December 2010

The New York Times ran a fascinating piece this week about professional part-time work in the Netherlands . It seems the Dutch have had more success than most of us in finding ways to balance work and family life. Most interesting to me is that their workplace flexibility movement isn’t just focused on women: Part-time work has ceased being the prerogative of women with little career ambition, and become a powerful tool to attract and retain talent – male and female — in a competitive Dutch labor market…There are part-time surgeons, part-time managers and part-time engineers…with one in three men now either working part time or squeezing a full-time job into four days, the “daddy day” has become part of Dutch vocabulary… A daddy day! What a concept, right? Actually, what I find most striking is that this sounds so foreign to us. The idea that a man could work 30 hours a week, be a successful doctor, lawyer, or business leader and still take one day off to hang out with his kids simply isn’t in our frame of reference. But why not? As the Dutch have found, offering employees flexible work schedules makes them more productive, not less. “Our part-time experience has taught us that you can organize work in a rhythm other than nine-to-five,” said Pia Dijkstra, a member of Parliament and well-known former news anchor…”The next generation,” she added, is “turning our part-time culture from a weakness into a strength.” Many Dutch companies — and it should be said, a growing number of American companies, too — already know that workplace flexibility is one of the best ways to attract and retain top talent. Flexible jobs keep employees happy, stem turnover, and stop parents from dropping out of the workplace altogether. This is not to say that part-time work is the only way. For some people a “daddy day” would make a big difference; for others it simple wouldn’t work. But there are a thousand different routes to flexibility , whether it’s telecommuting, taking time off and then re-entering the workforce, or just allowing people to set their own schedules. It’s important to note that this isn’t about working less — it’s about letting every person find a method that makes their work fit with their life. In fact, flexible work hours don’t always mean working less. At Dutch Microsoft headquarters in Schiphol, Ineke Hoekman, head of human resources and mother of two, used to work part time. But in 2008, when the company moved into a space without designated work stations and employees were told to work “anywhere, any time,” she gradually went back to full time. Her team lives with Friday conference calls from her son’s soccer practice. Aspects of this “new world of work” concept have been exported to other Microsoft offices, including Norway, France and Australia — though not yet to U.S. headquarters. So why not? Just about every person I know is sick and tired of not being able to balance the needs of work and family. So if there are workplace innovations that can give us more time with our families and make our businesses more productive, why aren’t we all doing it? Of course, many of us already are doing it. Over the past decade, the phrase “workplace flexibility” had entered the American lexicon, and thousands of businesses have embraced flexible workplace practices . But when we hear “workplace flexibility,” too many of us still think only about moms. In fact, workplace flexibility is something that can help all of us — moms, dads, people caring for aging parents — anyone. As President Obama said at the White House Forum on Workplace Flexibility : Workplace flexibility isn’t just a women’s issue. It’s an issue that affects the well-being of our families and the success of our businesses. It affects the strength of our economy — whether we’ll create the workplaces and jobs of the future we need to compete in today’s global economy. I say it’s about time every American employee has a chance to find their own flexibility, whatever that may be. Now if you’ll excuse me, it’s time to sign off — today’s a self-imposed daddy day.

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Rex Flexibility: The Dutch Have Daddy Days — Why Not Us?

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St. Elias Mines Ltd. Reviews 2010

by on December 31, 2010

From
Marketwire – Management Changes:

2011 Augers Well for St. Elias – Growth Projects in Peru and B.C.

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St. Elias Mines Ltd. Reviews 2010

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Video: Burns Says Insider Trading to Be Priority at SEC in 2011

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Douglas Burns, a formal federal prosecutor, talks about possible U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigations in 2011. Burns also discusses the SEC’s probe of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Toyota Motor Corp.’s vehicle recalls. He talks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Feinberg Says Half of BP Fund May Cover Oil Spill Claims: Video

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Kenneth Feinberg, administrator of the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, talks about payments made from BP Plc’s $20 billion compensation fund to cover claims resulting from the company’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Feinberg says he anticipates half that amount will be sufficient to cover claims for economic losses. Feinberg also discuss Wall Street compensation. (Source: Bloomberg)

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For Unemployed, New Jobs Come With A Catch

December 31, 2010

A new study of American workers displaced by the recession sheds light on the sacrifices a large number have made to find work. Many, it turns out, had to switch careers and significantly reduce their living standards.

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Video: Shah Says Gap, BJ’s, SAP May Be Targets in 2011

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Sachin Shah, a special situations and merger arbitrage strategist at Capstone Global Markets LLC, talks about CVS Caremark Corp.’s agreement to buy the Medicare Part D unit of Universal American Financial Corp. for about $1.25 billion and the outlook for mergers and acquisitions in 2011. Shah, speaking with Melissa Long on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line,” says RadioShack Corp., Gap Inc. and BJ’s Wholesale Club Inc. may be private equity targets in 2011 and SAP AG could be acquired by Microsoft Corp. or Hewlett-Packard Corp. (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Steven Bulwa: The Media Has Failed Us

December 31, 2010

Financial media is not helping us become better informed or better investors. These outlets devote too much of their airtime to forwarding partisan propaganda rather than informing or entertaining us. The numbers suggest media is actually misinforming us and turning us into bad investors. The findings of a recent study, Misinformation and the 2010 Election from the University of Maryland’s World Public Opinion, show that 9 in 10 voters in the 2010 election believe they encountered information that was misleading or false, with 56% saying this occurred frequently. The study also concludes that those who watched Fox News almost daily were significantly more likely than those who never watched it to believe misinformation. The bad news for Fox News viewers is that merely watching the channel appears to be toxic. Most voters believed a few whoppers during the 2010 election cycle. But daily watchers of FOX News believed more misinformation than everyone else. Numbers Don’t Lie The majority of retail (casual) investors use mutual funds and ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) to invest in the markets. Fund flows (deposits vs. withdrawals) are generally regarded as contrary indicators. This is a component of a broader series of indicators classified as investor sentiment that provide some insight into future directions of the market. The basic principle being that when many investors are bullish the market is more likely to go down and conversely a higher level of bearishness or negative sentiment indicates the market is likely to make a move higher. TrimTabs Investment Research reports on these fund flows and in a recent report stated : We observed that equity prices tend to fall after equity exchange-traded funds (ETFs) rake in large sums of money. Conversely, the market tends to rise after equity ETFs post heavy outflows. The report then issues this conclusion : We have two explanations for the strongly negative correlation between equity ETF flows and future market returns. First, ETFs are traded mostly by retail investors and day traders. These are the least informed and most emotional market participants–the ones most likely to lose money over time. Second, we suspect hedge funds use ETFs when liquidity dries up. Hedge funds were forced to close individual stock positions during the credit crisis, so they bought equity ETFs instead. Equity ETFs posted large outflows in 2009, when liquidity improved. These concepts are not really as complicated as they seem. It’s Economics 101. When demand outstrips supply, prices go up and when supply is larger than demand, prices go down. When funds are flowing into stocks, markets rise; but at some point most people are invested and there isn’t enough uninvested capital left to drive prices higher. Whatever the internal dynamics, the retail investors are generally the last to join in a rally and their main vehicle of investment are mutual funds and ETFs so large inflows into those instruments suggests that the market is near the top. That’s how many retail investors get the timing wrong and end up losing money. Nobody likes being wrong or losing money, it makes us feel pretty lousy and reluctant to invest, starting the whole cycle all over again. This is borne out in the current rally where the retail investor is reticent to return to the markets after being burned so badly in the housing/banking crisis of 2008 – maybe one time too many in the last decade. As a result they’ll probably join in just as the rally is about to top out. As Adam Shell recently wrote in USA Today : Yet, increasingly, investors on Main Street are not playing the stock market game with confidence like they used to, mainly because the game of making money has gotten tougher and more volatile since the financial crisis. Retail investors are buying fewer stocks. They are paring back on stocks and stock funds they already own. Instead, they’re moving into safer investments, like cash and bonds. “Investors are on strike,” says Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Mutual Funds. Investors Should Turn Off Their TVs, Not Stop Investing With the proliferation of financial media and its informed commentary I would hope investor habits would be improving. But the numbers tell us they aren’t. The media is in fact complicit in perpetuating the retail investor’s position as contrary indicator, often referring to those contrary data points in assessing the market’s direction. In Rick Santelli’s famous rant on CNBC he called overburdened home owners struggling with their mortgages “losers” while using his podium to forward his political agendas. He is now credited with being the “lightening rod” of creation for the Tea Party movement. Perhaps he should have used his obviously influential media position to warn people of the perils of the housing bubble, helping them avoid complicated mortgage products that are hard to manage financially in the downturn that many market observers were predicting. Although I don’t blame investors for turning away from the markets after such treatment, it is the wrong decision. Markets have historically been a better investment than many other asset classes with the S&P 500 returning roughly a 7% annual rate of return . Stocks should, at the very least, be a strong component of a diversified portfolio. Instead of shying away from being burned again, investors should examine unsuccessful behavior, eliminate negative influences and improve decision making. Investment Principles for Profitable Investing Tune out the noise. Lengthen your investment time horizon. Never feel like you are missing out on a rally. Don’t panic in a selloff. History is your friend. Buy low and sell high so you can turn off your TV set to pursue activities you enjoy. I hope technology positively affects your life in 2011 and all your investments are winners. Follow Steven Bulwa on Twitter at @BulwaTech .

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David A. Dana: A Simple Approach to Preventing the Next Housing Crisis: Why We Need One, What One Would Look Like, and Why Dodd-Frank Isn’t It

December 31, 2010

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was, ostensibly, a response to the crisis in the U.S. housing market and the inter-related crisis in the market for mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”). One of the goals of the legislation, presumably, was to prevent another crisis in housing and mortgage finance. And, certainly after what we have seen in recent years, no one could question the importance of that goal. The housing crisis has deprived thousands upon thousands of Americans of not just wealth but of their homes; it has helped drive municipalities to the brink of fiscal collapse; and it has impeded the recovery of the U.S jobs market. The MBS crisis took down major financial institutions in the U.S., and almost caused a complete collapse of the financial sector. We cannot afford a repeat experience. But Dodd-Frank, even if it is implemented in the far-reaching way that some hope and think it can be, will not address a problem at the heart of the housing and MBS crisis: excessive complexity. The years running up to the implosion of the housing and MBS markets were marked by ever-increasing complexity. This complexity caused confusion and poor judgment on the part of unsophisticated home buyers and owners and supposedly sophisticated securities investors. This complexity also allowed some people and institutions to make an astonishing amount of money originating mortgages that never should have been originated and selling MBS that never should have been sold, at least at the prices they were sold. Dodd-Frank does not do the structural work of simplification we need to prevent this all from happening again once the memories of the current crises fade. Instead of Dodd-Frank, we need clear statutory reform that limits residential mortgages to a few sensible products, all girded by strict underwriting standards, and that correspondingly produces a well-ordered, transparent market in bonds or securities based on these mortgages. Other countries, most notably Denmark, have maintained a simplified, and hence much more stable, regime of residential lending and finance with reasonable costs of capital for borrowers. Moreover, it would probably be a good thing if reforms brought about lower rates of household investments in home ownership in the United States would be desirable: from a basic economics perspective, American households have long been overinvested in where they live. The approach I advocate — the simplicity approach, if you will — is admittedly politically infeasible at present, but if what is politically feasible is only Dodd-Frank, then perhaps our attention needs to most immediately focus on changing our politics and hence expanding the domain of the politically feasible. The Move to Complexity and Its Consequences At one point in time, residential lending in the United States was fairly simple, involving few parties per transaction and few instruments. Thirty year fixed rate, fully amortized mortgages were overwhelmingly the mortgage of choice; a significant down payment deposit was required; second and third mortgages were relatively uncommon, at least as part of the initial purchase transaction. In the last twenty years or so, we saw the utilization of a dizzying array of nontraditional alternatives in which rates were not fixed or only fixed for a time, principal was only partially amortized or not amortized at all, and by means of second mortgages or simply through lax underwriting standards, purchases often means little or no upfront, unborrowed cash deposit. At the same time, the number of parties involved in a single loan proliferated. Whereas once mortgages were solicited, originated and held by lenders, now those functions are typically performed by different parties. Mortgage brokers often originate mortgages, and usually sell them as fast as possible to lenders, who in turn quite often sell them again and again. Lenders very often retain servicing on loans they long ago sold. As the big servicers such as Bank of America have recently been forced to admit, the fabric of transactions surrounding a given ordinary residential mortgage can now be so complex that it is no mean feat to determine at a given point in time who exactly “owns” the mortgage. There has been a corresponding move to complexity in the MBS arena. Mortgages have been securitized for quite a long time in the United States, but until recently, almost all of the securitized mortgages were fixed rate mortgages that were originated using relatively strict FHA or Freddie Mac underwriting requirements and that enjoyed an implicit repayment guarantee of the United States. In the years immediately leading up to the implosion of the housing and mortgage finance market, we witnessed an array of new private label MBS that were much more complex than traditional MBS. The new kinds of MBS had so many tranches and permutations that you needed flow charts and advanced engineering degrees just to map them out. FHA and Freddie Mac sought to compete with private label MBS by loosening their underwriting standards and by producing more and more varied MBS products. The greater complexity in the market for mortgage instruments and in the MBS market were intertwined and reinforcing: The greater and more complex array of MBS fed demand for more borrowers, which was achieved in part by means of new, more complex loan arrangements that targeted households that could not have afforded traditional mortgages. That the housing and MBS crises were preceded by a move from simplicity to great complexity does not, by itself, mean that the complexity per se was a cause of the two crises. But complexity can operate to lead to sub-optimal decisions, as the behavioral psychology literature illustrates. Faced with a confusing array of choices, people tend to fall back on heuristic biases that do not necessarily result in the decisions that maximize their welfare. In particular, the complexity of mortgage arrangements and instruments likely made it easier for potential home owners and refinancing home owners to fall prey to “the optimism bias.” With this bias, it was too easy for many borrowers to believe that housing prices always rise (and certainly never fall) and hence that a no-money down, variable-interest rate mortgage is not just immediately tempting but also prudent. So, too, the dizzying array of MBS choices made it easier for investors to heavily invest funds that were supposed to be reserved for prudent investments, without tackling straight on the possibility that the always-rising-prices scenario might be nothing more than an historical anomaly. Swindlers flourished in the complexity and the confusion of the housing and MBS markets. The complexity of consumer choice made it easier for unscrupulous mortgage originators to target and sell vulnerable homeowners and home buyers products that they did not understand, could not afford, did not need, or were more expensive than available alternatives. The complexity of the MBS markets and its instruments allowed the originators, poolers, and sellers of MBS to take advantage of their superior information by overcharging and overselling their customers. Complexity made it easier for the MBS poolers and marketers to shop offerings among credit agencies for the best ratings. Complexity helped the credit agencies to meet the implicit demands of the MBS poolers and marketers — and hence boost their profits — because it allowed them to tell themselves the story that the offerings, which after all were too complex for them to really understand, somehow might deserve the AAA or AA ratings. Complexity also has made it harder for the government and private actors to respond sensibly to the housing and MBS crises. One plausible solution to the housing crisis would be the re-working of mortgages to reduce principal and make the mortgages more in keeping of actual market values. There are many reasons we have observed almost no loan modifications with principal reductions, but one contributing factor is the division of individual mortgages into many distinct and often adverse investment interests and the consequent difficulty of gaining approval from mortgage “owners” to significant modifications. The division of the ownership of mortgages from their servicing also has impeded loan modifications. Finally, complexity helped vested economic interests — including those making money off the poor choices home buyers and owners and securities investors make in an environment of complexity — avoid effective regulatory oversight. In the lead up to the implosion of the housing and MBS markets, federal regulators were largely passive, but when they did try to act, they received an enormous push-back from the financial industry and they quickly retreated. The financial industry’s enormous clout with both political parties and in Congress and the White House would make it difficult for even the most courageous, well-intentioned regulators try to get anything done that that industry does not favor. But complexity makes it harder for such regulators to try to get anything done, because regulators quite plausibly can be (and are) assaulted with the claim that they do not fully understand the complexities of the relevant markets and hence are not equipped to impose new rules and regulations. Indeed, in the wake of the MBS crisis, regulators had to turn for advice and counsel to the same entities that had helped create and benefited from the bubble in MBS instruments for explanations of those instruments and guidance as to what they really might be worth. The Simplicity Approach (or Why Not Follow Demark?) In a simplified mortgage and MBS market, there would be only one or two kinds of residential mortgages available, with the 30-year fixed-rate as the predominant instrument; putting twenty percent down or paying mortgage insurance requirements would be a strict requirement and not easily evaded using second mortgages; and rates among mortgages offered to borrowers thus would not be very varied. The similarity in instruments and the uniformity of the underwriting standards would not support a wide range of rates. Because only traditional, reasonable risk mortgages would be made, there would be no possibility of MBS based on nontraditional mortgages. MBS pools would be based on quite transparent instruments, and investors in MBS thus could make reasoned and reasonable investment choices. In such an environment, the bubbles we experienced and subsequent implosions would be less likely. Moreover, there are models — and not just historical ones — for such a simplified regime of mortgage finance. In Denmark, the form of residential mortgages is tightly regulated — so much so that there is really only a single mortgage rate good for virtually all new mortgages on any given day. Mortgages are financed with bonds, such that banks are able to off-load interest rate risk while retaining creditworthiness risk. The Danish system, which no less prominent an investor than George Soros has suggested as a model for the United States, was adopted in the wake of late nineteenth century housing bubbles and has proved highly effective in preventing bubbles. At the same time, the cost of capital for mortgages in Denmark compares favorably with the rest of Europe and the United States. If a simplified regime can satisfy the needs of home buyers and owners in Denmark while achieving admirable stability, why, at least in theory, can the United States not do the same? Dodd-Frank does not even come close to offering greater simplicity. It is a massive piece of legislation. The bill does not bar nontraditional mortgage instruments; it does not even require that potential home buyers be given a lucid explanation of how a plain vanilla mortgage would compare to less traditional, higher risk alternatives. Perhaps implementing regulations could require mortgage brokers to at least offer traditional mortgages to customers who can afford them, but even that modest reform seems unlikely given the clout of the financial industry. Moreover, it is hard to imagine that courts will uphold regulations that in effect re-insert into Dodd-Frank provisions Congress quite plainly removed from it as part of the process that allowed for its ultimate passage and enactment into law. Congressional intent that Dodd-Frank be limp and lax and not terribly protective of consumers is in no way admirable, but is quite plain for all to see. Dodd-Frank also does not restrict what kinds of mortgages can be securitized or how they can be securitized. It is true that Dodd-Frank may make certain mortgages riskier than before for investors by giving borrowers who feel they were sold an unsuitable mortgage some recourse against foreclosure. But if recent history teaches us anything, it is that investors in MBS sometimes can be sold on securities based on mortgages that are in fact quite risky — indeed, that in a search for a higher rate of return, they may gravitate to such investments whether they understand what they are doing or not. We can be assured the financial industry will seek to tap the ever-present yearning for higher return. The Choice-Is-Always-Good/Innovation-Is-Always-Good Objection One central objection to a simple regime of mortgage finance is that complexity is beneficial when it gives consumers (home buyers and owners and investors) greater choice and thus allows them to maximize their preferences. After all, if choice is good, isn’t more choice better? And if innovation is good, why isn’t financial innovation in mortgages and MBS good, too? Even after the recent crises, it is still commonplace for politicians, business leaders and elite commentators to opine that financial innovation is a key American comparative advantage that we must not undermine in the interest of reform. As noted above, however, more choice does not always translate into better informed, better-reasoned choice. Moreover, even if one (unrealistically) assumed that people always do maximize their own narrowly-understood welfare through more choice, the fact is that the many people are affected by other people’s choices that impact the stability of the housing market. Children who lose their family home because a parent entered into an imprudent mortgage, neighbors whose housing values plummet and basic services disappear because of foreclosures, and retirees whose pensions go underfunded because the pension fund invested in overvalued MBS all lose out as a result of other people’s choices. Perhaps in some part because housing is a domain where such externalities abound, there is in fact a long tradition of constraining individual choice and requiring the use of certain standardized forms in the area of real property law generally and in the context of mortgages in particular. What makes a mortgage a mortgage rather than an installment land contract, legally, is that mandatory rights and obligations are read into the agreement between borrower and lender whatever the parties, as a matter of their contractual intent, actually intended. Viewed in the broader swath of Anglo-American legal history, the essence of mortgage law is legal constraint on ad hoc innovation in the interest of preserving social stability and protecting the vulnerable. Indeed, as Henry Smith of Yale Law School and Thomas Merrill of Columbia Law School have argued, what arguably distinguishes the domain of property law from that of contract law is that property law insists upon a high degree of standardization and, in that sense, simplification. Smith and Merrill root property’s traditional demand of standardization in the benefits of reducing transaction costs for third parties to property transactions, but the recent housing and MBS crises suggest that this tradition can also be defended as a means of protecting parties to property transactions from the cognitive pitfalls of complexity and from the underhandedness of those who would take advantage of those pitfalls. The recent crises also underscore the wisdom of the tradition in property of constraining and overriding private party choice in the interest of preventing or overcoming excessive fragmentation of interests in real property. The Ownership Society Objection If mortgages and MBS were standardized and simplified, the average costs of borrowed money for purchase money mortgages might not climb but it is certainly possible both that (1) some buyers would be not be able to buy as expensive a home as they otherwise would have, and (2) some buyers with poor credit histories or limited income and assets would be unable to buy a home at all. With respect to the first possibility, I think the best response is, why would that bad thing? Until very recently, the average size of new U.S. homes has steadily increased as the size of the households occupying them has declined or at most remained steady. The result is more sprawl, more fossil fuels consumption, more greenhouse gas emissions, and not necessarily more happiness, as far as anyone can objectively measure happiness. Moreover, households that have invested heavily in homes are not acted in accord with standard portfolio theory, which teaches that the best way to temper financial risks is to diversify one’s investments. From this perspective, many households that sank all their available capital and committed all their anticipated earnings in a single asset — a house — would have been much better off diversifying by buying less house while investing more in their human capital (e.g. education) or other, more liquid forms of capital (bonds, stocks, life insurance). But what about people who would be left out of the housing-ownership market altogether under a regime of only traditional mortgage instruments and straightforward, reasonably strict underwriting? The ownership-society school of social policy and popular commentary teaches that by owning homes, people achieve greater personal and familial success, communities become more stable, and social ills are reduced. If ownership equals greater individual and social welfare, is not anything that reduces that rate of ownership a bad thing? Recent scholarship calls into question the necessary connection between ownership and stability and human flourishing, but even if we accept that connection, the fact is that owning a fee simple is not the only way to gain the emotional attachment and longer-term perspective that we believe is the mechanism by which “ownership” confers individual and social benefits. In the United States, there are relatively few protections for residential renters from displacement by landlords, government action, or market forces. Most available leases are one-year or month-to-month, and there are very few protections in more than a handful of locations against landlord’s decisions not to renew leases or to drastically increase rent at the time of lease renewal. If the menu of rental arrangements available to low-income households included ones that offered more of the stability that (sometimes) is offered by a fee simple while costing less than a fee simple and thus being genuinely affordable to these households, then many of the benefits of the ownership society could be achieved. Providing people with greater ownership in their places of employment and in their local schools also could go a long way to achieving the benefits of an ownership society. The Hard Reality of Politics and the Need for Campaign Finance Reform So what is to be done? If Dodd-Frank gets us (almost) nowhere and something more radical and much more simple is needed, how can that be achieved? The answer is only through new Executive leadership or new legislation, and there is no reason, under the current politics, to anticipate either. Thus, the only “solution” is a terribly hard one: to change the politics. But as many commentators have noted, both political parties appear aligned with, if not captive to, the interests of the financial industry and the apparent goal of that industry to essentially go on now as if the housing and MBS crises never happened. At least in part, this alignment reflects the reality of the huge financial contributions that industry makes and (after Citizens United ) will be freer to make than ever before. What that means is that new legislation is needed to reform campaign finance and to pressure the Supreme Court to temper its First Amendment absolutism when the interests of large corporations are at issue. Hence the catch and the challenge: we need (at a minimum) new rules for campaign finance to get a better politics, but until we get a better politics, we cannot get the new rules. So, somehow, we need to achieve meaningful, constructive political change even under rules that have led to dominance by two parties that cannot or will not undertake the reforms that are needed for our public welfare. It is a hard challenge but our politics has overcome even harder challenges — the Great Depression, World War II, Jim Crow — and prevailed. We can do that again.

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Michael Thornton: Gibbs: 99ers Will be Saved by Jobs, Not Unemployment Benefits. But Honestly….

December 31, 2010

In replying to ABC’s Jake Tapper’s question about 99ers and what can be done to help the millions of long-term unemployed, Presidential Press Secretary Robert Gibbs offered a baffling, disjointed, mishmash answer chock full of clichés and lacking any substance. Gibbs-speak, shall we say? First let’s look at the unedited version of the 99er exchange. TAPPER: … they’re individuals who have been — whose unemployment insurance has run out. They were not included in the deal, the tax deal that the president signed with Mr. McConnell, the Republicans and others. Is there anything that the president can do for them? GIBBS: Well, I think the best thing that we can do as a country is to get — get a fragile economy more stable, and one that creates more jobs. I think that’s — that’s why I think, you know, economists said that they would reorient their growth estimates based on the agreement that the president signed. And obviously, the best thing we can do for them is to create an environment where businesses are hiring. Look, we have — what you’ve heard me say on a number of occasions, that one of the great benefits of the agreement was taking the politics out of — out of unemployment insurance. We — we — we have — it’s been a contentious battle just to get unemployment insurance to continue up to 99 weeks. It’s not — it’s not in any way been easy. And this takes the politics out of that throughout 2011 and hopefully we can focus — continue to focus on getting the economy moving again and providing — providing those guys with a helping hand with a job. As Mr. Tapper alludes, the 99ers, those who have exhausted all unemployment benefits, were not part of the $856 billion tax agreement brokered between Obama and the Republicans. While many 99ers are certainly glad that Mr. Tapper at least brought up the subject of 99ers, his question to Mr. Gibbs lacked any sense of urgency or breath of the issue. After all, millions have exhausted all available unemployment benefits and have no other means of support What was most telling was that the interview Q & A ignored reality. Mr. Tapper posed a softball question to a hardball subject and Mr. Gibbs tried his best to spin a bad situation into a confusing situation. Let’s see if this interview can be better understood with some realities added to the question and answer. Here’s how the interview segment would have made more sense: Honest Mr. Tapper: Estimates are that 4-5 million unemployed have exhausted all their unemployment benefits – the 99ers. Since job creation is near zero and millions more 99ers are in the pipeline for 2011, why didn’t the president demand some relief for these long-suffering jobless, instead of just giving billions more in tax cuts to businesses that aren’t hiring and to the wealthy who don’t need the extra money? Honest Mr. Gibbs: Yes, the economy is still unable to create the jobs needed to help the four to five million and growing ranks of 99ers. We didn’t include 99ers in the monster tax package plan because economists think job growth will increase and you know how much you can trust economists to be correct (LOL)! We are more concerned about continually giving untold billions in tax breaks to businesses that still are not hiring even though they have recorded record profits and are sitting on over one trillion dollars in capital. Eventually, they will have to hire some additional people, maybe even a couple 99ers, just to count all that extra cash! We took the politics out of the next 13 months of unemployment benefits extensions for those who haven’t exhausted benefits, but when millions more do exhaust benefits in 2011, well, honestly, tough luck. In fact we didn’t even bring up the matter of unemployment benefits exhaustion because we were afraid to make Republicans angry. You know how nasty Republicans can get if you bring up government job creation or longer term benefits! Are you crazy (LOL)? Did you see what that whacko Sen. Bunning did last year when we tried to extend unemployment benefits? We didn’t want to go there again. Those guys are nuts! We feel it’s much more important to bailout corrupt and mismanaged Wall Street and foreign banks, large insurance companies and auto manufacturers than it is to bailout the long-term unemployed. I mean, do you think the president will receive more money for his 2012 reelection campaign from corrupt business leaders or 99ers? Get real, Jake. Sure, we hope 99ers support us, but we know where our bread is buttered and it’s not from contributions from unemployment checks! We will continue to go down the same path of giving billions in tax breaks to businesses and the wealthy, but we have our fingers crossed that they create a few jobs for the very long-term unemployed. Our job creation policies haven’t worked for the past two years, but we’re certain, certain those same policies will work this time. Third time lucky, we think! Tapper: Thank you for being honest with your answers. Gibbs: Thank you for asking a probing, difficult question. Although that interpretation is over the top, many long-term unemployed 99ers may not see it that way. They have been ignored for almost a year and their ranks are growing quickly. 99ers were and are being ignored by elected representatives, but the media has a responsibility to do more than simply ask questions, they need to investigate and determine why so many are being ignored for so long. You can see the entire interview: Power, pop, and probings from ABC News Senior White House Correspondent Jake Tapper . Weakness, fizzle and pleasantries may be a more appropriate title to Mr. Tapper’s interview, but he does deserve some credit for having the decency to ask the 99er question. Observing how many politicians and media pundits avoid, disparage, manipulate and dismiss those who have exhausted unemployment benefits is disturbing, but it’s demoralizing, depressing, damaging and destructive to those families who have to live through it, the long-term unemployed, the 99ers.

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Michael Likosky: Top 5 to Watch in 2011: Infrastructure Leaders

December 31, 2010

1. Bellwether Members of Congress – Barbara Boxer (D-CA) Dave Camp (R-MI) Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) John Kerry (D-MA) John Mica (R-FL) 2. Bellwether Governors – Jerry Brown (D-CA) Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) Nathan Deal (R-GA) John Hickenlooper (D-CO) Rick Perry (R-TX) Rick Scott (R-FL) 3. Bellwether Mayors and Mayoral Candidate – Michael Bloomberg (I-NYC) Rahm Emanuel (D-Chicago-Candidate) Antonio Villaraigosa (D-Los Angeles) 4. Bellwether Federal Institutions National Infrastructure Bank (proposed) Department of Commerce Department of Energy Department of Homeland Security Department of Transportation Department of the Treasury Environmental Protection Agency 5. Bellwether Leaders: Sung and Unsung President Barack Obama Governor Ed Rendell (D-PA) Representative Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-CA)

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Video: Saffo Predicts `Decade of Turbulence’ for U.S. Economy

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Paul Saffo, managing director of foresight at investment-advisory firm Discern, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy. Saffo also discusses potential investment opportunities, U.S. education and the use of robotics. He speaks with Julie Hyman on Bloomberg Television’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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David Isenberg: PMC: Past, Present, and Future

December 31, 2010

Hmm, celebrate my birthday today or write the final PMC post for 2010? Hey, I’m a multitasking man; no reason I can’t do both. It’s been precisely a year and eight days since I first started writing on private military and security contracting issues for the Huffington Post. I started on Dec. 23, 2009, with this piece ” Contractors ‘R U.S. ” Since then I wrote, including this one, 224 posts, or 61 percent of the time. Thanks to Huffington Post management for letting me do so much. Of course, the fact that I’ve not yet been able to find fulltime work after returning to the United States in late 2009 has given me time to write. I’d like to find one though, so in case there is an employer out there looking for someone please feel free to contact me. The beginning sentence in my first post was “Welcome to the wonderful, and frequently wacky, world of military and foreign policy outsourcing and privatization.” A one year anniversary seems sufficient reason to muse a bit about that world. Guess what; it’s still wacky but there are a few signs that at least the public debate about it is becoming a bit more rational. Of course, that may not be saying much, given how low the bar has been set in the past when it comes to public discussion of the issue, but one takes what one can get. Thanks to work by groups ranging from the Commission on Wartime Contracting, Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, various NGOs, some outstanding reporters, some very good bloggers, and even a relatively few farsighted officials within the PMSC industry itself critical and key issues like oversight and accountability are moving, albeit slowly, from rhetoric to reality. Note: that is not to say everything is fine and dandy in the PMSC world. Of course, it is not. But the trend is positive, even if the upward slope is an exceedingly gentle incline, instead of a sharp angle. What is important to think about in the future regarding private contractors? Note that I did not write private military or private security contractors. That is not an oversight, pardon the pun. The use of private contractors to do things formerly done by people in government is vastly more widespread than commonly thought and goes far beyond those carrying guns or serving food in a dining facility and delivering supplies to troops under a LOGCAP contract, to name the two main divisions in what the government persists in politely calling “contingency operations.” Note to the younger generation: this is what, back in the 20th century, we used to call war. Just looking at the so-called national security realm contractors are widespread in the intelligence community, they are critical to the Department of Homeland Security, they do the majority of the work for the U.S. Agency for International Development. They are heavily involved in what will be the growing field of cyber defense and, if it comes to that, outright cyber war Just looking at some of the industry literature I have lying around, in 2010 contractors were supporting counter-narcotics work in Afghanistan, Mexico; and Nigeria (SOS International Ltd.), helping farmers in Pakistan and providing HIV/AIDS prevention in Ethiopia (International Relief and Development), proving Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) and mine clearance services (EODT and Pax Mondial), and provide training for Basic and Advanced Law of War that is required by the Pentagon for all contractors accompanying U.S. armed forces overseas. Speaking of literature, during the year I have frequently referred to and quoted from academic scholarship. If nothing else, the law journal articles I cited were at least good for helping you go to sleep. So for the last academic reference in 2010 let me refer you to an article published earlier this month. It is “Sovereignty and Privatizing the Military: An Institutional Explanation” by Ulrich Peterson, published in Contemporary Security Policy journal. He looks at some of the standard explanations for the rise of privatized military companies both in the United States and elsewhere and finds them insufficient. But he does find some uniquely American history to explain whey privatization finds such fertile ground in the United States. One consequence of the idea of shared sovereignty is that the federal state does not possess the exclusive right of maintaining the most powerful means by which oppression could be exercised: the armed forces. Although control over the use of force abroad is located at the federal level, it is not the exclusive right of the federal government to own means of violence. … It shares this privilege with the constituent states and even the citizens. The most important point is that in this crucial area of statehood, the idea of ‘sharing’ has already been introduced. Adding another actor therefore did not amount to a violation of a paradigm. This significantly lowered the barrier for the participation of market actors. The interaction of the principles of shared sovereignty and the minimal state led to extensive privatization in the armed forces. Second, although the state is of course supposed to defend its citizens, defensive force is not its sole prerogative. The right to own weapons and to use them in self-defence, some argue even against the state, is deeply rooted in American history. This notion of everybody’s right to self-defence paved the way for privatizing defensive services such as the protection of senior civilian officials, site security, and convoy security. Thus, the domestic structure and the international changes resonated well with each other and therefore facilitated extensive privatization. It’s an interesting argument and one that, on the face of it, makes sense. If you follow the logic of it far enough it means that the largest private security force in the United States would be the membership of the National Rifle Association. Perhaps it will be wooed by the International Stability Operations Association as its next member. At the end of my first post I wrote, “Before going any further let’s acknowledge that that vast majority of contractors working in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere are decent, honorable men and women, doing their best to do difficult jobs in dangerous and hazardous environments.” That is still true. Let’s hope that in the future those men and women have people in their management who are as good as they are. And to all of you who read these posts I wish you a very a very merry and serene 2011.

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Steven B. Smith: 11 New Year’s Resolutions to Achieve Financial Fitness in 2011

December 31, 2010

In 2010, we saw the average American household slip deeper into financial distress. Fortunately, the start of a new year offers a great opportunity to be proactive about getting our financial lives in order and experiencing financial peace of mind. So if your personal budgeting skills need refreshing, or if your portfolios and insurance policies have not been recently reviewed, then committing to the following eleven resolutions can help make 2011 the year you achieve financial fitness. 1. Resolve to spend less than you make. The oldest financial advice is still the best — spend less than you take in. This will keep you out of debt and help you build fiscal stability. 2. Automate your finances. If something isn’t easy, most of us simply won’t do it. Make it easy on yourself by using a secure online budgeting system, like Mvelopes , to track and categorize your expenses. You can save hours of work every month while also taking control of your spending habits. 3. Create a spending plan. Determine how much you plan to spend and divide that money among your different spending or expense categories. Give yourself some flexibility to allow for some of those impulse buys without ruining your overall plan. Individuals who successfully create and follow spending plans often save as much as 10% of their income during the year – simply because a spending plan guides them in making good spending decisions. 4. Save at least ten percent of your income. If you don’t pay yourself first, there won’t be any left over at the end of the month to save. Set up an automatic transfer to a savings account to make it easy. 5. Start an emergency fund. Use part of your savings to create an emergency fund. You should have three to six months’ worth of expenses set aside in an easily accessible account to cover mortgage, food, car payments and other necessities in an emergency. Keep it separate from other funds to avoid spending it. 6. Pay at least the minimum on your credit cards. And pay off as much extra as you can. Making at least the minimum payment on time accounts for 35 percent of your credit score. Resolve to take control of your credit card usage and set a goal to pay off outstanding balances as soon as possible. Paying off the entire balance each month can save you hundreds of dollars in interest. 7. Begin paying off your debts as quickly as possible. In today’s economy, the best investment you can make is to quickly pay off all your debts. Use the debt roll-down principle to accelerate how you pay down your debt. Used correctly, the debt roll- down doesn’t require any dramatic changes in your spending habits while cutting years off your long-term debts and dramatically decreasing how much interest you will pay. 8. Contribute enough to your 401(k) to get the maximum company match. Your kids can get help to pay for college, but no one will help pay for your retirement. If you’re not taking advantage of a company match, you’re turning down a yearly bonus from your employer. 9. Review and readjust your portfolio. Make sure that no single stock comprises more than five percent of your portfolio. As your different investments perform differently, your distribution will become skewed. Readjust your holdings to match your desired distribution. 10. Check your credit reports. You’re entitled to one free copy of your credit report from each of the three credit-reporting agencies at your request each year. Stagger the reports receiving one every four months to keep an up-to-date view of your credit throughout the year. 11. Review your insurance policies and update as needed. Review your life, health, home, auto, and disability insurance policies. Make sure you have cost replacement coverage on home and auto insurance, as well as good liability coverage. Make sure your home insurance reflects the current value of your home. While it may seem daunting at first, almost anyone can get their financial house in order by following these basic steps. Imagine the success and relief you’ll feel next year at this time if you commit to these resolutions. You have nothing to lose but your frustration and debt, so make this the year you become financially fit! Steven B. Smith is the author of Money for Life: Budgeting Success and Financial Fitness in Just 12 Weeks! and creator of Mvelopes (www.mvelopes.com/save), the award-winning online envelope budgeting system, and Money4Life Center (www.money4lifecenter.com/debt), a debt assistance and money management coaching program.

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Video: Hatzius Says U.S. Home Prices to Fall 5%, Bottom in 2011

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Jan Hatzius, chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs Group, and Ethan Harris, head of developed-markets economic research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, talk about the outlook for the U.S. economy in 2011. They speak with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Nicole Lapin: States of Pain: Bankruptcy Bandage?

December 31, 2010

A state used to feel like a trusty light switch, a utility. You could see when that little knob was flicked — to the rescue during times of state disasters like floods, fires and other emergencies. Until recently we always expected the lights would come on, in the same way we expected our banks to be there for us, too. Then, of course, they failed. Overleveraged and unable to pay their bills either, will the states be the next big economic entity not “too big to fail”? To attempt to answer that question, I recently traveled from Maine to Montana to talk to governors of states in all stages of financial trouble or prosperity for a series called ” States of Pain .” After all, both the fiscally sound and unsound have reasons to fear the unprecedented failure of any state. We have all seen the deficit numbers. $25 billion for California. $15 billion for Illinois. $10 billion for New Jersey. Analyst Meredith Whitney , famous for predicting the downfall of the banks, now predicts that we’ll all start feeling the states’ pain in the spring when federal stimulus money dries up. Some set the D-Day date for states even earlier, possibly even next month. CEO turned Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen predicted that, in January, some states would have, “A cliff they’ve got to navigate. There’s going to be some dislocation. You’re going to see some problems.” When I interviewed him in Nashville for my “States of Pain” series , he chided his gubernatorial colleagues for relying too heavily on federal stimulus money, saying, “an awful lot of states took that money and treated it as continuing money and not like one-time help.” No one disputes the last batch will dry up. Another batch is up for debate, of course. The federal deficit, however, is unarguably swollen and President Obama has asked the public for good ideas to be sent his way. And, he’s going to need some to calm that swell while dealing with some of the world’s largest economies — the states — and avoid giving the situation a cold shoulder with the subsequent “Ford to City: Drop Dead”-esque headlines of 1975. So, as a member of the public, I am here to suggest, Mr. President, that you deposit your newly found political capital in an unlikely place — a bankruptcy bid. Bankruptcy gets a bad rap, but it could be a less costly alternative to another trillion dollar shot in the states’ budgetary arm. Technically, states cannot go bankrupt now like cities and counties under Chapter 9. But, the federal bankruptcy code, like the constitution itself, is a living, breathing document — able to be amended like it has been 27 times before. Federal Bankruptcy Code likes to play the odds — Chapter 7, Chapter 9, Chapter 11 and Chapter 13 are the biggies. But there’s some room left for the even chapters, particularly Chapter 8. A respected but lesser-known (I predict to be better-known soon) law professor, Professor David Skeel, suggests that a Chapter 8 is theoretically constitutional for Congress to enact. If it is indeed constitutional, then it might just add a much-needed arrow in the quiver of our rapidly-diminishing fiscal and monetary policy toolkit. “Although bankruptcy would be an imperfect solution to out-of-control state deficits, it’s the best option we have, at least if we want to have any chance of avoiding massive federal bailouts of state governments,” Skeel recently wrote in The Weekly Standard . The mere idea of bankruptcy sounds unpalatable to some governors I ran this by, like Mark Parkinson from Kansas. “Declaring bankruptcy is not the answer to the budget crisis facing many states,” he told me, adding that “the crippling public relations message bankruptcy would send to businesses and investors and the ripple effect on local communities is too high a price to pay for any potential upsides.” True, at first glance, it seems nuclear. But, the potential upsides to allowing states to declare bankruptcy are far too compelling to dismiss outright. Namely, it would give bite to the barking we’ve been hearing from the states’ governors, like Parkinson, letting them play hardball with their biggest creditors — bondholders and union contracts. Granted, union contracts can theoretically be restructured outside of bankruptcy, but in no meaningful way. State bonds, in essence, can’t be restructured without bankruptcy. I’m not suggesting that bankruptcy is the only option. It’s not even a good one to see to fruition, but the mere threat might reduce the burden on Congress to push through more stimulus or a state bailout. “Some of the biggest benefits would occur even if no state ever actually filed for bankruptcy,” Skeel tells me. “Creditors might agree to much more meaningful concessions if the alternative is a messy bankruptcy that would require even greater concessions.” But, it’s those greater concessions that make municipal bondholders cry foul. While Bond King Bill Gross, founder of world’s largest bond fund PIMCO, is going deep into California and New York munis, claiming the returns are still the best in the market despite the headline risk, even the discussion of bankruptcy as a bargaining chip has caused some to fear bond market hysteria. “There’s no question the bond markets would be unhappy if a bankruptcy law were passed, but they’re already starting to price in the prospect of a default,” Skeel tells me. “What the bondholders who claim that the enactment of a bankruptcy law would mean Armageddon for the markets really want — just as with the big banks in 2008 — is to be bailed out if the states can’t afford to pay.” Skeel believes “everyone needs to sacrifice if a state is in financial crisis; bondholders shouldn’t simply be given a pass.” Reuters’ blogger Felix Simon suggests , though, that bankruptcy is more of a Band-Aid on a gunshot wood and doesn’t avoid a bailout, it just delays the inevitable. If Chapter 8 bankruptcy was an option, Simon says “prices of municipal bonds would plunge, and most states would find it pretty much impossible to borrow money.” (Although, GM’s expedited pre-packaged bankruptcy and subsequent IPO would challenge that idea.) A disrupted muni market, also, seems negligible compared to the ramifications of the federal government getting in the foxhole with states. But, Simon continues, “As such, facing a massive and immediate liquidity crisis, they would be in more need of a federal bailout than before the bankruptcy legislation was seriously mooted.” Mooted? Perhaps. Necessary to avoid more serious financial meltdown? Perhaps. Necessary to consider before firing up the printing press again? Absolutely. “Given the general political consensus against future bailouts, maybe just maybe, this is something to think about. And better to do the thinking now, rather than when such a tool is actually needed, fast,” opined bankruptcy expert Stephen Lubben for Dealbook. Fast is already here if you take into account what economist Nouriel Roubini recently told me . Dr. Doom already cast his spell on the states, telling me debt is up to 20% of state GDP and unfunded liabilities of state and local pension funds is another 20% of GDP, or $3-5 trillion. The argument that the states’ GDPs are huge relative to their debts is right, of course, until it’s wrong. Panic is inevitable if a big state fails — you’d have a run on the bank, or should I say a run on the state. As such, a panel including former White House officials Robert Rubin, Glenn Hubbard and Josh Bolton met in October to simulate what it would look like if a state went down. They set the scenario in 2013, when the fictional state of New Jefferson — said to be the third largest U.S. state — faces a $1.5 billion bond payment. Its governor and legislators are gridlocked. The mock governor calls on the Fed for an emergency loan to avoid default and another sizable loan to keep the state afloat. Then the chairman of the National Economic Council calls a meeting. This is where the simulation kicked in real-time; the audience watched as the mock Treasury secretary, Fed chairman, chief of staff, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers decided the fate of New Jefferson and analyzed the systemic risk. It doesn’t need to be Too Big to Fail Déjà vu just yet. “There are ominous parallels between the states’ predicament and the condition of the big banks in 2008 before they were bailed out. The one big difference is that, this time, we can see the problem before it blows up and we have a real opportunity to do something about it before it’s too late,” says Skeel. We know the lights are flickering in 48 of 50 statehouses right now. The question has become, do you light a candle or pray the water won’t shut off, too?

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Video: Evans Says Facebook Dating Apps Changing Web Landscape

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — David Evans, president at Digicraft, discusses the impact of Facebook Inc. applications on Internet dating sites. Evans talks with with Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Wachter Says U.S. Housing Market Double-Dip Is Unlikely

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Susan Wachter, a real estate professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, talks about her expectation for a “bumpy” U.S. housing market for 2011. Wachter, speaking with Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness,” also discusses the government’s role in stemming the housing crisis and the impact employment may have on the market. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Bruce Bartlett: Time to Reform the Budget Process

December 31, 2010

ne consequence of the Senate’s irresponsible delay in confirming Jacob Lew as director of the Office of Management and Budget is that Congress will have less time to finish its work on the budget next year. This week, the White House announced that the president’s budget won’t be sent to Capitol Hill until mid-February, a week later than usual. It probably won’t make much difference. For decades, the president’s budget has been dead on arrival in Congress. This wasn’t always the case. Before creation of the Congressional Budget Office in 1974, the White House had a virtual monopoly on budget numbers. Congress, therefore, had little choice but to work from the president’s baseline and accept his underlying assumptions, which meant that appropriations bills tended to adhere closely to presidential priorities.

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Video: Commodities Beat Stocks, Bonds as All Assets Advance

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Commodity prices beat gains in stocks, bonds and the dollar this year as China, the biggest user of everything from cotton to copper to soybeans, led the recovery from the first global recession since World War II. The Thomson Reuters/Jefferies CRB index of 19 raw materials gained 15 percent through yesterday. Bloomberg’s Dominic Chu reports.(Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Tenengauzer Says Countries to Set More Capital Controls

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Daniel Tenengauzer, head of emerging-market currency and rates strategy at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, discusses the outlook for emerging markets and his investment strategy. Tenengauzer, who speaks with Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness,” also discusses the prospects for inflation. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Thomas Brown Says Banks Increasing Lending to Businesses

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Brown, chief executive officer of Second Curve Capital LLC and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, talks about bank lending to businesses and the outlook for the industry. Brown speaks with Carol Massar and Jon Erlichman on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Sinnreich Says Competition to Drive Apple ITunes Changes

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Aram Sinnreich, a media professor at Rutgers University and managing partner at Radar Research, discusses the outlook for the music industry. Sinnreich speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Griffin, Istock Elected to Camelot Board of Directors

December 31, 2010

UNIVERSAL CITY, CA–(Marketwire – December 31, 2010) – Camelot Entertainment Group, Inc. ( OTCBB : CMGR ) (“Camelot”) announced today that Steven Istock and Leo Griffin have been elected to serve on the Company’s Board of Directors. On Monday, December 13, 2010, at the Company’s Annual Stockholder Meeting, Camelot Chief Financial Officer and Director Steven Istock was elected to the Board of Directors with 28,556,299,749 votes for (90.13% of the votes eligible to be cast) and 8,658,966 votes against (.03%). Leo Griffin was elected to the Board of Directors with 28,564,958,715 votes for (90.16%) and 0 against. Mr. Griffin will serve as an independent director. Both directors were elected to a term of five years. Mr. Griffin will accept his election and join the Board of Directors once the Company has secured its new directors and officers (“D&O”) insurance policy, which the Company expects to have in place during January

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Video: Blair Says Google Can Compete With Apple in Tablets

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Brian Blair, principal and equity analyst at Wedge Partners, discusses the production of new tablet computers aiming to compete with Apple Inc.’s iPad. Blair talks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Kelly Says NYC New Year’s Eve to Be `Happy, Peaceful’

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and Richard Falkenrath, a principal at the Chertoff Group and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, talk about safety measures taken for tonight’s New Year’s Eve celebrations across the city. They speak with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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For-Profit Colleges Charging More While Doing Less For Poorest

December 31, 2010

s state budget cuts lock students out of community-college classrooms or force them to stand in class, for-profit colleges are attracting hundreds of thousands of poor and minority students, charging up to 10 times as much for the same degree. The industry, including Washington Post Co.’s Kaplan University, has tripled enrollment to 1.8 million in the past decade by pouring billions of dollars into marketing and recruiting, offering flexible online classes and outfitting more-modern campuses while states slash funding for community colleges. As much as 90 percent of revenue at each for-profit college comes from federal student aid.

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Fund Investors Slowly Returning To Stocks

December 31, 2010

BOSTON — It appears investors are beginning to get comfortable with risk again. Not only are they pulling money out of bond mutual funds at the fastest pace in two years, but they’re slowly starting to embrace stocks again. The shift in sentiment comes as positive economic news and robust corporate earnings lift stocks, which have risen 20 percent since the start of September. Prices of bonds, typically less risky than stocks, are heading in the opposite direction. A broad measure of the bond market, the Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond index, is down nearly 3 percent since early November. This reflects fears about rising interest rates, which effectively lower bond returns. “You’ve almost got a one-two punch, with stocks up, and the bond market taking a pretty big hit,” says Ron Saba, director of stock research with Horizon Investments, a Charlotte, N.C.-based investment adviser for $3 billion in assets. “So now you start to see psychology take over. Investors say, ‘I want to invest where I’m making money.’” For the last few months, there’s been a disconnect between the market’s gains and investor behavior. Investors have been withdrawing more money from U.S. stock mutual funds than they’ve been adding. There hasn’t been a positive weekly net flow of cash since late April, according to the Investment Company Institute. That has finally changed. The fund industry organization reported Wednesday that investors added a net $335 million into U.S. stock funds during the week ended Dec. 21. Although that’s a small amount – stock funds hold more than $5 trillion in assets – the switch to positive flow comes after the pace of U.S. stock fund withdrawals has recently slowed. Meanwhile, more than $20 billion has been pulled out of bond funds since mid-November, with the weekly outflow in mid-December marking the biggest in more than two years. “At the end of the year, a lot of investors have been looking at what stocks have been doing and asking, ‘What am I sitting in bonds for?’” says Cleve Rueckert, a strategist with Birinyi Associates, a stock research and money management firm in Westport, Conn. The Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index is up 15 percent this year including dividends, more than twice the return of the comparable bond index. The advantage for stocks was even bigger in 2009, when markets began recovering from a financial crisis that soured many investors. That has led to a massive shift into the relative safe haven of bonds. Investors have added a net $640 billion to bond funds since January 2009, according to ICI data. When investors have sought the higher potential returns of stocks, their search has taken them overseas. U.S. stock funds have consistently seen money flow out, while funds buying stocks of foreign companies have taken money in. But positive sentiment is coming home, especially with many recognizable U.S. stocks faring well. Year-to-date, Apple Inc. is up more than 50 percent. Shares of NetFlix Inc. have more than tripled in value, and Priceline.com has nearly doubled. Investing pros also are also turning more positive. At least three surveys of money managers this month show growing confidence. Some of the frequently cited reasons: _ Stocks remain cheap by the most widely used measures. The price-to-earnings ratio for Standard & Poor’s 500 index stocks was 15.75 on Thursday, based on earnings from the trailing 12 months, according to Rueckert. Over the past two decades, the average has been around 23. _ Volatility has eased. The rapid swings in the the stock market have turned off many investors. A year or two ago, daily movements in the Dow of more than a full percentage point were the norm. But that’s tapered off, and the Chicago Board of Options Exchange’s Volatility Index is running at its lowest level in eight months. The index, known as Wall Street’s fear gauge, is now roughly a third of where it stood during the financial crisis in 2008. _ Most economic indicators are positive. The deal between Congress and President Obama to extend Bush era tax cuts is expected to give the economy a short-term boost. Despite continuing housing market troubles, most data suggest the economic recovery is regaining momentum after stalling over the summer. For example, the government reported Thursday that the number of people applying for unemployment benefits fell to its lowest point in nearly two and a half years. Those are the key reasons why Harry Rowen, CEO of Starmont Asset Management, has gradually been increasing the stock component of the more than $100 million his San Francisco-based firm manages for wealthy individual investors. Now that total is about half in stocks, half in bonds. Rowen expects to increase the stock component to 60 to 70 percent in coming months, anticipating stocks will continue rising after posting what could be the market’s best December showing in 20 years. But Rowen is moving slowly and cautiously. “My clients are still very skittish – most of them have a good deal of money already, and they like to preserve it,” he says. “So our moves back into stocks” he says, “are coming in small steps.” ______ Questions? E-mail investorinsight(at)ap.org.

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Gold Bag Announces Closing of High Grade Gold Project in Mexico

December 31, 2010

RENO, NV–(Marketwire – December 31, 2010) – Gold Bag, Inc. ( OTCBB : GBGI ) ( PINKSHEETS : GBGI ) (“GBGI”) has closed it previously announced acquisition of Fairfields Gold S.A. de CV (“Fairfields”). On December 14, 2010 Fairfields and GBGI signed a minor amendment to the previously announced definitive agreement. With the issuance of 13.5 million GBGI common shares to the owners of Fairfields and completion of all due diligence the transaction has now closed.

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Video: Pimco to Settle Lawsuit; Porsche Wins Lawsuits Dismissal

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deirdre Bolton reports on top legal stories in today’s Legal Briefs. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Myspace Reportedly Mulling Significant Layoffs

December 31, 2010

Myspace–the long-troubled social networking site turned social entertainment hub–is in the midst of planning that could soon result in significant layoffs of its staff, according to multiple sources familiar with the situation.

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Video: Frank Aquila Expects `Very Strong’ Year for M&A in 2011

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Frank Aquila, partner at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, talks about the outlook for mergers and acquisitions in 2011. Aquila speaks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Goldberg Says Economic Outlook Bodes Well for Big Banks

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Jason Goldberg, senior analyst at Barclays Capital, talk about the outlook for the U.S. banking industry in 2011. Goldberg speaks with Deirdre Bolton and Jon Erlichman on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: EBay’s Planned Merger of South Korean Units Delayed

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Jon Erlichman reports on the latest breaking news and top stories in today’s Business Briefs. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Clearwire’s McCaw Plans to Step Down as Chairman Today

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — Clearwire Corp., a company creating a nationwide high-speed wireless network using WiMax technology, said Chairman Craig McCaw will step down today. Bloomberg’s Deirdre Bolton reports on McCaw’s resignation in today’s Movers & Shakers. (Source: Bloomberg)

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American Stocks closed mixed

December 31, 2010

American Stocks closed mixed

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U.S stocks gain in midday…

December 31, 2010

U.S stocks gain in midday…

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EURUSD, GBPUSD Present Prime Trade Opportunities to Start the New Year

December 31, 2010

EURUSD, GBPUSD Present Prime Trade Opportunities to Start the New Year

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US Dollar Poised to Rally in the New Year

December 31, 2010

US Dollar Poised to Rally in the New Year

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Looking Ahead to a New Year and Lots of Trade Potential

December 31, 2010

Looking Ahead to a New Year and Lots of Trade Potential

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Silver Prices Forecast to Rally Further in 2011

December 31, 2010

Silver Prices Forecast to Rally Further in 2011

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Inflation and the U.S. Dollar

December 31, 2010

Inflation and the U.S. Dollar

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Australian Market Report of December 31, 2010: Moly Mines (ASX:MOL) First Iron Ore Shipment Heads For China

December 31, 2010

Australian Market Report of December 31, 2010: Moly Mines (ASX:MOL) First Iron Ore Shipment Heads For China

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U.S stocks open in red ahead of a new year…

December 31, 2010

U.S stocks open in red ahead of a new year…

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Swiss Franc to Strengthen on Euro Zone Fiscal Crisis in 2011

December 31, 2010

Swiss Franc to Strengthen on Euro Zone Fiscal Crisis in 2011

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U.S. Dollar Weakness To Be Short-Lived, Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen At Risk For Currency Intervention

December 31, 2010

U.S. Dollar Weakness To Be Short-Lived, Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen At Risk For Currency Intervention

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EURUSD: Selling to Resume in 2011

December 31, 2010

EURUSD: Selling to Resume in 2011

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FOREX: Dollar Vulnerable Through Year-End, 2011 Outlook Still Bullish

December 31, 2010

FOREX: Dollar Vulnerable Through Year-End, 2011 Outlook Still Bullish

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Crude Oil Declines on Profit Taking, Gold Pauses but New Records May be around the Corner

December 31, 2010

Crude Oil Declines on Profit Taking, Gold Pauses but New Records May be around the Corner

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Crude Oil Inventory Watch: U.S. Inventories Plunge as Demand Soars

December 31, 2010

Crude Oil Inventory Watch: U.S. Inventories Plunge as Demand Soars

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A Falter in Risk Appetite in 2011 Could Realign the Negative Dollar and S&P 500 Correlation

December 31, 2010

A Falter in Risk Appetite in 2011 Could Realign the Negative Dollar and S&P 500 Correlation

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