water bill. Last month, we got a letter from Chase Home Finance [link] stating that we were delinquent in our payments. So Chase paid our neighbor’s water bill and established an escrow account into which it plans to collect and store such money as it says we owe-at that moment, a cool $82.91, but increasing as Chase adds its “expenditures” towards our actual taxes and water bills, which we have already paid in what is referred to in mortgage circles as “timely fashion.” We were not surprised. This is the third time-the third time that we know of-that Chase has tried to make us pay our neighbor’s water bill. We refinanced with Chase in 2004 at a rate that was, and still is, pretty good, not to mention that it was and still is a fixed rate mortgage. Perhaps it’s the fixed rate thing that gets under Chase’s corporate skin, because unlike any of the eight other banks who’ve held our mortgages over the years, Chase keeps trying to make us pay it more money than we owe. The vehicle for this petty larceny is escrow for tax and insurance payments which are, to put it politely, enhanced. At first, we had no problem with paying our taxes and insurance through Chase. We’ve had the arrangement with other banks and none of them ever tried to filch more than we owed, or at least not this obviously. My wife and I share bill-paying and check-writing duties, so neither of us noticed the creep of our escrow payments, nor did we connect it with the regular letters from Chase requiring notification of insurance, which we duly sent along. In 2006 we realized something was amiss; our monthly escrow payment was huge. There were phone calls, some of a highly emotional nature, with the affectless warriors of Chase Customer Care. Eventually a polite lady called to tell us in silvery tones that there’d been a mistake, can you imagine, something about unacknowledged notices of coverage, and that we’d shortly receive a check for $4000 and change-funds, we gathered, Chase had been hanging onto for our own good. We allowed as how we’d like Chase to waive our escrow requirement, so we could pay our taxes and premiums ourselves, and the lady told us we could do that. What she didn’t say was “if you dare.” To Chase, a home loan with an escrow waiver is an unexploited resource, like the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Since this is the third time in two years Chase has created tax delinquencies that don’t exist, we know the drill: We faxed a note to Customer Care illuminating our “concerns,” pointing out that our address is not the same as our neighbor’s, the water account number is different, the houses are different, the mortgages are different-you know, we’re different fucking people. We included copies of the receipts for all the timely tax payments we’ve made. We referred to, but did not include, the last letter we sent Chase about our neighbor’s water bill, from December ’09, but we didn’t mention the one we sent on the same subject in October ’08, as we didn’t want to burden Customer Care with too much to think about, much less read. And we ended stirringly by requesting, insisting, demanding that this escrow grift cease immediately. Reliably, Chase took our remonstrance in stride and ignored it. Our new payment coupon already has a healthy chunk of escrow added, for taxes we’ve already paid and which Chase claims to have paid too, or intends to pay. The last time this happened, in 2008, we went through a telephone gauntlet, repeating the story endlessly, receiving assorted “work case numbers,” which were never recognized by anyone we spoke with, and collecting the names of every Customer Care Representative we spoke to, which got confusing because they only offer first names. And we continue to pay our principle and interest on time. No response. Zilch. Eventually we sent certified letters, return receipt requested, to assorted Chase departments-Customer Care, Tax, Escrow Removal-and personally to David B. Lowman, CEO of Chase Home Finance, and Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, the mother ship. We made our case, included our documentation and declared that if we did not receive satisfaction we would file reports with the Attorney General’s Office, the CAC, the Better Business Bureau and Santa. Lowman’s receipt didn’t come back to us for three months, so we were not surprised to hear Dennis Kucinich snap at him for Chase’s spectacular foot-dragging on mortgage modification [http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2419665720100624] . Yes, foot-dragging seems to be the Lowman Way, except last April, when he told Barney Frank of the House Financial Services Committee hearing that aggrieved Chase mortgage holders should come to him with their concerns, then hot-footed it the hell out of there when a group of them actually did. [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/14/jpmorgan-executive-mobbed_n_537508.html] Someone evidently must have read the one we sent to Dimon, because we got a call from an oberleutnant of the Executive Resolution Center (Orwellian, no?), who made it chillingly clear that the only way to get rid of the escrow was to pay it off. Could we find out if we’re still paying for the neighbor’s water? How about copies of the numerous delinquency alerts Chase claims to have sent us and we never received (maybe the neighbors did)? Not a chance. Far be it from me to suggest that Jamie Dimon, a man the NewYork Times calls “a financial superstar” and Huffpo calls “The Most Dangerous Man in America,” tells the troops to squeeze a few extra bucks out of non-risky mortgages. I mean, JP Morgan Chase owns 44% of the derivatives market, whatever that may be. $82.06 doesn’t even qualify as chump change. It’s the principle of the thing, I suppose. Whether it’s billions in dicey investments or just a few bucks of funny escrow, take a shot and if no one’s the wiser, no one’s the wiser. It’s very different from the attitude Matt Taibbi captured so brilliantly in his description of Goldman Sachs, the “great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, etc.” [link] Chase Home Finance is less squid than weasel: a rabid weasel, wrapped around my house, pointy little claws relentlessly poking-behind the sofa cushions, in our wallets, next door on the neighbor’s water meter-for any spare change or folding bills it can sweep into its fetid maw before someone shoos it away with a broom. It is a busy weasel. We thought paying our neighbor’s water bill was a mistake too stupid to be anything but honest, but it turns out Chase pulls this stuff all the time. At the ample Chase Home Finance section on the Complaints Board Website [link], there’s a post from a guy Chase is escrowing for taxes on property he doesn’t own. On the Chase Home Finance Sucks Facebook Page [link], we read of a man escrowed for taxes due (and paid) for the year before his mortgage was taken over by Chase. The Los Angeles Better Business Bureau [http://www.la.bbb.org/Business-Report/Chase-Home-Finance-100018450 ] awards Chase Home Finance an F for reliability, which makes us think Chase really doesn’t give a damn what anyone thinks of it-which is exactly the attitude we would recommend to Chase if we were its therapist or mother. Perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising, but it somehow is, that the same banks and bankers that thought big enough to drive the whole economy over a cliff also think-and behave– really, really small. To paraphrase Lady Bracknell [ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiNVy5nfbcQ ]: To swindle someone once may be regarded as a mistake; to swindle the same someone in the same way repeatedly looks like a business plan. I’ll be chronicling this episode of our ongoing struggle to pay Chase what we owe it on my blog, Joy Buzzer. This time we’re hoping to keep our postage expenditures down and to avoid hyperventilating on the phone. My prediction: they’ll escrow us for David B. Lowman’s water bill.

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Video: Pelosi Gets Advice, Donations From Silicon Valley: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg Businessweek’s Patrick O’Connor talks about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s ties with corporate leaders in California and donations from these unofficial advisers. Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Aug. 2 issue that Pelosi regularly seeks out corporate leaders for their take on the economy and talks frequently with Bay Area business titans such as Eric Schmidt, the chief executive officer of Google. O’Connor speaks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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U-Store-It Announces the Appointment of Robert G. Blatz as Senior Vice President of Operations

July 29, 2010

WAYNE, PA–(Marketwire – July 29, 2010) –  U-Store-It Trust ( NYSE : YSI ) announced the appointment of Robert G. Blatz as Senior Vice President of Operations.

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Video: JPMorgan’s Kelly Discusses U.S. Economic Outlook, Stocks: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — David Kelly, chief market strategist for JPMorgan Funds, about the outlook for the U.S. economy and stock market. Kelly speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Kristie Arslan: Politics Trumps Progress: Main Street Likely to Be Left Out in the Cold Yet Again

July 29, 2010

Members of the Senate decided today to put politics over progress by blocking movement on the Small Business Jobs Act ( H.R. 5297 ) when it came up for a crucial procedural vote. Unless an agreement can be reached, the bill is likely to languish in the Senate. The debate on the Senate floor consisted of the usual acrimonious banter with lots of finger pointing about the unfairness of the majority and the obstructionism of the minority. What is truly unfair is that Main Street will likely be left out in the cold again to weather this economic storm, while Wall Street was bailed out by Congress with swiftness as soon as financial institutions showed signs of stress from the fiscal crisis they single-handedly created. To date, Wall Street has received close to $5 trillion dollars in aid. Yes, that’s right, $5 trillion! Yet, nothing has been done to provide assistance or relief to the largest sector of our economy — small business. The critical question in this debate should be what the Small Business Jobs Act could mean to a small business owner’s bottom line. The tax equity for the self-employed provision alone would result in tax savings of over 15 percent for the 23 million self-employed Americans. Sole-proprietors would receive a one-year, temporary business deduction for their health insurance costs providing them significant savings on their self-employment (payroll) taxes. This is a permanent deduction currently enjoyed by large businesses and corporations in the U.S. Did bailing out Wall Street help 23 million Americans? Did bailing out our auto industry save 23 million jobs? I don’t think so. The Small Business Jobs Act, with its’ $12 billion in targeted temporary tax relief, will provide a wide-sweeping benefit to our nation’s smallest businesses. While the bill is certainly not a panacea, it is a step in the right direction; a step that should have the support of both sides of the aisle. However, with August recess looming and campaign season in full swing, it seems the need to one-up the opposition is more important than improving the economy and helping American families. Is it any wonder why only 11 percent of Americans have confidence in Congress? Lawmakers need to get their act together and focus on the big picture. It’s the economy, stupid! A healthy Main Street means healthy families, health communities and a healthly economy. If legislators want to keep their jobs come November, it is time for them to start doing their job in Congress.

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California State Of Emergency Declared By Schwarzenegger Over $19 Billion Budget Gap

July 29, 2010

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency over the state’s finances on Wednesday, raising pressure on lawmakers to negotiate a state budget that is more than a month overdue and will need to close a $19 billion shortfall.

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Accellera Announces Election of Officers for 2010/11

July 29, 2010

Shishpal Rawat, Chair; Dennis Brophy, Vice-Chair; Stan Krolikoski, Secretary; Yatin Trivedi, Treasurer

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HuffPost Innovators Series: Shutterstock, Mobius Technologies, KOR Water

July 29, 2010

In our latest edition of the HuffPost Innovators series, we’re highlighting companies that have some creative solutions to problems big and small. One firm is dedicated to offering literally trillions of shopping options to buyers of men’s shirts, and two of the firms are hoping that BP and the U.S. government will use their products to clean up the Gulf oil spill. To submit an innovative entrepreneur, startup or established company, click “ADD A SLIDE” below and upload a short description and picture of the founder or business leader you’d like to nominate. (Note: Please skip the marketing jargon and keep your descriptions short.) If your story is compelling, a HuffPost staffer will contact you to learn more about your story. (Check out the first and second editions of our Innovators series.) Which company is the most innovative? Check out the latest edition of the HuffPost Innovators series below:

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Citigroup Will Pay SEC $75 Million To Settle Subprime Charges

July 29, 2010

WASHINGTON — Banking titan Citigroup Inc. is paying $75 million to settle civil charges that it misled investors about its potential losses from subprime mortgages as the housing bust hit in 2007. The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement with Citigroup on Thursday. It said the company repeatedly made misleading statements in calls with analysts and regulatory filings about the extent of its holdings tied to high-risk mortgages. The bank had said the exposure was $13 billion or less. The SEC said it exceeded $50 billion. Citigroup earned $2.7 billion in the second quarter of this year. So the penalty represents less than 3 percent of its net income from April through June. The settlement marked the second time in weeks that the agency reached an agreement on punitive action against a major Wall Street firm in connection with the financial crisis. Earlier this month, Goldman Sachs & Co. agreed to pay $550 million to settle civil fraud charges that it sold mortgage investments without telling buyers that the securities had been crafted with input from a client that was betting on them to fail. Citigroup was one of the hardest-hit banks during the financial crisis. It received $45 billion from the $700 billion financial bailout – among the largest of government rescues. A current and a former Citi executive also settled charges with SEC. Former Chief Financial Officer Gary Crittenden agreed to pay a $100,000 civil penalty. The former head of investor relations, Arthur Tildesley Jr., agreed to pay $80,000. Tildesley now is the head of cross marketing at the company. New York-based Citigroup, Crittenden and Tildesley neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s charges. But they did agree to refrain from future violations of the securities laws. “We are pleased that we have reached agreement with the SEC to put this matter concerning certain 2007 disclosures behind us, and that the SEC is not charging Citi or any individual with intentional or reckless misconduct,” the company said in a statement. SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement that Citigroup boasted of its superior ability to reduce its subprime exposure, even in the fall of 2007 as the subprime mortgage market quickly weakened “In fact, billions more in … subprime exposure sat on its books undisclosed to investors,” he said. “The rules of financial disclosure are simple – if you choose to speak, speak in full and not in half-truths.” Of the $45 billion that Citigroup received from the government bailout, $25 billion was converted to a government ownership stake in the company last summer. The bank repaid the other $20 billion in December. The government has said it will sell the $25 billion in stock by the end of 2010. The SEC said in its lawsuit that Citigroup left out two categories of assets tied to subprime mortgages when it reported its exposure of $13 billion. The company didn’t disclose until November 2007 that it had more than $40 billion of additional exposure from those categories, the SEC said. By then, the value of those assets had declined. The SEC also said that Crittenden and Tildesley were repeatedly given information about the full extent of Citigroup’s potential losses from subprime mortgage securities.

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Video: Harvey Says Consol Missed Estimates on Acquisition: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — J. Brett Harvey, chief executive officer of Consol Energy Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s July Hyman about his company’s second-quarter performance. Net income decreased to $66.7 million, or 29 cents a share, from $113.3 million, or 62 cents, a year earlier, Pittsburgh-based Consol said today. The company was forecast to earn 65 cents, according to the average of eight analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Veteran Brand Marketing Executive Kip Knight Joins NetBase Board of Directors

July 29, 2010

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA–(Marketwire – July 29, 2010) –   NetBase , the Insight Discovery Company, announced that Kip Knight was elected to NetBase’s board of directors at their meeting today.

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Inder Sidhu: World’s Most Interesting Intern Talks "Doing Both"

July 29, 2010

This is a guest post by Greg Justice, the World’s Most Interesting Intern. It is cross-posted from Cisco.com: The Platform . “Always read something that will make you look good if you die in the middle of it.” –P.J. O’Rourke Trust me: if you pick up a copy of Inder Sidhu’s ( @indersidhu ) New York Times best-seller, Doing Both , you will look good…really good…while reading it. But don’t take my word for it, check this interview with the man himself. I liked doing this interview and I’d like to do more. If you are also a Cisco executive who has a current New York Times best-selling book , I’d love to interview you as well. Get in touch with me via Twitter @gregjustice . Or, fellow interns and readers, if you have other suggestions for people within Cisco you’d like me to interview, please let me know. And, in case there are any newbies in the group, I am The World’s Most Interesting Intern (click to watch ALL MY VIDEOS!), though challengers abound (see below for this week’s top intern response). These GMDD interns, coming straight out the ‘Burgh, have formally launched their campaign of usurpation: Cross-posted from Cisco.com: The Platform.

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Dan Dorfman: Gold Shines, But Media Sees Rust

July 29, 2010

Super sports feats — like running the four-minute mile, winning the triple crown or slamming four home runs in a single baseball game — are certain to achieve glowing media coverage. Not so, a similar Hercules-like investment feat by gold, which has been on a rampage, shooting up about 235% in the past nine years, 100% in the past five years and 40% in the past three years. It’s also up again this year, trading at around $1,164, versus its 2009 close of $1,087.50. Despite these impressive sprints, some media outlets remain skeptical. In brief, they’ve turned cold on go-go gold. Last October, for example, I did a piece in which a number of precious metals pros raised questions about a Wall Street Journal story, which had just described gold in a non-hedged headline as a “lousy investment.” At the time, the yellow metal was trading in the mid-$900s. It was one of the paper’s bumbling moments as gold subsequently shot up about 35%, climbing last month to an all-time high of about $1,265 an ounce. Now, another media gold critic has popped up, CNBC anchor Maria Bartiroma, who told viewers last week that it’s time to unload the metal. She may be right, of course, but the facts and some precious metals trackers suggest her advice is as sound as that of the WSJ . “A contrary indicator and probably very bullish for the metal” is how Bartiroma’s advice is viewed by Mark Leibovit, a long-time gold tracker and editor of the on-line VR Gold Letter in Sedona, Ariz. That doesn’t mean that he thinks it’s up, up and away for gold, which recently fell more than $100 an ounce, amid some strengthening in the Euro and the dollar, no significant outbreak of new European debt woes, deflationary worries, and a pickup in the U.S. economy. To the contrary, Leibovit sees the possibility that gold could be vulnerable over the near term to a drop to about $1,100 an ounce during the usual summer lull at which point, he says, “I would pile in.” With commodities on the upswing, such as oil, copper and aluminum, Leibovit holds out the rise as a sign the gold correction could, in fact, be over and that “maybe it’s ready to take off again.” If so, Leibovit, who is convinced gold is in the midst of a 20-year up cycle and has made a series of sparkling up and down and down gold calls in recent years, believes the metal could soon climb to between $1,220 and $1,230, which he would construe as a prelude to a further run to the $1,320-$1,330 range over the next few weeks. A catalyst for such a rise, as he sees it, would be a reversal in the recent strength of the dollar and Euro, both of which, he argues, are in significant downtrends. Yet other pluses are said to be growing economic uncertainty and the mushrooming lack of faith in currencies, the latest being those of Hungary and Ireland. “Governments are playing with money, they’re printing like crazy and everybody knows it,” Leibovit says. “The wind is at gold’s back,” he tells me, “And I think a price of $3,000, $4,000 or $5,000 is just a few years away. That’s not a pipe dream, but common sense reality.” Leibovit’s favorite gold plays are two exchange-traded funds — one traded under the symbol GDX for larger gold stocks and the other, GDXJ for smaller stocks. Well known global money manager Jim Rogers is also at odds with Bartiroma, as are the world’s central banks. “I own gold and I hope I’m smart enough and alert to buy more if it drops,” Rogers says. Meanwhile, central banks became a net buyer of gold last year for the first time in 20 years, a trend which has spilled over into 2010. In the first quarter, for example, Russia fattened its gold reserves by more than 25 metric tons, while the Phillipines boosted added 10 metric tons. In addition, China, the world’s largest producer, is believed to be quietly adding large quantities to its reserves. Yet another gold plus, according to Frank Holmes, CEO of Texas-based U.S. Global Investors, is diminishing supply. Gold mine output, he observes, is set to decline both in 2010 and 2011 after rising in 2009. He also points to strong investment demand. Jeffrey Nichols, managing director of American Precious Metals Advisors in Cortland Manor, N.Y., cites a number of reasons why he believes the price trend in gold is unmistakably up. Among them: Expectations of ongoing inflationary monetary policies. Continued sovereign risks in Europe. Strong Chinese demand, a reflection of its improving economy. A resumption of strong buying interest in India, especially with the wedding and festival seasons coming up shortly and continued positive central bank buying. Nichols figures gold will top $1,300 by year end and balloon to $2,000 to $3,000 in the next two to three years. Roseland Capital LLC, a major dealer in gold bars and gold coins in Santa Monica, Ca., offers an historical perspective, noting that over the years gold prices have typically moved higher during the last four to five months of the year, with an average gain in this period of 7% to 8%. Several brokerages have also been bitten by the gold bug, what with Credit Suisse, UBS and CIBC World Markets all raising their 2010 and 2011 price targets. It all sounds pretty positive for gold — and it is — but a word of caution: the volatile metal can tumble big time at any time. For example, one study has shown a $10,000 investment made in gold in June, 30, 1980, would have dwindled to $4,776 by June 30, 1985. “I get no respect,” was the favorite line of the late comedian, Rodney Dangerfield. Media blasts notwithstanding, the bottom line here is that gold, widely thought of as a safe-haven investment, at least at this juncture, clearly merits respect. What do you think? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com

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Video: Sharga Sees `Slim Chances’ of Recovery for U.S. Housing: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Rick Sharga, senior vice president for marketing at RealtyTrac Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton about U.S. foreclosure filings. Foreclosures climbed in three-quarters of U.S. metropolitan areas in the first half as high unemployment left many homeowners unable to pay their mortgages, according to the Irvine, California-based mortgage-data company. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Jacob Lew, OMB Nominee, Got $900K Citigroup Bonus After Bailout

July 29, 2010

President Obama’s choice to be the government’s chief budget officer received a bonus of more than $900,000 from Citigroup Inc. last year — after the Wall Street firm for which he worked received a massive taxpayer bailout.

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GOP Filibusters Small Business Bill After Criticizing Dems For Delay

July 29, 2010

For several days now, Senate Republicans have ridiculed their Democratic counterparts for prioritizing campaign finance legislation over a bill that would benefit small businesses, arguing that Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) was putting electoral advantages over jobs for everyday people. On Tuesday, the DISCLOSE Act failed to get the needed votes for cloture, in the process providing the Senate the time needed to move on to other business. But when leadership brought a revised version of the small business bill to the floor on Thursday morning, they were met with united Republican opposition. Despite complaining about the delay in consideration, Republicans filibustered the measure by a vote of 58 (in favor of cloture) to 42 (against). GOP leadership argued that it wasn’t against the aims of the bill per se. They objected mainly to Reid’s refusal to allow consideration of amendments to the legislation. “It’s not going to die,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell spokesman Don Stewart, who noted that another vote could be held as early as today. “We just want to have amendments considered. They made a start, allowing three — so we’re making progress.” But as the GOP noted when chastising the consideration of DISCLOSE, the window for considering legislation is close to closing. As it stands now, Democrats are set to put energy legislation on the legislative calendar Friday and consider the nomination of Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court next week. After that, they will head out of town for August recess. Allowing a lengthy amendment process could derail the remainder of what the party was hoping to consider. The other major tenet of GOP criticism is that that the bill, which has been under consideration since late June, has moved far away from its original conception. Speaking on the floor, McConnell bemoaned the fact that “over a billion dollars in agriculture spending” has been added to the text. That said, there are fairly substantive bipartisan components to the legislation, which would eliminate capital gains taxes for investment in small firms, create a Small Business Lending Fund to underwrite loan through community banks and create a credit initiative for small business to help meet state budget shortfalls. Reid, moreover, has offered the chance to consider several GOP amendments already, and could well open the window for more. The drama, which seems likely to extend throughout the day, is not only a reflection of just how ground-down the procedural elements of the Senate have become. It also shows how difficult it has been for Democrats to push forward on economic recovery — which, in concept, has bipartisan support but always seems to come up a bit short when it comes to a roll call. “Eighty-one percent of the jobs lost in America are from small business,” said Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.). “So when the other side complains and complains and just flaps and flaps all day long about it’s a jobless recovery, we put a bill on the floor to creates jobs for small business and they say no… They can color it, paint it any way they want, that’s what it was.”

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The Most Successful Business Power Couples (PHOTOS)

July 29, 2010

These days successful celebrity marriages are rare gems. But throw in a thriving multimillion-dollar company and add a hefty dose of public scrutiny and things become even more complicated. The tales of power couple splits are legion. In June, Al and Tipper Gore, a brand in their own right, announced that they were separating after 40 years together, reported the Daily News . In October, Dodgers owner Frank McCourt fired his estranged wife (now ex-wife) Jamie McCourt from her position as team CEO of the Dodgers. According to ESPN , Jamie and Frank McCourt took almost 30 years to build a billion-dollar empire together. But the successful power couples have found their own ways to make it work. From Alan Greenspan and Andrea Mitchell, who bonded over a dry economic text on their first date, to Ben Trott and Mena Trott, the high school sweethearts who created the blog software empire of Six Apart Media, there’s no one way to make a power couple last.

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Video: Ahuja Says 4G Network Will ‘Democratize’ Wireless: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Sanjiv Ahuja, chief executive officer of LightSquared, talks with Bloomberg’s Sheila Dharmarajan about LightSquared’s plan to launch a 4th generation wireless broadband service and the outlook for telecommunication companies. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Tony Schwartz: Tony Hayward Is the Identified Patient

July 29, 2010

In psychology, the term “identified patient” refers to a family member — often a child or a teenager — who acts out and then gets scapegoated for behavior that’s really just a predictable response to the stress of dealing with a dysfunctional family. Tony Hayward, now the former CEO of BP, is noxious and repugnant for all the obvious reasons. But Hayward is also BP’s identified patient. It’s true he wanted his privileged, aristocratic life back, even in the midst of the environmental catastrophe his company caused. It’s true he wouldn’t give up yachting on the weekends, even at the height of the crisis. It’s true that he was way out of his depth dealing with the disaster for which he was ultimately responsible. Hayward misbehaved by saying what he felt. But is there any reason to believe he is appreciably worse as an executive than any of his colleagues? He did spend nearly 30 years rising steadily through the ranks at BP, and he was the guy who reached the top. Hayward was thrown overboard so that BP has someone to blame, and doesn’t have to look at the deeper dysfunctions of an organization that chose him as CEO in the first place. It’s exactly what happened at so many banks during the subprime crisis, when they needed sacrificial lambs to appease their critics. BP’s mid-level employees have done a better job than Hayward at putting a caring face on the company in its tv ads. This morning I watched Fred Lemond, head of the cleanup efforts, tell me three times over the course of ten minutes that BP will be there till the last drop of oil is gone. Before that, it was Darryl Willis, head of claims for the oil spill, explaining in his Louisiana drawl why he and BP are committed to working around the clock to assure that every innocent victim of the crisis gets reimbursed for their losses. “Folks were talking about paying claims in 30 to 60 days, and I knew that was going to be about 30 days too long,” Willis told a reporter. “We needed to get people’s claims paid as quickly as possible.” These are the sorts of things we want to believe about the leaders and the companies that operate in our communities. Unfortunately, the evidence suggests that BP’s ads are far more about damage control and public relations than they are about real concern and prompt action. BP has paid out only a fraction of the claims it has received. On Tuesday, NBC ran a story quoting a series of small businesspeople describing their frustration in trying to get losses reimbursed by BP. Even where claims were paid, recipients got only a fraction of what they sought. The bigger issue here is the myopic worldview of so many executives who run large public companies. It isn’t sufficient any longer to say their only responsibility is to their shareholders, particularly when those shareholders are mostly short-term speculators, who buy in and out of their companies. We need CEOs and senior executives willing to be reflective — to ask themselves at least three critical questions about any significant strategic choice they face: 1. How will this decision add longer-term value not just to the company, but also to the larger community we serve? 2. What are the potential costs of this decision to any of our constituencies, and am I doing enough to mitigate them? 3. Is this a decision that reflects me operating at my best? Great leaders are characterized by a big view — the broadest possible perspective on the effects of their actions, and the constituencies they influence. The world’s biggest companies now have the power and reach of large countries, and a corresponding need to think beyond their own borders. It’s all well and good that Tony Hayward is finally gone. The deeper problem is the system that produced him.

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Rebecca Harrington: HuffPost Thursdays: Meetup to Talk About the News

July 29, 2010

This week marks the inaugural session of HuffPost Thursdays, a Meetup to talk about the news. While we want everybody to shape the tone and style of their local Meetup, the editors here at HuffPost would love to offer some guidance. In order to make the discussion as fulfilling as possible, we thought we might suggest some topics for you to think about. It has been a very interesting week for news, so hopefully these links will make for good conversation starters: Wikileaks, a shadowy media organization dedicated to government transparency, leaked scores of government documents about the War in Afghanistan to varied reactions. It was the 100th day of the oil spill. Elena Kagan got the go ahead from the Senate Judiciary committee. President Obama signed the financial Reform Bill . Shirley Sherrod was fired and rehired . In Tech news, Facebook got its 500 millionth member , Google might have a Facebook competitor and facebook ‘questions’ launched We hope you guys have a great Meetup. We look forward to hearing what you come up with. Please email us with pictures, comments, and summaries of what you discussed.

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Video: David Evans Discusses Cuomo Probe on Life Insurers: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s David Evans talks about New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s fraud probe into the life insurance industry. Cuomo’s office subpoenaed Prudential Financial Inc. and MetLife Inc. for information about profits on death benefits retained from the families of deceased policyholders including military personnel. Cuomo’s investigation was prompted by a Bloomberg Markets magazine report and follows a review by the New York State Insurance Department. Evans speaks with Margaret Brennan and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness”. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: David Evans Discusses Cuomo Probe on Life Insurers: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s David Evans talks about New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s fraud probe into the life insurance industry. Cuomo’s office subpoenaed Prudential Financial Inc. and MetLife Inc. for information about profits on death benefits retained from the families of deceased policyholders including military personnel. Cuomo’s investigation was prompted by a Bloomberg Markets magazine report and follows a review by the New York State Insurance Department. Evans speaks with Margaret Brennan and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness”. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Pimco’s Kashkari Discusses U.S. Entitlement Programs: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Neel Kashkari, head of new investment initiatives at Pacific Investment Management Co. and former head of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, discusses the impact of entitlement programs on the federal budget deficit and the outlook for the economy. Kashkari speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Westfield Board of Directors Selects New CEO and President

July 29, 2010

WESTFIELD CENTER, OH–(Marketwire – July 29, 2010) –  Mr. Robert J. Joyce, Chair of Westfield Group, announced today that the Board of Directors has completed its succession planning efforts to identify the next Group Leader and Chief Executive Officer.

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Westfield Board of Directors Selects New CEO and President

July 29, 2010

WESTFIELD CENTER, OH–(Marketwire – July 29, 2010) –  Mr. Robert J. Joyce, Chair of Westfield Group, announced today that the Board of Directors has completed its succession planning efforts to identify the next Group Leader and Chief Executive Officer.

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Buffett’s Dairy Queen Fights To Stop Rival From Selling Frozen Yogurt ‘Blizz’

July 29, 2010

International Dairy Queen Inc, the ice-cream company owned by the billionaire investor’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc, has asked a court to stop a southern California rival from selling a frozen yogurt with a name similar to Blizzard, its biggest-selling menu item. Yogubliz Inc had on May 17 filed a lawsuit seeking an order that would “eliminate any doubt” its sale of Blizzberry and Blizz Frozen Yogurt products did not infringe any Dairy Queen trademark and was not likely to confuse customers.

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Buffett’s Dairy Queen Fights To Stop Rival From Selling Frozen Yogurt ‘Blizz’

July 29, 2010

International Dairy Queen Inc, the ice-cream company owned by the billionaire investor’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc, has asked a court to stop a southern California rival from selling a frozen yogurt with a name similar to Blizzard, its biggest-selling menu item. Yogubliz Inc had on May 17 filed a lawsuit seeking an order that would “eliminate any doubt” its sale of Blizzberry and Blizz Frozen Yogurt products did not infringe any Dairy Queen trademark and was not likely to confuse customers.

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Video: Hill Says Metro Bank Strategy Based on Customer Service

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Vernon Hill, co-founder of Metro Bank, talks about the opening of the bank’s first branch today. Metro is the first new U.K. consumer bank in more than a century. He spoke with Bloomberg’s Andrea Catherwood yesterday.

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Video: Bloomberg’s Salas, McKee on Fed Transparency, Bollinger: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Caroline Salas and Michael McKee discuss transparency of the Federal Reserve and the outlook for the board of the New York Fed, which Columbia University President Lee Bollinger will chair next year. They speak with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Columbia’s Lee Bollinger Discusses State of Journalism: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University who will become chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s board next year, talks about the state of the journalism industry. Bollinger speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Kimmitt Says U.S. Needs Favorable Corporate Tax Policy: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Former Deputy U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt talks about the need for favorable U.S. corporate tax policy to attract foreign investments. Kimmitt, speaking with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness,” also discusses the U.S. economy and growth outlook. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Raciti Says Social Gaming Industry Has ‘Tremendous Legs’: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Robert Raciti, founder of Raciti Capital Advisors, discusses the growth in social media and the outlook for the industry. Raciti speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Top Ten Consumer Complaints: Consumer Federation of America Survey

July 29, 2010

The Consumer Federation of America has come out with its list of the top ten complaints for 2009 based on a survey conducted with the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators and the North American Consumer Protection Investigators. The items on the complaint list are predictable, and underscore the pitfalls of consumers not paying close attention to the goods and services that they buy. The top ten items are:

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David Fiderer: An S.E.C. Lawsuit Does Little To Strip Away The Secrecy Surrounding Certain AIG CDOs

July 29, 2010

Thomas C. Priore had a very impressive resume . Harvard B.A., Columbia M.B.A., fourteen years of structured credit investment and origination experience, and a 76% ownership stake in Institutional Credit Partners LLC, better known as ICP. Priore was also the President and CEO of ICP, which arranged and structured about $11 billion worth of CDOs. A big chunk of that risk, about $4.3 billion, was insured by AIG , and later acquired by the New York Federal Reserve as part of Maiden Lane III. Priore’s accomplishments were truly extraordinary. He helped found ICP in August 2004 as an affiliate of The Bank of New York, which sold him a majority ownership stake in May 2006, when he was 37. In September 2006, Priore launched a $2.5 billion deal, CDO Triaxx Prime CDO 2006-1 , which was jointly arranged with Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. AIG insured about 2/3 of that deal, or $1.8 billion, for the benefit of UBS. Later, ICP Securities acted as the sole arranger for a $5 billion deal called Triaxx Prime CDO 2006-2 . About half of that deal, $2.5 billion, was insured by AIG for the benefit of Goldman Sachs. AIG and Goldman must have been dazzled by Priore. I can’t think of any other instance when a big institution bought a billion-plus piece of a deal that wasn’t structured and arranged by a large bank or brokerage firm. Other banks take comfort from knowing that the entity behind a deal has a big capital cushion and is subject to regulatory oversight. ICP was a three-year-old company owned by one guy who lived in Chappaqua. Many CDOs are structured in ways that offer opportunities for abusive self-dealing, and the Triaxx deals were no exception. Investors in these deals did not acquire static portfolios; they were either actively managed deals, and/or deals that enabled the asset manager, ICP, to pick and choose which investments were added to the CDO portfolio during the ramp up period. The investments were subject to certain eligibility criteria, most notably that they had to be rated triple-A and they had to be residential mortgage backed securities. The senior tranches of the CDOs of were entitled to a fixed rate of return, and any excess profits, above and beyond that fixed return, went directly to ICP, which held the equity in the deals. A month ago, the S.E.C. alleged in a complaint that Priore’s firm made all sorts of fraudulent transfers for the benefit of himself and ICP, at the expense of investors in the Triaxx CDOs. The most notorious transfer, according to the S.E.C.’s complaint, was Priore’s fast-and-loose acquisition of a $1.3 billion of Bear Stearns bonds initiated in late June 2007, when Bear was seeking to raise cash to bail out two failing hedge funds . Priore had agreed to purchase the bonds for the Triaxx CDOs, but later decided assign the purchased assets to a different investment account managed by ICP. Shortly thereafter, Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s , within a few hours of each other, announced a series of downgrades on a relative handful of subprime bond issues. Those downgrades spooked the market, and sent prices of the mortgage bonds downward. So in August 2007, Priore arranged a series of unauthorized forward sales of the Bear mortgage bonds to the Triaxx CDOs, which acquired the assets at higher-than-current-market prices. The S.E.C.’s case does not address the more questionable attributes of the deal. What were Goldman, or UBS, or AIG thinking, when they signed on for billions in credit risk on transactions sponsored by a fledgling operation? Why did AIG, the rating agencies, and the U.S. government feel the need to transfer the Triaxx deals into Maiden Lane III? At the time of the transfer, they were still rated Aaa by Moody’ s, which downgraded the Triaxx deals to Caa levels on January 30, 2009. Ostensibly, these CDOs did not invest in subprime mortgages. But we have no way of finding out what went on, because the government still refuses to lift the veil of secrecy surrounding all CDOs, not only those acquired by the Federal Reserve. Until the government voids the nondisclosure agreements that limit public disclosure of CDO performance reports, persons far more culpable than Thomas Priore remain insulated from accountability.

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Video: BMC’s Beauchamp Sees `Good, Solid Growth’ in Europe: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Robert Beauchamp, chief executive officer of BMC Software Inc., discusses the company’s fiscal first-quarter earnings and the outlook for the company’s performance. Beauchamp speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop With Betty Liu.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Hall of Fame Beverages Announces Its New CEO

July 29, 2010

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – July 29, 2010) –  Hall of Fame Beverages, Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : HFBG ) would like to announce Steve Hendricks will become the new Chief Executive Officer (CEO) for the company. Hendricks has spent 34-years in the beverage industry managing hundreds of sales executives throughout the U.S. and developing brands as a national sales manager and Vice President of companies like Renfield Wine Company, Vintwood International Wine Brokers, and Rodney Strong Wine Estates. He is responsible for bringing these companies tens of millions of dollars in business and helped build those companies into attractive deals to buyers in the industry.

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Michael Pento: Don’t Lose Sleep over Deflation

July 29, 2010

After hearing the dire warnings of deflation that have become the standard talking points of most economists, American investors may be reaching for a bottle of Prozac. I believe that their anxiety is misplaced. Unfortunately, modern economists don’t understand what deflation is or why, in reality, we have much more to fear from inflation. Moderate deflation is actually the natural trend of a productive economy. If a producer can increase his output per unit of input, then he can afford to expand his market by lowering prices while still increasing profits. In that way, deflation allows consumers to buy items that they may not have previously afforded. It also promotes savings, which is essential for investment and capital development. Deflation is also the normal consequence of a contracting economy. In a recession, there is a reduction in the amount of goods and services available for consumption. In order to keep prices from rising (due to shrinking supply), the central bank should allow the money supply to fall in line with the reduction in output. Also, during an economic contraction, consumers put downward pressure on prices by responsibly selling assets to pay down debt. Many economists mistakenly claim that the Great Depression of the 1930s was caused by a 30% contraction in the money supply. The truth is that all depressions are caused by the reversal of a massive credit expansion. The reduction in money supply is part of a healing process that brings the overall level of prices back to a sustainable condition. Looking at today’s situation, just because we have a few months of sequential declines in CPI and PPI doesn’t mean that deflation has become a secular trend. Year-over-year (YOY) growth in the M2 money supply is 2%; therefore, since the money supply is still growing, we are experiencing inflation rather than deflation. Considering that evidence of inflation abounds, the Federal Reserve has pulled off a good trick by convincing Americans that we are about to “suffer” through a protracted period of deflation. Why have we been so easily duped? In the past ten years, the monetary base has grown from $600 billion to $2 trillion. This expansion has accompanied a rise in the price of gold from below $300/oz at the beginning of the decade to around $1,200/oz today. The price of gold is the best arbiter for a currency’s purchasing power. Therefore, gold is still telling us that inflation is eroding the value of our dollar. Other commodities, like crude oil, are telling the same story. Ten years ago, a barrel of oil was trading for $25. Today, it is $78. Since 2001, the US dollar has lost over 30% of its value against our largest trading partners and more than 7% of its value since June alone. These facts are causing the mainstream economists to wring their hands about deflation? More recently, YOY increases in the CPI, PPI, and import prices were 1.1%, 2.7%, and 4.5% respectively. Even though these YOY increases aren’t evidence of runaway inflation, they still can’t be construed as deflation. The truth is consumers should be allowed the advantages of falling prices. Aggregate hours worked are down 8% since their peak in March of 2008. Since the money supply should fall along with the decline of the number of people in the work force, price levels should be falling too. But that is not what we see today. If the monetary base continues to stagnate and banks stop lending to the government through Treasury purchases, we could see a deflationary environment sometime in the future. But given the current policy drift, that scenario appears unlikely. Even if deflation were to take hold, it would not be something to fear. Lower prices are beneficial for those who have been thrown out of work, and falling prices allow asset values to reach a level that can be sustained by the free market. The fact is that prices should currently be falling in order to reconcile the imbalances brought about by decades of profligate spending and borrowing. Deflation… I say bring it on! But that is not what is occurring today. Because of the towering level of US sovereign debt, it is inflation that remains the clear and present danger. The national debt now stands at $13.24 trillion — nearly 92% of the entire output of goods and services in the US economy this year. In its mid-session review, the OMB revised its 2011 federal budget deficit projection to $1.42 trillion, down only slightly from the $1.47 trillion estimate for this year’s deficit. Given this intractable and unsustainable level of obligations, the last thing the Fed and Administration can tolerate is to increase the burden of that debt by allowing the money supply to shrink. A reduction in the supply of money (deflation) would cause the cost of debt to rise. An increase in the purchasing power of money also means it is more difficult to acquire the new money needed to reduce debt levels. Conversely, increasing the supply of money (inflation) reduces the cost of debt. With these incentives firmly entrenched, the last thing Americans will have to “worry” about is deflation. Given the obvious mathematics, one wonders why Treasury yields remain at historic lows. The bond vigilantes are indeed in a coma. However, despite the mountain of complacency that their slumber has inspired, this golden age of E-Z financing can’t last forever. Michael Pento is the Senior Economist for Euro Pacific Capital

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KAT Exploration and Bella Viaggio, Inc. Welcome "Senior Vice President of Capital Projects" to Board of Directors

July 29, 2010

MOUNT PEARL, NEWFOUNDLAND–(Marketwire – July 29, 2010) –  KAT Exploration Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : KATX ) ( www.KATexploration.com ) and Bella Viaggio, Inc. ( OTCBB : BVIG ) are very pleased to announce that J. Wayne Pickett has agreed to join the companies as a director and ” Senior Vice President of Capital Projects.” Mr. Ken Stead, CEO, commented that “on behalf of the board of directors, we are delighted to have someone with this caliber of a geological background to oversee all the company’s projects as we move forward ever so rapidly.” All present and future geologists along with field crews will work under the direction of Mr. Pickett.

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New Bank Rules Mean Higher Fees For Customers: Wells Fargo Chief

July 29, 2010

Wells Fargo & Co. Chief Executive Officer John Stumpf said customers, not just the bank, will bear the financial burden for U.S. regulations that cover services ranging from home loans to credit cards.

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Video: Google Faces Censorship in Middle East Expansion Plans

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Heidi Couch reports on government-backed censorship in the Middle East and its impact on Google Inc.’s expansion plans in the region.

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Video: Don Yacktman Likes Viacom, ConocoPhillips, Microsoft: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Donald Yacktman, manager of the Yacktman Focused Fund, discusses the performance of Viacom Inc., ConocoPhillips and Microsoft Corp. shares and the outlook for the companies. Yacktman speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Don Yacktman Likes Viacom, ConocoPhillips, Microsoft: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Donald Yacktman, manager of the Yacktman Focused Fund, discusses the performance of Viacom Inc., ConocoPhillips and Microsoft Corp. shares and the outlook for the companies. Yacktman speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Pavel Molchanov Calls Exxon Mobil Profit `Pretty Solid’: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Pavel Molchanov, an energy analyst at Raymond James & Associates, discusses Exxon Mobil Corp.’s second-quarter profit reported today and the outlook for the company’s performance. The largest U.S. oil company said net income jumped 91 percent to $7.56 billion, or $1.60 a share, exceeding analyst estimates. Molchanov speaks with Carol Massar and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop With Betty Liu.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Pavel Molchanov Calls Exxon Mobil Profit `Pretty Solid’: Video

July 29, 2010

July 29 (Bloomberg) — Pavel Molchanov, an energy analyst at Raymond James & Associates, discusses Exxon Mobil Corp.’s second-quarter profit reported today and the outlook for the company’s performance. The largest U.S. oil company said net income jumped 91 percent to $7.56 billion, or $1.60 a share, exceeding analyst estimates. Molchanov speaks with Carol Massar and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop With Betty Liu.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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A positive outlook for the Bahamas’ property market

July 29, 2010

The Bahamas property market is gradually recovering from the effects of the global recession as US and UK buyers return to the islands.

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Goldman Sachs Bans Profanity In Emails — No More ‘Sh–ty Deals’

July 29, 2010

Goldman Sachs workers beware: expletives, like those used referring to certain now infamous mortgage deals, are no longer allowed in emails. The Wall Street Journal reports this morning that, following the lead of Citigroup and JPMorgan, Goldman has issued a company-wide ban on email profanity . Here’s the WSJ A Goldman spokeswoman said: “Of course we have policies about the use of appropriate language and we are always looking for ways to ensure that they are enforced.” The new edict–delivered verbally, of course–has left some employees wondering if the rule also applies to shorthand for expletives such as “WTF” or legitimate terms that sound similar to curses. (Check out the full piece at the WSJ .) The new mandates are likely intended to stop emails from surfacing like the internal bank messages that referred to the Timberwolf CDO as a “sh–ty deal” . In an April Congressional hearing, Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), highlighted a series of emails in which Tom Montag, a senior bank executive, appeared to rip into the quality of the complex CDO package. In the below video, Daniel Sparks, the former chief of Goldman Sachs’s mortgage department, gets grilled over the email by Sen. Levin, who uses the term ” sh–ty deal” some 12 times . WATCH: What do you think? Is Goldman’s HR department going too far?

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Toyota Recall: Automaker Pulls 412,000 Cars In U.S., Mostly Avalons

July 29, 2010

TOKYO — Toyota is recalling 412,000 passenger cars, mostly the Avalon model, in the U.S., and another 16,420 vehicles in Japan for steering problems, the automaker said Thursday. The 373,000 Avalons being recalled in the U.S. range from the 2000 model year through to 2004 and have improper casting of the steering lock bar – a component for the steering system – causing cracks to develop on the surface. In some cases, the crack can cause the lock bar to break, potentially leading to a crash if the steering wheel locks, the world’s No. 1 automaker by car sales said. No injuries have been reported from the accidents that may be caused by the defect, it said. Recalled in Japan for a similar problem are 6,750 vehicles, called Pronard, built from February 2000 through January 2004, Toyota and the Japanese transport ministry said. There have been three reported problems linked to the defect but no accidents in Japan, the ministry said. Also being recalled in the U.S. are 39,000 Lexus luxury model LX 470s for the 2003-2007 model years because of a steering shaft problem, which is different from the Avalon steering problem, according to Toyota. That problem affects 9,670 vehicles in Japan, two Land Cruiser models, the ministry said. One problem has been reported but no accidents are suspected of being linked to the defect, it said. Toyota said it will fix the Avalon steering problem by replacing a part called the steering column bracket. The problem with the LX 470 will be fixed by replacing a component in the steering shaft called a snap ring. Customers affected by the recalls will begin receiving mailings in August instructing them to take their cars to their dealer for the repairs, Toyota said. The latest recall comes on top of some 8.5 million vehicles that have been recalled around the world by Toyota Motor Corp. since October for a spate of problems, including faulty floor mats, defective gas pedals and braking software glitches. The recall crisis has damaged Toyota’s reputation for quality and customer service. Toyota executives have repeatedly vowed to put customers first. But it has been criticized as lagging in its response to quality lapses, and was slapped with a record $16.4 million fine in the United States for responding too slowly when the recall crisis erupted. Earlier this month, Toyota announced a recall of some 270,000 vehicles, mostly Lexus cars, for engine problems, dealing a further blow to its image because Lexus is its top-end luxury brand. Toyota faces more than 200 lawsuits in the U.S. tied to accidents involving defective automobiles, the lower resale value of Toyota vehicles, and a drop in its stock value. “Toyota is continuing to work diligently to address safety issues wherever they arise and to strengthen our global quality assurance operations so that Toyota owners can be confident in the safety of their vehicles,” said Steve St. Angelo, Toyota chief quality officer for North America. Owners of Avalon and Lexus cars are being notified next month, being asked to bring in their cars to nearby Toyota and Lexus dealers for a free fix, according to Toyota. “Our engineers have thoroughly investigated this issue and have identified a robust and durable remedy that will help prevent this condition from affecting drivers in the future,” said Mark Templin, group vice president and general manager of Lexus. ___ AP Auto Writer Dan Strumpf contributed to this report from New York.

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David Bolchover: Tony Hayward and Those CEO Myths

July 29, 2010

The exiting BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward has become rich as a time-serving employee, working his way up a huge corporation over three decades, profiting from the brand and infrastructure of a company that was created three years before he was born. Then he was made a scapegoat for an oil spill from one of the company’s several thousand wells, a well he had probably never visited and maybe never knew existed. Such is the life of a chief executive of a large corporation. The eulogies and vilifications are flip sides of the same coin, and are founded on the misconception that the chief executive of a longstanding global company with tens of thousands of employees, hundreds of senior managers and an army of expensive external consultants, has anywhere near the dramatic impact we are led to believe. The myth of CEO (chief executive) omnipotence and its twin misconception, the myth of rare executive talent, cost us dear and must be challenged vigorously and urgently. It is after all the population at large which owns large public companies through pensions, savings and other investments, and therefore has to pay for the exorbitant salaries that are a direct consequence of these myths. However, these expensive myths will continue to be stoutly defended by a number of vested interests, such as remuneration consultants, headhunters and the institutional shareholders who invest in public companies on our behalf, and whose senior executives also owe their wealth to the exact same fallacies. The principal beneficiaries of the status quo are of course the CEOs themselves, together with those corporate hopefuls who aspire to be CEOs in the future. These myths secure life-transforming and life-long wealth for them if and when they get to the top. After all, in a market where the supply of a given entity is deemed to be scarce and precious, its price (in this case, its salary) inevitably rises. Moreover, as these CEOs are in such a powerful negotiating position before they assume responsibilities, they can guarantee through contractual obligations that their sky-high compensation, in the form of golden handshakes and pension entitlements, will continue even if their term in office is deemed a failure. Thus, the heavily criticised Hayward picks up around $1.6 million on his way out, with a promised pension pot reportedly in excess of $16 million, ensuring an annual retirement windfall of around $1 million that will keep him in the lap of luxury for many years. Many years, no doubt, in which several future BP chief executives will become seriously wealthy by managing to beat thousands of equally qualified candidates to find themselves at the top of a massive company, only to then wield insignificant impact on its performance. Hayward had two full years as chief executive of BP – 2008 and 2009. In those two years, he received around $11 million in salary, cash bonus and share awards. The board defended both annual payouts on the basis that Hayward had boosted “operational performance”, despite the company performing worse than its competitors in terms of total shareholder return in 2008, and reporting a 45% profit fall in 2009. Besides, in an industry where investments traditionally take a long time to bear fruit, it is hard to accept that Hayward himself could be held personally responsible for any alleged improvements. Under his leadership, the company adopted cost-cutting measures throughout the organisation, similar to those overseen by countless chief executives, past and present. No rare talent necessary there, just bog-standard corporate administration. After the spill, he made several notorious gaffes, such as saying he wanted “his life back” after eleven people had lost theirs due to the initial accident, and thousands more lost their livelihoods as a consequence. One of the key attributes of any leader of a large organisation must be diplomacy, to say the right thing as the figurehead. Tact is a trait possessed by numerous people, for example by seasoned foreign diplomats and PR consultants earning a relative pittance. So why have all those millions come out of our pockets and been given to Tony Hayward? We need to draw broader lessons from the Tony Hayward saga. It’s not just the money that is being unjustly taken from the population as a result of the myths surrounding executives. What signal does it send to society when corporate leaders become hugely wealthy without themselves taking on any personal risk or creating anything new? What damage does that message do to innovation and entrepreneurship? Why not forget about setting up that business, and just try to become another corporate leader, exploiting and suffering from external events, and becoming rich, no matter what? David Bolchover’s latest book is “Pay Check: Are Top Earners Really Worth It?”

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