February 2011

Video: Lenz Sees More New York Luxury Home Buying From Overseas

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Dolly Lenz, a broker at Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate, talks about the demand for luxury real estate in the New York market. Lenz, speaking with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack,” also discusses the use of high-end properties as a hedge against inflation. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Ruskin Calls Food Inflation `Vexing’ Problem for G-20

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Alan Ruskin, global head of Group-of-10 foreign-exchange strategy at Deutsche Bank AG, talks about the Group of 20 finance ministers meeting in Paris. He speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Will NYSE’s Merger Help Prevent Another ‘Flash Crash’?

February 18, 2011

NEW YORK (By Jonathan Spicer) – The merger frenzy among the world’s top exchanges could cast the U.S.-centric “flash crash” debate in a global light, as experts on Friday pitch some possibly radical changes meant to avoid another market breakdown. A special committee is set to meet in Washington to make its long-awaited recommendations to regulators — now more than nine months since the unprecedented market crash sent the Dow Jones industrial average down some 700 points before rebounding, all in a matter of minutes. The May 6 crash rattled investors, exposed flaws in the structure of today’s electronic markets, and set regulators on a mission to fix the high-speed system. The exchanges at the center of the breakdown, however, added a new wrinkle to the debate when in the last week they set off a new wave of planned global mergers, including the takeover of Big Board parent NYSE Euronext by Germany’s Deutsche Boerse. While the deals could strengthen the oversight of cross-border trading and boost the flow of global liquidity, they also tie the world’s interconnected markets tighter together, possibly setting the stage for larger-scale crashes, some observers said. Seth Merrin, chief executive of market operator Liquidnet, said the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission need to coordinate with regulators elsewhere to understand how sharp movements in one country’s market can hit derivatives traded in others. “Nobody as far as I can see has said to all of the other regulators that if you’re going to create securities that link to anything in my market, we have to talk,” said Merrin, whose venue lets institutional investors trade anonymously. “I don’t know that investors can sustain another flash crash,” he said in an interview. After the crash, one of the first steps taken by the CFTC and the SEC was to strike the committee to come up with some answers. The group includes Financial Industry Regulatory Authority head Richard Ketchum and former CFTC Chairman Brooksley Born, among others. Robert Engle, an Nobel Prize-winning economist also on the committee, told Reuters that members discussed several possible changes, including giving special rebates that would help stabilize markets during stressful times, and cracking down on the growing amount of trading outside of the public exchanges. Engle, interviewed earlier this month, said at the time that no final recommendations had been set. The SEC and CFTC, which hosts the Friday meeting, could formally propose rule changes based on the recommendations. They have already made a handful of adjustments to the marketplace in the wake of the flash crash, including adding trading pauses known as circuit breakers. In another nod to boosting market security, SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro told a U.S. Senate panel on Thursday the agency asked all exchanges for audits of their security policies, after Nasdaq Stock Market parent Nasdaq OMX Group said on February 5 that hackers had breached its computer systems. Rounding out the merger activity that caught fire last week, London Stock Exchange bid to buy Canada’s TMX Group, and, according to a source, BATS Global Markets is nearing a deal to buy fellow private exchange operator Chi-X Europe. BATS accounts for about 10 percent of all U.S. stock trading. (Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Gary Hill) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Les Leopold: Wall Street Wins Big in Deficit Battle

February 18, 2011

Maybe it’s something in the water. Some potent little parasite has wormed its way into Washington, and now everyone’s coming down with the disease: certifiable deficit hysteria. Politicians and pundits are all marching in lockstep chanting “Cut, Cut, Cut,” fearing that if they don’t they’ll be assaulted by the right-wing budget police. They rationalize the madness with the slogan “equality of sacrifice,” a platitude that is supposed to make us feel better about destroying our public sector. For all the pompous pontifications, the real argument politicians are having is over which group of working Americans they should screw first. No one’s asking Wall Street to sacrifice. The bankers and hedge fund gamblers are getting a free ride — again. You’d think this would be a good moment to mention that we wouldn’t even be having these budget deficit hysterics right now if Wall Street hadn’t just destroyed over $13 trillion dollars in wealth as well as wiping out several hundred billion dollars in yearly government tax revenues. Do we even remember that the reason 30 million Americans can’t find full-time jobs is that Wall Street’s reckless gambling crashed the economy? (If you still have any doubt about this, please see The Looting of America for the sad tale of how we got here.) Instead, even NPR reporters (who may soon feel the sharp edge of the budget-cutting guillotine themselves) command us again and again to “Text, Twitter or Facebook us about what you think ought to be cut.” PBS News Hour’s Gwen Ifill seems to be on a righteous mission as she presses White House budget director Jack Lew over and over: “What about the entitlements, Mr. Lew? What about the entitlements, Mr. Lew?” Yes, Serious People everywhere know that Social Security and Medicare cuts are inevitable and that their job is to nail those slippery pols down: How much? When? But suggesting that perhaps Wall Street should sacrifice something is too ludicrous even to mention. Serious People don’t bring up issues that have been quarantined by deficit hysteria. New Taxes on Wall Street to Help Reduce the Deficit? But hold on, deep in the bowels of the president’s budget you can actually find new Wall Street taxes. If you look real hard you’ll see a category called “Total Reform Treatment of Financial Institutions and Products.” Hmm, looks promising. Maybe they’re proposing to finally tax the hell out of the derivative products that destroyed our economy a couple of years ago. So, let’s see. It says the total tax increases in 2012 come to … $159 million? Million, not billion? Is that a typo? Is the decimal point in the wrong place? Or is this the new definition of “equality of sacrifice”? Let’s do the math: John Paulson, the hedge fund manager who earned $2.4 million an HOUR in 2010, could pay off the proposed tax increases for the entire financial industry personally — by working less than two weeks. But not to worry, Mr. P. You and your fellow hedge fund elites have been saved yet again by the deficit fanatics’ exclusive focus on squeezing middle- and low-income Americans instead of you. No one’s talking about closing the shameless tax loophole that allows hedge fund managers to pay only a 15 percent “capital gains” tax on their enormous incomes instead of the top income tax rate of 35 percent. Closing that tax loophole on just the 25 top hedge fund managers — just 25 individuals! — would pull in twice the revenue compared to freezing the wages of 2 million federal employees. Apparently the new math of “equality of sacrifice” means that 25 people equals 2 million. To be fair, the president’s budget does propose gradually raising financial taxes by a total of $33 billion over the next decade. Unfortunately that only amounts to 3.3 percent of the trillion dollars he’s proposing to cut — more Orwellian equality. The nauseating ironies abound. The hedge fund managers are likely to pay a lower income tax rate than the families who find out they can’t send their kid to college because Congress cut their Pell tuition grant. It’s one thing to have an in-depth debate over steeper taxes on financial billionaires and lose. It’s quite another to see the entire debate buried by Democrats, Republicans, the media and just about every other force in society. Buried under great heaping mounds of deficit drivel. Wall Street owes the American people. And the American people, I am sure, would love Wall Street to make restitution for the damage it has done. In a saner world, we’d be considering a wider menu of real financial industry tax increases. Taken together these would raise more money than all of Obama’s proposed budget cuts combined: Close the hedge fund loophole so that hedge fund managers have to pay the top income tax rate. Enact a 50 percent surcharge on financial sector profits and bonuses until the unemployment rate drops below 5 percent. Impose a small financial transaction tax on all short-term financial transactions. This would both raise revenue and tap the brakes on reckless financial gambling. Together these taxes could raise federal revenues by $100 to $200 billion a year. In the process they would: a) reduce the size of Wall Street’s dangerous casino economy; b) reduce the outsized pay packages of financiers, whose “innovations” contribute next to nothing to the real economy; and c) make our economy more stable by reining in the reckless gambling. (This would be a return to the post WWII practice of keeping Wall Street salaries in line with salaries of those in other fields with similar educational levels.) But instead of looking for constructive solutions to our budget challenges, politicians are using deficit hysteria as an excuse to gut and privatize the public sector, invade the few remaining union strongholds, and turn working people against each other. The budget axes are flying, but on Wall Street all is peaceful and calm. The new financial oligarchs are quietly collecting the happy returns from all the taxpayer dollars we gave them. They’re back to flying high on their financial trapeze, making reckless bets in the hopes of outrageous returns. But no worries: Now more than ever, they’ve got a net. It comes in the form of an enormous implicit federal guarantee: If you fall, we will catch you (or actually, the taxpayers will). Because the institutions that were too big to fail in the last round are now way too big to fail. Remember, there now are even fewer of them and they are much bigger. The obsessive focus on budget cuts keeps us from noticing that we, the people, now own billions of dollars of toxic assets (via the Federal Reserve) that once were rotting on the books of our largest financial institutions. We’re the ones who are paying off the largest Ponzi scheme ever created. (If you want to really get a rage on, read the Financial Crisis Inquiry Report’s account of how banks traded the most toxic slices of CDOs back and forth to create a make-believe market in toxic assets. You’ll either want to free Bernie — the sacrificial lamb — or throw the whole bunch of them in jail with him.) “Equality of sacrifice?” There ought to be a law against any politician uttering that phrase. But despite it all, something good is percolating. Financial billionaires are whining more and more about the criticism they are receiving for bankrupting our economy. One plutocrat even waved legal action at me for suggesting that maybe his financial “genius” involved some fraudulent activities. Think about it. If our financial titans are coming after lowly bloggers, maybe they’re just a tiny bit worried. Maybe events in Tahrir Square or Madison have them spooked. Maybe they fear the sparks could ignite into a massive conflagration of demands for financial billionaires finally to pay up for the damage they have done. Let’s blow harder on those sparks. Les Leopold is the author of The Looting of America: How Wall Street’s Game of Fantasy Finance destroyed our Jobs, Pensions and Prosperity, and What We Can Do About It Chelsea Green Publishing, June 2009. He is currently working on a new book, How to Earn $900,000 an Hour: The Rise of Wall Street Billionaires and the One-sided Class War, (hopefully to be published in 2011).

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Robert H. Lorsch, MMRGlobal Chairman and CEO, Named Head Concierge

February 18, 2011

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – February 18, 2011) –   MMRGlobal, Inc. ( OTCBB : MMRF ) today announced that Chairman and CEO Robert H. Lorsch added two more words to his title of Chairman and CEO. They are “Head Concierge.” The purpose of the change in title is to underscore the Company’s commitment to support concierge medicine. Concierge medicine is proving to represent the future of healthcare in many communities, particularly when it comes to the survival of the small family group practice. The Company has launched an educational effort and a campaign to expand the use of its Internet-based MMRPro product and service to play a more important role in enhanced patient communication, a ne

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Robert H. Lorsch, MMRGlobal Chairman and CEO, Named Head Concierge

February 18, 2011

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – February 18, 2011) –   MMRGlobal, Inc. ( OTCBB : MMRF ) today announced that Chairman and CEO Robert H. Lorsch added two more words to his title of Chairman and CEO. They are “Head Concierge.” The purpose of the change in title is to underscore the Company’s commitment to support concierge medicine. Concierge medicine is proving to represent the future of healthcare in many communities, particularly when it comes to the survival of the small family group practice. The Company has launched an educational effort and a campaign to expand the use of its Internet-based MMRPro product and service to play a more important role in enhanced patient communication, a ne

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High River Provides an Update on the Bankruptcy Procedures of Prognoz Silver LLC

February 18, 2011

TORONTO, ONTARIO–(Marketwire – Feb. 18, 2011) – High River Gold Mines Ltd. (” High River ” or the ” Company “) (TSX:HRG) was informed that Prognoz Silver LLC (” Prognoz Silver “) repaid part of an outstanding debt due under the contract for exploration work on the Prognoz silver project to OJSC Buryatzoloto (” Buryatzoloto “). High River holds a 50% indirect interest in Prognoz Silver, which operates the Prognoz silver project in the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), Russia. The repaid amount was approximately US$18 million. Prognoz Silver’s debt originated from the inability of its shareholders, other than High River, to finance their share of expenditures at the Prognoz silver project.

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JPMorgan CEO Gets $17 Million Pay Day

February 18, 2011

NEW YORK — JPMorgan Chase & Co. has granted Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon stock and options worth $17 million, just a month after one of Wall Street’s largest banks posted a big jump in quarterly earnings. Dimon’s bonus follows huge compensation boosts earlier this month for the heads of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc., as many big banks _and their stocks – have rebounded from the financial crisis. The New York bank said in a regulatory filing Thursday that it granted Dimon 251,415 restricted stock units, of which half vest in January 2013 and the rest the following year. Based on the stock’s closing price Wednesday, the day the units were granted, the award is worth $12.1 million. Dimon, 54, also received 367,377 stock appreciation rights, which have a 10-year term and become exercisable in five installments staring next January. Using the Black-Scholes calculation method, the rights are valued at about $5 million. Dimon’s salary and other compensation weren’t disclosed in Thursday’s filing. JPMorgan Chase pleased investors in January with news that it will raise its dividend soon, pending approval from the Federal Reserve. The bank also reported that its income jumped 47 percent in the final three months of 2010 as fewer customers defaulted on their loans. Last month, Goldman Sachs more than tripled the salary of CEO Lloyd Blankfein to $2 million, not including stock awards, and also granted raises to four other top executives. Citigroup Inc. gave its top executive, Vikram Pandit, a salary raise to $1.75 million, from just $1 the previous year. Bank of America Corp., however, has said it won’t give its top executive a raise for 2011 and won’t hand out cash bonuses to top management. CEO Brian Moynihan’s salary will remain $950,000 for 2011, though he could get up to $9.05 million in stock awards if the nation’s largest bank by assets hits certain performance targets.

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Video: Holland Says Gold Prices More Likely to Rise Than Fall

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Nick Holland, chief executive officer of Gold Fields Ltd., talks about the outlook for the price of gold. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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CoStar’s People of Note (Feb. 13-19)

February 18, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland/Northern Ohio, Columbus, Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston, National, New York City, Orange County, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Richmond and San Antonio. AUSTIN, DALLAS/FORT WORTH, HOUSTON, SAN ANTONIO Veteran Investors Form State of TX Real Estate Fund Veteran commercial real estate investors Mark Jordan and Kevin White formed the State of Texas…

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CoStar’s People of Note (Feb. 13-19)

February 18, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland/Northern Ohio, Columbus, Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston, National, New York City, Orange County, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Richmond and San Antonio. AUSTIN, DALLAS/FORT WORTH, HOUSTON, SAN ANTONIO Veteran Investors Form State of TX Real Estate Fund Veteran commercial real estate investors Mark Jordan and Kevin White formed the State of Texas…

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Video: Campbell Says U.S. Housing May Not Have Reached Bottom

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Ken Campbell, chief executive officer of homebuilder Standard Pacific Corp., discusses the U.S. housing market. Standard Pacific is based in Irvine, California. Campbell talks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Dumas Says China’s Economy to Weaken `Sharply’ This Year

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Charles Dumas, research director at Lombard Street Research Ltd., talks about the outlook for the Chinese and German economies. Dumas also discusses this weekend’s Group of 20 meeting of finance ministers with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Video: Rice Says U.S. `Miseducating,’ Need Technical Skills

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Bob Rice, general managing partner at Tangent Capital Partners LLC, discusses President Barack Obama’s agenda for creating jobs. Rice speaks from New York with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: JPMorgan Boosts Dimon’s Stock Payout 22% to $17.4 Mln

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second-largest U.S. bank by assets, boosted Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon’s 2010 restricted stock payout by 22 percent to $17.4 million. Deirdre Bolton reports on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Obama Dines With Jobs, Zuckerberg With Economy on Menu

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama dined with a dozen leaders of the U.S. technology industry including Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs and Facebook Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg as he sought support for his education and innovation agenda to help promote growth. Cris Valerio reports on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: British Retailers Rebound in London, Retreat in North

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on a rise in commercial real estate vacancies in the North of England, while trade at London stores rebounds. Linzie Janis also speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: HSBC’s Kwok Says Yuan Will Reach `Critical Mass’ by 2015

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Donna Kwok, an economist at HSBC Holdings Plc, talks about the outlook for the yuan as the currency of choice in global trade. She speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: Ikea Recalls Cribs; Video Game Console Sales Decline

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Jane King summarizes the top stories this morning on the Bloomberg Business Report. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: D’Arvisenet Says U.S. Should Face Pressure on Low Dollar

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomebrg) — Philippe D’Arvisenet, global chief economist at BNP Paribas SA, discusses the outlook for Group of 20 talks on currency imbalances. He speaks with Francine Lacqua in Paris on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Carroll Says Anglo Has $70 Billion Investment Pipeline

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Cynthia Carroll, chief executive officer of Anglo American Plc, talks about the demand for commodities and the company’s investment pipeline. The part-owner of the world’s biggest platinum and diamond producers said profit almost doubled last year as commodity prices climbed from their 2008 slump. Carroll speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Rodriguez Says Mexico to Avoid Currency Intervention

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Mexico’s Deputy Finance Minister Gerardo Rodriguez discusses the outlook for inflation and the ecomomy. He speaks with Francine Lacqua in Paris on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: ING’s Condon Says G-20 `Too Large’ to Solve Imbalances

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Tim Condon, the head of Asian research at ING Groep NV, talks about the outlook for this weekend’s Group of 20 finance ministers meeting in Paris and inflation levels in Asia. He speaks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: Arab League’s Moussa Says `Wind Of Change’ Sweeps Region

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Amr Moussa, the secretary-general of the Arab League, talks about the prospect of new democracies emerging in the Middle East following weeks of civil unrest across the region. He spoke in Cairo yesterday with Bloomberg’s Lara Setrakian.

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Video: Lagarde Says Growth is the Objective G-20 Must Pursue

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde talks about the topics up for discussion at this weekend’s Group of 20 finance ministers meeting in Paris. She speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Lease Up: League of Legends Popularity Gives Rise to HQs Expansion

February 18, 2011

Riot Games, as independent game developer and publisher, secured new office space in Santa Monica, CA. Based on the incredible success of League of Legends, Riot has seen rapid expansion in its staffing, which necessitated securing 47,000 square feet of space at Santa Monica’s Yahoo Center. With the recent announcement by CEO Brandon Beck that Riot Games would be increasing its staff by 100 additional employees in 2011 in order to make further…

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Lease Up: League of Legends Popularity Gives Rise to HQs Expansion

February 18, 2011

Riot Games, as independent game developer and publisher, secured new office space in Santa Monica, CA. Based on the incredible success of League of Legends, Riot has seen rapid expansion in its staffing, which necessitated securing 47,000 square feet of space at Santa Monica’s Yahoo Center. With the recent announcement by CEO Brandon Beck that Riot Games would be increasing its staff by 100 additional employees in 2011 in order to make further…

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Video: Sfakianakis Says Saudi Stability Should Avert Oil Rise

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — John Sfakianakis, chief economist at Banque Saudi Fransi, discusses the impact of civil unrest in parts of the Middle East on the price of oil. He speaks from Riyadh with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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HuffPost TV: WATCH: Arianna Discusses Her Editorial Vision On Charlie Rose

February 18, 2011

Arianna and AOL CEO Tim Armstrong sat down with Charlie Rose on Thursday to discuss the recent merger of The Huffington Post with AOL. Arianna explained to Charlie her larger vision for the future of the company. She said that “the key here is to remain passionate” and to base reporting “on storytelling rather than just repeating data.” In terms of local stories, Arianna stated how important it is “to focus on solutions, rather than just problems.” Summing up the current divide between national and local issues, Arianna explained, “I actually really profoundly believe that at the national level people are losing trust,” but that “at the local level, we have people actually finding solutions, using their compassion and ingenuity to help each other.” WATCH:

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Ian Fletcher: The Biggest Bubble of All Has Yet to Pop

February 18, 2011

Americans presumably realize by now that living in a bubble economy, while exhilarating as long as the champagne lasts, is not a good move. Therefore it is worth understanding why the biggest bubble of all may be yet to pop. I refer to America’s trade imbalance with the rest of the world. As I explained in a previous post , our trade deficit with the rest of the world means that we must a) borrow money and b) sell existing assets in order to cover the yawning gap between our imports and our exports. And while a rich nation can indeed borrow a huge amount of money and has a lot of assets to sell off, this doesn’t mean Santa has installed an ATM on every street corner. Which is what a lot of people seem to think. Now it used to be that American liberals were the ones traditionally accused of “money-grows-on-trees” thinking. But I’ve noticed something: when it’s convenient to them (i.e., not a matter of cutting social programs they don’t like), American conservatives are now even worse. Let’s take as a case-in-point this recent assertion by Don Boudreaux of the libertarian Cato Institute: Second and most importantly, Mr. Fletcher doesn’t understand what a trade deficit is. An increase in the U.S. trade deficit does not necessarily mean that Americans are borrowing more or are selling off assets. The volume of productive capital assets is not fixed. Foreigners who invest dollars in creating and expanding businesses in America increase America’s capital stock without either putting Americans further in debt or decreasing Americans’ ownership of assets. Given that America is the world’s leading destination for foreign direct investment, it hardly seems plausible that the U.S. trade deficit is evidence of American impoverishment or of inadequate production. Now the key phrase here is, “The volume of productive capital assets is not fixed.” The idea appears to be that because we can always make more assets, there’s nothing wrong with selling them off to foreigners. Sounds logical enough. The problem, though, is that even if you can bake more cookies, selling off the cookies you already have results in your ending up with fewer than you would otherwise have. Maybe you don’t end up with nothing, but your still have fewer cookies than if you hadn’t sold any. The meaning of this analogy is that even if America can increase its stock of capital assets over time (as we obviously can), selling off some of those assets to foreigners still means we own fewer assets. Our net worth is still lower. We are poorer, by basic accounting. We own less. Debt works the same way. Even if America’s capacity to service debt goes up over time (as it does with a growing GDP), assuming debts to foreigners still means that we owe more than we otherwise would. Again, our net worth is lower. Our debit column went up. Now let’s look at the next tenet of bubblethink expressed above, the idea that “foreigners who invest dollars in creating and expanding businesses in America increase America’s capital stock without either putting Americans further in debt or decreasing Americans’ ownership of assets.” There are two problems with this idea. First is that most foreign investment into the United States simply doesn’t fall into this category. For example, of the $260.4 billion invested in 2008, 93 percent went to buying up existing companies, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. (Thomas Anderson, “Foreign Direct Investment in the United States,” BEA, June 2009, p. 55.) Worse, a huge chunk of foreign investment in the U.S. just goes for Treasury securities, which get recycled, by way of deficit spending, into consumption , not even investment in existing assets. Second, it’s a baseline trick. It is indeed true that if we take our low savings rate as a given and ask whether we would be better off with foreign-financed investment or no investment at all, then foreign-financed investment is better. But our savings rate isn’t a given, it’s a choice , which means that the real choice is between foreign- and domestically-financed investment. Once one frames the problem this way, domestically-financed investment is obviously better because then Americans, rather than foreigners, will own the investments and receive the returns they generate. Developing nations face this problem all the time (and more honestly than we do right now): While it’s certainly nice to have foreigners come and invest in your country, because this creates jobs et cetera, what’s even better is if you have the capacity to invest for yourself. Being able to develop your own country with your own investments, rather than depending upon others, is part of what distinguishes the serious players from the also-rans. The last time America was importing huge amounts of capital was in the 19th century, when we were still a developing nation dependent upon European bankers to pay for building our railroads and the like; as we matured into a major industrial power in our own right, the tide reversed and we exported capital back to Europe to rebuild it, for example, after two world wars. In the 19th century, we borrowed to invest in projects that made us more productive, improved our capital stock, thus we could (and did) pay back the borrowing. Borrowing to consume is quite the opposite. Today, we are selling off our capital stock and damaging our future productivity. The free trade crowd also assumes that the economics of trade takes place in a vacuum. This is where the golden rule applies: He who has the gold makes the rules and controls the key decisions. There are important economic and political consequences. If Washington is under the influence of Wall Street and so-called “American” multinationals, what will our policies look like, what freedom of action will we have as a nation? How does one possess national security when the economic sinews thereof belong to someone else? At some point, all this will come out in the wash. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

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Digital Divide: Only 60 Percent Of Rural Homes Use Broadband

February 18, 2011

COFFEEVILLE, Ala. — After a couple of days in this part of rural Alabama, it is hard to complain about a dropped iPhone call or a Cee Lo video that takes a few seconds too long to load.

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Video: Beijing Property Boom Forces Migrant Workers Underground

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Rising rents in Beijing are forcing many of the city’s migrant workers into small dwellings underground. China’s inflation accelerated in January as prices excluding food rose the most in at least six years, bolstering the case for more interest-rate increases to tame overheating risks in the fastest-growing major economy. Bloomberg’s Margaret Conley reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bradford Says Social Media to Be `Core’ of Marketing

February 18, 2011

Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Reggie Bradford, chief executive officer of Virtue Inc., talks about prospects for corporate use of social media to market their products and services. Bradford talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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U.S. Dollar in the Market’s Crosshairs Next Week as Investors Eye Growth Data

February 18, 2011

U.S. Dollar in the Market’s Crosshairs Next Week as Investors Eye Growth Data

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U.S. Dollar in the Market’s Crosshairs Next Week as Investors Eye Growth Data

February 18, 2011

U.S. Dollar in the Market’s Crosshairs Next Week as Investors Eye Growth Data

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Swissy at Range Resistance

February 18, 2011

Swissy at Range Resistance

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Swissy at Range Resistance

February 18, 2011

Swissy at Range Resistance

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Swissy at Range Resistance

February 18, 2011

Swissy at Range Resistance

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An Intraday AUD/JPY Ascending Channel is Creating Scalping Environment

February 18, 2011

An Intraday AUD/JPY Ascending Channel is Creating Scalping Environment

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An Intraday AUD/JPY Ascending Channel is Creating Scalping Environment

February 18, 2011

An Intraday AUD/JPY Ascending Channel is Creating Scalping Environment

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AUD/CHF Ascending Channel Provides Swing Trading Opportunity

February 18, 2011

AUD/CHF Ascending Channel Provides Swing Trading Opportunity

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AUD/CHF Ascending Channel Provides Swing Trading Opportunity

February 18, 2011

AUD/CHF Ascending Channel Provides Swing Trading Opportunity

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Investors Turn to Swiss Franc as Middle East Tensions Escalate

February 18, 2011

Investors Turn to Swiss Franc as Middle East Tensions Escalate

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