December 2010

NY Times: ‘Troubling Prospect’ After Bank Blocks WikiLeaks

December 26, 2010

The whistle-blowing Web site WikiLeaks has not been convicted of a crime. The Justice Department has not even pressed charges over its disclosure of confidential State Department communications. Nonetheless, the financial industry is trying to shut it down. Visa, MasterCard and PayPal announced in the past few weeks that they would not process any transaction intended for WikiLeaks. Earlier this month, Bank of America decided to join the group, arguing that WikiLeaks may be doing things that are “inconsistent with our internal policies for processing payments.”

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The 10 Worst Predictions For 2010

December 25, 2010

If 2010 taught us anything, it’s that few people are able to accurately predict even the simplest events in the near-term future, let alone the big ones. From the price of gold, to unemployment, to Google Wave, prognosticators got more than a few major items wrong in their predictions lists. Here, in no particular order, are “ten for ten” — 10 of the worst predictions of 2010.

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IMF grants a $1.5b loan to Ukraine

December 25, 2010

IMF grants a $1.5b loan to Ukraine

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Toyota pays $10m for Lexus crash settlement

December 25, 2010

Toyota pays $10m for Lexus crash settlement

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Reserve Bank of India tightens on Iranian oil imports

December 25, 2010

Reserve Bank of India tightens on Iranian oil imports

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Vietnamese inflation rises by 11.8%

December 25, 2010

Vietnamese inflation rises by 11.8%

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Editorial: Istanbul talks

December 25, 2010

Editorial: Istanbul talks

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India sets new housing loan norms

December 25, 2010

India sets new housing loan norms

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Michael Likosky: Top 10 List for 2010: Infrastructure

December 25, 2010

1. Top Huffington Post Blog Chris Matthews: “Infrastructure as Monument” 2. Top Presidential Speech President Obama: “Our Generation’s Sputnik Moment is Now” 3. Top Infrastructure Journalist Rachel Maddow 4. Hardest Working Man in Infrastructure Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell 5. Best Statement in Support of an Infrastructure Bank Senator Kerry to Banking Committee 6. Best Report on the Stimulus Act & Infrastructure President’s Council of Economic Advisors Fourth Quarterly Report 7. Most Effective Consensus Builder Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (Conn.-3) 8. Best Advocates for a Bi-Partisan Approach Building America’s Future 9. Best Infrastructure Statesman Ambassador Felix Rohatyn 10. Top Infrastructure Philanthropist Bernard Schwartz

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Are Stores Open On Christmas Day?

December 25, 2010

Wondering what stores are open on Christmas Day 2010? Hardly any. Even though more stores than usual stayed open this Thanksgiving, and plenty of stores kept later hours this Christmas Eve, stores will widely be closed as typical on Christmas Day. It’s one of the few days every year in which nearly all businesses are closed across the country. Of course, this year Christmas falls on a Saturday, only solidifying the day off for many. Walmart, Target, Kmart, Old Navy and Toys R Us were open on Christmas Eve, but will all be closed Christmas Day this year. However, if you need to make a quick run to the store, Walgreens locations across the country will be open , and many CVS locations will also be open. Other stores could be open locally too; it’s best to check your local listings or call individual stores near you to be sure.

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Holiday Shoppers Came Back In Force In 2010

December 25, 2010

NEW YORK — Shoppers came back in force for the holidays, right to the end. After two dreary years, Christmas 2010 will go down as the holiday Americans rediscovered how much they like to shop. People spent more than expected on family and friends and splurged on themselves, too, an ingredient missing for two years. Clothing such as fur vests and beaded sweaters replaced practical items like pots and pans. Even the family dog is getting a little something extra. “You saw joy back in the holiday season,” said Sherif Mityas, partner in the retail practice at A.T. Kearney. A strong Christmas Eve augmented a great season for retailers. The National Retail Federation predicts spending this holiday season will reach $451.5 billion, up 3.3 percent over last year. That would be the biggest increase since 2006, and the largest total since a record $452.8 billion in 2007. The holiday season runs from Nov. 1 through Dec. 31, so a strong week after Christmas could still make this the biggest of all time. Spending numbers through Dec. 24 won’t be available until next week and final numbers, through Dec. 31, arrive next month. The economy hasn’t improved significantly from last year. Unemployment is 9.8 percent, credit remains tight and the housing market is moribund. But recent economic reports suggest employers are laying off fewer workers and businesses are spending more. Consumer confidence is rising. “I was unemployed last year, so I’m feeling better,” said Hope Jackson, who was at Maryland’s Mall in Columbia on Friday morning. Jackson bought laptops and PlayStation 2 games for her three daughters earlier in the season but was at the mall on Christmas Eve to grab $50 shirts marked down to $12 at Aeropostale. Some spending growth online has been driven by free shipping offers and convenience. From Oct. 31 through Thursday, about $36 billion has been spent online, a 15 percent increase over last year, according to MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse. Taubman Centers and Mall of America have reported strong clothing sales, which was a hard sell last year. Jewelry sales sparkled throughout the season. Stores expect solid profits because they didn’t have to slash prices as Christmas neared, analysts say. Some habits adopted during the recession lingered. Shoppers used cash more and credit cards less. The final six days of the holiday shopping season are Sunday through next Friday. They’re only 10 percent of the 61 holiday shopping days but can account for more than 15 percent of spending. For the economy, the key question is whether strong spending this holiday season will continue into the new year. Still, stores were encouraged by what they saw in the final stretch of the holiday season. Even pets made it back onto gift lists this year. Three Dog Bakery, a pet-supply chain in Clinton Township, Mich., whose specialties include $15.99 jars of banana-nut dog cookies, opened three years ago at the start of the recession. “We opened at the worst possible time in the world. Everyone was pulling back,” owner Chad Konzen said. Wednesday, the store had its best day ever. “Gourmet, all-natural dog treats are not a necessity,” Konzen said. “But now people are feeling more comfortable. You can only be thrifty for so long.” ___ AP Retail Writers Ellen Gibson in Columbia, Md., and Mae Anderson in Atlanta; and AP Writers Jessica Gresko in Washington; Barbara Rodriguez in Miami; and Holly Ramer in Concord, N.H., contributed to this story.

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US 3Q10 Growth Revised Up As Home Sales Gain

December 25, 2010

The US economy expanded at a slightly faster rate in the third quarter of 2010 than had been initially estimated thanks to stronger inventory growth according to Reuters

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GSE Slowed PrivateLabel MBS Rebound Says CBO

December 25, 2010

The Congressional Budget Office claims that overreaching by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac has slowed the recovery of the privatelabel mortgagebacked securities market reports Housing Wire

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Dell To Buy InSite One

December 25, 2010

Dell will purchase medical data technology company InSite One

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Tax Cut Bill Signed By Obama Packed With Obscure Stocking Stuffers For Businesses

December 24, 2010

WASHINGTON — The massive new tax bill signed into law by President Barack Obama is filled with all kinds of holiday stocking stuffers for businesses: tax breaks for producing TV shows, grants for putting up windmills, rum subsidies for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. There is even a tax break for people who buy race horses. Millions of homeowners, however, might feel like they got a lump of coal. Homeowners who don’t itemize their deductions will lose a tax break for paying local property taxes. The business tax breaks are part of sweeping legislation that extends Bush era tax cuts for families at every income level through 2012. Obama signed the $858 billion measure a week ago. It also provides a new payroll tax cut for wage earners and extends jobless benefits to the long-term unemployed. Most of the business tax breaks – about 50 in all – are part of a package that expires each year, creating uncertainty for tax planners but lots of business for lobbyists. Many of these tax breaks have been around for years but expired at the end of 2009 because lawmakers couldn’t agree how to pay for them. The new law extends most of them through 2011, some through 2012. They will be paid for with borrowed money. Nearly 1,300 businesses and trade groups formed a coalition urging Congress to extend the business tax breaks. Others lobbied for specific provisions, including a generous tax credit for research and development and subsidies to produce alternative energy. There is a generous tax break for banks and insurance companies that invest overseas, a tax credit for railroad track maintenance, more generous write-offs for upgrading motorsport race tracks, and increased deductions for businesses that donate books and computers to public schools and libraries. Many of the tax breaks are designed to encourage economic activity. But passing them each year at the last minute, or skipping a year and passing them retroactively, isn’t terribly efficient, said Clint Stretch, a tax expert at Deloitte Tax LLP. “It gives it a lot of dignity to call it a `system,’ ” Stretch said. Every year, taxpayers risk losing their favorite tax breaks, if they are not renewed. That’s what happened to millions of homeowners. For 2008 and 2009, homeowners who didn’t itemize their deductions were able to get an extra deduction – on top of the standard deduction – for paying local property taxes. Individuals could reduce their taxable income by as much as $500, couples could cut theirs by $1,000. The provision, which has saved homeowners about $1.6 billion a year, expired for 2010 and was left out of the new tax law. “A lot of Americans don’t make so much money that they itemize their tax returns. But those same Americans own property,” said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., who sponsored the original tax break. “It seems to me that they, too, should have the ability to deduct it. It’s a matter of equity.” Taxpayers who itemize will continue to be able to deduct local property taxes. About two-thirds of tax filers don’t itemize. Among the provisions in the new law: _A tax break that allows profitable companies to write off large capital expenditures immediately – rather than over time – giving some companies huge tax shelters. The tax break, known as bonus depreciation, benefits automakers, utilities, heavy equipment makers like Caterpillar Inc., and John Deere, air freight companies like Fedex Corp., and wireless companies like Verizon and AT&T, said Anne Mathias, director of research for the Washington Research Group, which provides research to institutional and corporate investors. It will save companies nearly $21 billion over the next decade. “It helps companies that use expensive capital equipment, that spend a lot of money,” Mathias said. “It also helps places where the economy is growing, like wireless infrastructure, because there is a pretty big wireless build out right now.” The tax break is also available to people who buy race horses and farmers who buy cattle for breeding or dairy, according to a depreciation list produced by the Internal Revenue Service. _An exemption that allows banks, insurance companies and other financial firms to shield foreign profits from being taxed by the U.S. through 2011. Cost: $9.2 billion. The tax break is important to major multinational banks and financial firms, such as Citigroup, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, and to the financing operations of other international companies, Mathias said. _A tax credit for research and development, benefiting a wide range of industries, including pharmaceutical and high tech companies. The law extends the tax credit through 2011, at a cost of $13.3 billion. “The House and the Senate are in the holiday spirit and giving US companies a present of $13 billion in potential R&D Tax Credits!” says a press release by Braithwaite Global Inc., a firm that advises companies on applying for research tax credits. _Increased tax rebates to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands from a tax on rum imported into the United States. The U.S. imposes a $13.50 per proof-gallon tax on imported rum, and sends most of the proceeds to the two U.S. territories. Previously, the rebate was $10.50 a gallon. The new law extends a more generous rebate of $13.25 a gallon through 2011. Cost: $262 million. _Extends a grant program for the production of wind, solar and other renewable energy through 2011. Cost: $3 billion. “This is a great holiday present for the 85,000 American workers in the wind energy industry, tens of thousands of whom will now be able to get back to work in a sector that has been a bright spot in the recession so far,” Denise Bode, CEO of the American Wind Energy Association, said in a statement. _Extends a 50 percent tax credit for expenses related to railroad track maintenance through 2011. Cost $331 million. _Enhanced deductions for companies that donate food to the needy, books to public schools or computers to public libraries, through 2011. Cost: $537 million. _A tax break that allows TV and movie productions to more quickly write off expenses, extended through 2011. Sexually explicit productions are ineligible. Cost: $101 million.

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Dave Johnson: Education For We, The People Or For Private Profit?

December 24, 2010

In his press conference this week President Obama said the economic focus is no longer saving the economy from crisis, but “jumpstarting” it to make a dent in unemployment. He listed education as one of the pillars of that effort. Later in the press conference he talked about making colleges and universities being open not just to people who are well-to-do, but to all of us. Progressives For A We, The People Economy Progressives believe that a We, the People economy works best when we act as a community where “we are all in this together,” and watch out and take care of each other. We mutually benefit from this approach: the better off we all are, the better off we all are . Conservatives, on the other hand, believe we should all be on our own, looking out for only ourselves and our families, and it is up to each of us, alone, to take “personal responsibility” for our own success. Our differing approaches to education reflect these different philosophies. Progressives believe that education is good for all of us, and should be available to all of us. We believe that the economy does better when more of us can receive a good education, whether this brings a vocational or advanced degree, in a community college or a university. We try to enact policies that make this education affordable for everyone. Conservatives, on the other hand, believe that “the government” (We, the People) has no business helping people. So they resist providing free public or university education. They call this “socialism.” And so America’s conflict continues, one side asking for public investment in all of us for the long-term benefit of We, the People while the other side tries to harvest the public good for the short-term benefit of a few. Compromise With Conservatives A compromise of sorts has existed in recent decades in which the government helps students get loans, enabling them to go to more expensive schools. But these loans increasingly leave students with a very high debt to pay off after they graduate. In recent years students are graduating with more student loan debt than they can reasonably be expected to pay off. Result: Increasing Debt CNBC reports: Student loans leave crushing debt burden The cost of a college education is rising faster than the cost of medical care and as much as three times as fast as consumer prices in general. But that’s just the beginning of the price of admission. This is the story of a debt crisis few are talking about. Americans now owe more on their student loans than they do on their credit cards — a debt fast approaching $1 trillion with no end in sight. Please read the entire CNBC report on the crushing debt load that students are taking on, just to get an education that will help our economy. Here is a clip of the video available at the link: USA Today reports: Student loan debt exceeds credit card debt in USA , Total student loan debt exceeds total credit card debt in this country, with $850 billion outstanding, according to Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of FinAid.org and FastWeb.com, websites that provide information about student aid and scholarships. Consumers owe about $828 billion in revolving credit, including credit card debt, according to seasonally adjusted numbers in a report on July credit from the Federal Reserve. Result: Increasing Defaults With the increasing debt load and the resulting crushing monthly payments come increasing defaults. From the Dept. of Education, Student Loan Default Rates Increase , “This data confirms what we already know: that many students are struggling to pay back their student loans during very difficult economic times. That’s why the Administration has expanded programs like income based repayment and Pell grants to help students in financial need,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. And, of course, along with the for-profit privatization of what should be a public function, and the compromise of federal help for loans comes the companies profiting from federal dollars. “The data also tells us that students attending for-profit schools are the most likely to default,” Duncan continued. “While for-profit schools have profited and prospered thanks to federal dollars, some of their students have not. Far too many for-profit schools are saddling students with debt they cannot afford in exchange for degrees and certificates they cannot use. This is a disservice to students and taxpayers, and undermines the valuable work being done by the for-profit education industry as a whole,” Duncan continued. Result: Increasing Quick-Buck For-Profit Scams Along with increasing and crushing debt and defaults another problem has cropped up. Just like with the housing bubble, the private predators have arrived to prey on the public. Private schools like Kaplan University are increasingly scamming their students with schemes reminiscent of the worst of the housing bubble, running up loan debt greater than any job they would ever get could pay, even hitting them with excessive fees and outright fraudulent charges. A Huffington Post report of their investigation of Kaplan University, At Kaplan University, ‘Guerilla Registration’ Leaves Students Deep In Debt , exposes Kaplan’s practice of “guerilla registration” in which they register students and charge them tuition for classes they don’t want or take, even in some cases after they have withdrawn from the school. And then they send the debt collectors after them for the money. Despite having attended only two online sessions, Castillo had remained officially enrolled at Kaplan for nearly a year after her withdrawal. Far from an aberration, Castillo’s experience typifies the results of a practice known informally inside Kaplan as “guerilla registration”: academic advisors have long enrolled students in classes they never take, without their consent and sometimes even after they have sought to withdraw from the university, in order to maximize the company’s revenues, according to interviews with former employees. Please read the whole Huffington Post report , there is much, much more there. Kaplan University, by the way, is owned by The Washington Post company. Speaking of Kaplan , this is also in the news: NY Times, E.E.O.C. Sues Kaplan Over Hiring , Sending a sharp warning to employers nationwide, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued the Kaplan Higher Education Corporation on Tuesday, accusing it of discriminating against black job applicants through the way it uses credit histories in its hiring process. . . . In the E.E.O.C.’s suit, which was filed in federal district court in Cleveland, the agency said that since at least January 2008, Kaplan had rejected job applicants based on their credit history, with a “significant disparate impact” on blacks. . . . The E.E.O.C. typically brings discrimination cases only when it is convinced that serious abuse has occurred. Resources: Demos: Student Loans and Student Loan Debt , links to Demos resources and research on this issue. The Project On Student Debt This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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Art Levine: No Home for Xmas: Can Labor — or Anyone — Stop the Foreclosure Mess?

December 24, 2010

As Americans head home for the holidays or look forward to a Christmas meal with friends and family nearby, it’s worth remembering that over two million people have had their homes repossessed in the last few years — and another 6.5 million are in foreclosure or will face it soon. Thousands of current and pending foreclosures may have been carried out due to forged documents, bank negligence or lack of court authority to do so. And as NPR reported recently, people like Jennifer Ryan-Voltaire may be spending their last Christmas in the home that Wells Fargo now owns after it allegedly lost her tax paperwork needed to stay in a loan modification program. As NPR noted: “We’re trying to make it as fun for the kids as possible without them knowing or having to worry about what we’re going through,” says Voltaire, an office manager at a medical practice. She hasn’t told her three kids that they don’t own their house anymore.

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FocusShares Plans MorningstarBased ETF

December 24, 2010

FocusShares has launched a new broadbased asset allocation strategy

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Rabbi Shmuley Boteach: Will Banks and JP Morgan Chase Be More Ethical in the Coming Year?

December 24, 2010

Tis’ the season to be jolly. Er.. if you’re a Wall Street banker, that is, where billions in end-of-year bonuses are about to rain down like manna from heaven. Wall Street is the one place in America where the economic downturn has not reached. Over the holiday period flashy Ferraris will be fired up and driven off showroom floors. The Hamptons will emerge from a deep winter thaw, warmed by the fires of credit cards working at such a feverish pace that plastic will be hard-pressed not to melt. Oh yes, happy days are here again. If only the prophet Amos were alive to see it, he might have proclaimed, “Let champagne flow like a river; Don Perignon like a mighty spring.” King David would likewise have cheered, “Yay, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of unemployment, I shall fear no recession, for my government bailouts are with me… My cash runneth over.” OK, ok. So I sound a little bit envious. I confess. But only a little. I do not begrudge the success of my Wall Street brothers. Not because I have mastered jealousy but because I make a living counseling people whose lives are in crisis. And I’ve discovered that the only thing that buys happiness on this earth is a life lived as a blessing to others. Excessive consumption is naught by a manifestation of the black hole at our center and the human need to fill it with an endless supply of adult toys (OK, calm down. I mean, of course, the more respectable, if somewhat infantile, adult toys of the car, yacht, and plane variety). Not that there aren’t many Wall Street bankers who fill their lives with virtue rather than Hermes. Many of my former Oxford students run hedge funds and work on the street. The majority of them make money to give it away to the needy around the world and support their families in dignity. They reject conspicuous consumption, live faith-based lives, and are communally engaged. But they might just be the exception that proves the rule. There can be little doubt that the success of the banking industry is critical to the success of the overall American economy. But that success dare not be made off the backs of hard-working Americans. Let them Wall Street traders be paid a king’s ransom. Let them eat cake. But when government bailouts are chiefly responsible for their astronomical profits, then they better make darn sure that the spigot is not suddenly turned off for desperate homeowners who need modifications to stay in their homes. I used to have a much higher opinion of Wall Street and indeed, as I wrote above, many of my closest friends are bankers. But a series of unfortunate incidents soured me, nearly all of them with JP Morgan Chase and its subdivision Bear Stearns. I have earlier written of Bear Stearns’ losing about forty percent of my retirement savings and then trying to triple charge me with fees when another trader moved the money into mutual funds. Wow. You’d think that after everything my wife and I had been through they would at least not try and gouge me. I shared how an old and influential friend at the bank then told me that any attempt to recover the paltry $3900 I had requested, amid losses of tens of thousands, due to consequences of the triple-charging on the part of the young trader, would be labeled extortion. Bigger wow! If you complain they threaten you? Nobody likes to be threatened or bullied so I had no choice but to sue Bear Stearns. I have tried to settle the suit. Bear is offering a pittance. Still I indicated a willingness to accept the small sum to simply put the matter behind me. This was never about money but about a regular person showing Wall Street that they can’t simply push us around. But the draconian confidentiality terms Bear is demanding is making even a small settlement difficult. As a writer, broadcaster, and columnist, I talk about the state of the economy and the state of our banks as an important barometer of the overall health of our nation’s values. And it seems to me that rather than large institutions like Bear Stearns try to gag people from being critical, especially when it is the only remedy available to us given our weakness in taking on multi-billion dollar institutions, it is better to correct their inner culture to act fairly and ethically in the first place. The New York Times Magazine recently ran a cover story that seemed like a puff piece on JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon entitled, “America’s Least-Hated Banker.” (That’s what passes for a compliment for bankers today.) I would like to believe that he’s a good guy. Perhaps he is the genius they say he is (though I was startled to see writer Roger Lowenstein disclose halfway through the piece that “my mother is friendly with Dimon’s parents.” I kind of wondered why he was selected him to write the profile.) But to prove it, Dimon must demonstrate that he is changing the culture at Bear Stearns and JP Morgan Chase and that he gets that while it’s nice to make bucket loads of money and afford the luxuries of life, it’s even more important to uphold the highest ethical standards while doing so. Rabbi Shmuley Boteach is founder of This World: The Values Network, an organization dedicated to promoting universal Jewish values in the culture. The international best-selling author of 24 books, his most recent work is “Renewal: A Guide to the Values-Filled Life.” Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

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