March 2011

Video: Mankiw Says Economists Agree on U.S. Deficit Reduction: Video

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Gregory Mankiw, who chaired President George W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers, talks about the importance of reducing the U.S. budget deficit. He speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Clifton Expects Extension of U.S. Payroll Tax Cuts

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Dan Clifton, partner and head of policy research at Strategas Research Partners, talks about government-related issues on the minds of investors and the outlook for additional economic stimulus. Clifton speaks with Adam Johnson at the Strategas Global Macro Conference in New York on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Wisconsin Billionaire Charged With Sexual Assault Of A Child

March 24, 2011

Samuel Curtis Johnson III was formally charged today, March 24, with repeated sexual assault of a child. A judge released him on a $500,000 cash bond and Johnson was ordered to have no contact with the child or any other minor female child. Johnson, who lives in Caledonia, is the billionaire son of the late Sam Johnson and is the former head of Sturtevant-based Diversey, Inc.

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Video: Stocks Rally on Higher-Than-Estimated Corporate Profits

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index higher for a second day, after corporate profit topped analysts’ estimates and a government report showed a decline in jobless claims. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Crisis Of Conscience: Lobbyist For Bahrain, Yemen Loses Top Execs

March 24, 2011

This story has been updated NEW YORK — One of Washington’s best-known lobbying and public relations firms has been upended in the wake of the turmoil in the Middle East due in part to its representation of some of the region’s autocratic governments. In the last two months, more than a third of the partners at Qorvis have left the firm to start their own lobby shops, partly because of the firm’s work on behalf of such clients as Yemen, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the Central African nation of Equatorial Guinea, say former employees. “I just have trouble working with despotic dictators killing their own people,” a former Qorvis insider tells The Huffington Post. “People don’t want to be seen representing all these countries — you take a look at the State Department’s list of human rights violators and some of our clients were on there.” The governments of Bahrain and Yemen, which have been condemned by the United Nations for their brutal crackdowns that resulted in dozens of protesters killed and hundreds injured, are both represented by Qorvis through a subcontract to British public relations giant Bell Pottinger . Saudi Arabia, which last week sent troops to assist in riot control in Bahrain and has long been cited for its poor human rights record , is a longtime client of the firm. And Equatorial Guinea, an oil-rich dictatorship considered one of the most corrupt and undemocratic regimes in the world, likewise pays Qorvis to burnish its reputation. Several former Qorvis staffers blamed the firm’s current management for cultivating such “black hat” clients, noting that much of that business came about through the firm’s partnership with Bell Pottinger, the United Kingdom’s largest public relations firm, which took heat for representing Sri Lanka during that South Asian country’s brutal crackdown on rebel groups during the last two years. “They have zero conscience in what they do,” says the first former insider, referring to Bell Pottinger. A spokesperson for Bell Pottinger did not return calls for comment. Such “black hat” countries pay well — Equatorial Guinea pays Qorvis $55,000 per month and Saudi Arabian initially paid Qorvis $14 million per year back in 2002 to polish its reputation in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, though in recent years the latter contract has been much less lucrative. “These scumbags will pay whatever you want,” says the former insider. “You can charge retainers that are huge.” The firm’s founder and CEO, Michael Petruzello, says that such complaints are “ridiculous” and disingenuous, asserting that the firm’s work with international clients preceded the tenure of departing partners and that no one complained about it. “If they had a problem with it, it would have been discussed,” he said. He adds that most of those former partners worked at Qorvis for six to seven years and that they left primarily to start their own businesses, which is very common in the hothouse world of D.C.-based lobbying and public relations outfits. The principals who departed include Kelley McCormick (who left in early March for Gibraltar Associates), Don Goldberg, Michael Quint and Jason Siegel (who resigned in February to start a new firm, Bluetext), and Maura Corbett , who left in November to launch the Glen Echo Group. Petruzello defends the firm’s work on behalf of countries with troubled reputations, explaining that the firm’s international clients represent only 20 percent of its business (which primarily consists of large corporate clients such as Cisco and Sprint). “The reason they hire Qorvis and others is that they have a narrative they feel is not being heard — and they want a chance to be heard in the court of public opinion.” He adds that he’s proud of the work the firm has done for Bahrain, for example, explaining that every Secretary of the Navy has said that there is no stronger ally of the United States than the island nation, which hosts the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet. And Petruzello, who quickly named four new principals in recent weeks , insists that the firm “has the strongest leadership team in [its] 10-year history.” Among them are former State Department staffer Greg Lagana and former Washington Times editor Seam Dealey, who are handling a new $92,000 litigation communications contract with Cairo-based EZZ Industries. That company’s owner, Egyptian business tycoon Ahmed Ezz, a friend of the Mubarak family, was arrested amid the unrest in that country. Qorvis’s role is to promote “a transparent judicial system in Egypt,” reports O’Dwyer’s. It’s not the first time that Qorvis has witnessed a mass exodus due in some part to its unsavory clients. After Qorvis was retained by Saudi Arabia several months after 9/11, the contract attracted controversy and a Justice Department probe of the firm for its involvement in a radio ad campaign that burnished the image of the country, leading three top principals (Bernie Merrit, Jim Weber and Judy Smith) to leave the firm . Weber and Merritt, who run their own firm, did not return calls for comment. One of the methods used by Qorvis and other firms is online reputation management — through its Geo-Political Solutions (GPS) division , the firm uses ‘”black arts” by creating fake blogs and websites that link back to positive content, “to make sure that no one online comes across the bad stuff,” says the former insider. Other techniques include the use of social media, including Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. Recently, Qorvis helped frame the kingdom’s crackdown on protests by highlighting statements made by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in which she emphasized America’s commitment to Bahrain and affirmed its “sovereign right” to invite security forces from other countries. Clinton’s comment that the government is “on the wrong track,” however, was omitted, notes the Sunlight Foundation’s Paul Blumenthal . The firm’s work for Equatorial Guinea, whose strongman Teodoro Obiang has been accused by the UN Commission on Human Rights of directly overseeing the torture of his opponents, includes sending out news releases about the country’s support for animal conservation and a native daughter being named Michigan “Teacher of the Year.” In a lengthy Harper ‘s profile of Obiang and his son, Qorvis principal Matthew J. Lauer defended the country, saying, “No one is saying there are no problems, but it’s not North Korea,” but declined to respond to questions about claims of corruption and money laundering by U.S. investigators. Other high-powered firms operate in the Mideast — Patton Boggs, which owns a percentage of Qorvis and which recently made headlines when President Obama sent one of the firm’s lawyers , Frank Wisner, to negotiate with Egypt’s recently-ousted former president Hosni Mubarak, has long worked with Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Qorvis and Patton Boggs were both subpoenaed in 2002 by the House Committee on Government Reform , which was investigating reports of American children kidnapped and held in Saudi Arabia. The Livingston Group, founded by former Louisiana Rep. Robert L. Livingston, was paid $2.4 million to represent Libya in 2008 and 2009. And the Washington Media Group ended its $420,000 contract to enhance the image of Tunisia in January after images of the country’s brutal crackdown on protesters made headlines around the world. The United Arab Emirates was the second-biggest foreign lobbying client , paying $5.3 million to DLA Piper and other firms in 2009 to help get more access to U.S. nuclear technology, among other issues. And former Wall Street Journal reporter Christopher Cooper was recently hired for $20,000 a month by Bahrain’s envoy to the U.S. government to help get the administration and members of Congress behind the Crown Prince’s idea of a national dialogue, says Cooper. Envoy Abdul Latif Zayani, Bahrain’s former chief of police, is a familiar presence in military and diplomatic circles and was once a classmate of Joint Chiefs Chairman Mike Mullen. The region is attractive to lobbying firms due to the lucrative contracts but it can also present challenges. “If you get associated with somebody who turns out to be a Gaddafy kind of person, you’re not in the company of one of the nice people of the world and that could harm your reputation,” says Howard Marlowe, president of the American League of Lobbyists. “And in the lobbying world, your reputation is everything.” “Most of us are not guns for hire — we would like to be able to wake up in the morning and look in the mirror and feel that we are not associated with child molesters, wife beaters. And to do work that meets our own test of ethics and conscience,” he added. Making sure to emphasize that he was not referring to the Qorvis situation, he called on lobbyists to follow their conscience. “It’s a commendable thing for a lobbyist to have their own set of ethics — if I’m doing something that I’m uncomfortable with, then I need to get out of it.” Correction: A previous version of this story erroneously reported that legendary publicist Judy Smith died last year based on an incorrect online report. I sincerely regret the error.

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Video: Pharo’s Dow Says Portugal, Greece Will Restructure Debt

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Mark Dow, portfolio manager at Pharo Management LLC, and Mark Grant, managing director at Southwest Securities Inc., talk about European debt markets. They speak with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Richardson Says U.S. Should Emphasize Renewable Energy

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Bill Richardson, former governor of New Mexico, discusses the outlook for the U.S. energy policy. He speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Omega’s Cooperman Sees 3% Growth in U.S. Economy in 2011

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Leon Cooperman, chairman of Omega Advisors Inc., talks about the outlook for U.S. economic growth and equities, and some of Omega’s top stock picks. Cooperman speaks with Adam Johnson at the Strategas Global Macro Conference in New York on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Fed Announces Plans To Hold Regular Media Briefings

March 24, 2011

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will start holding regular media briefings on monetary policy next month, a historic shift to greater openness at the traditionally secretive U.S. central bank. Bernanke will kick off a program of four-times-a-year news conferences on April 27 following a regularly scheduled two-day Fed meeting on monetary policy, the central bank said on Thursday. It will be the first regularly scheduled briefing by a Fed chairman in the history of the nearly 98-year-old central bank. Future briefings will coincide with Fed meetings at which officials provide their quarterly economic forecasts, which fall in June and November this year. “The introduction of regular press briefings is intended to further enhance the clarity and timeliness of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy communication,” the central bank said. Bernanke has taken a number of steps to boost transparency at the Fed during his tenure as chairman, and the latest announcement brings it into line with some other central banks. The head of the European Central Bank holds a news conference after each ECB policy meeting, while the governor of the Bank of England briefs media quarterly. Congressional and public outcry for greater Fed disclosure grew louder in the wake of the recent financial crisis, during which the Fed undertook extensive unorthodox emergency measures. The Fed has a reputation for conducting its operations behind closed doors and shielding details of its decision-making from view. Despite a gradual shift to greater openness in recent years, the Fed has fought to keep some of the details of its operations secret. This week, it lost a court battle to withhold the names of banks that had taken emergency loans from its last-resort lending facility during the financial crisis. To make its operations more open, the central bank has in recent years begun issuing its forecasts quarterly, rather than twice a year, and moved up the publication of minutes of policy meetings to three weeks from about six weeks. It did not begin announcing its interest rate moves until 1994. Since the financial crisis, Bernanke has stepped up efforts to explain the central bank’s actions to the public, giving two extensive television interviews and delivering speeches at which reporters have been able to ask questions. Janet Yellen, the Fed’s vice chairman, has led a subcommittee since November to examine the central bank’s communications practices. The Fed said on Thursday it would continue to review its policies “in the interest of ensuring accountability and increasing public understanding.” (Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Neil Stempleman and Dan Grebler) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Robert Lenzner: Gold, Silver Prices Hit New Peaks on Political Unrest

March 24, 2011

Gold bullion closed at $1438 Wednesday after hitting $1442, and will rise as investors try to protect themselves in a world gone mad with chaos and blood. Silver actually hit a new 35 year peak at $37.19, and getting closer to the $40-$50 goal we set last fall. Gold is no longer just a hedge against QE2 and inflation — or a hedge against deflation. Nor is it a hedge against a declining dollar. Today, gold has become an expression of the instability spreading from Tunisia to Egypt to Libya to Syria, to Yemen, to Saudi Arabia, to Iran, to Bahrain — and those street dissensions to come, conceivably in Kuwait, UAE, and elsewhere. Oil supplies are threatened. Buy gold and silver. You don’t believe? Look at a chart of gold against silver. They are moving in absolute tandem now. Any Sheikh trying to preserve his fortune must own gold and silver. In the US the price of GLD, the largest gold ETF, hit a peak of $140 and looks set to breakthrough that mark tomorrow or the next day. Let’s see if net selling turns into net buying. Are you listening Soros and Paulson, and their camp followers? Then, there’s the WikiLeaks impact on gold and silver. The FT reported a few days ago, via cables released by WikiLeaks, that more central banks are plowing into gold, playing catch up with China, Russia and India. Listen up!. Iran, says the Bank of England via the FT , is making “a significant move… to purchase gold. Likewise, the Qatar Investment Authority, no slouches, and Jordan’s central bank are putting reserves into gold. I must call my friend at the Bank of Israel to find out what he’s doing. I’m sure I won’t get anywhere. Imagine; gold and silver at new peak prices. While oil is only at $106 — high for sure, and going higher in fits and starts, and copper has eased recently as the Chinese reduced their purchases. A shocking development. Goldman Sachs is still bullish.

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Will Marshall: Labor Boosted by Proposed Merger

March 24, 2011

America’s embattled labor movement hasn’t had much to celebrate lately, so it’s worth noting when a major union welcomes a business mega-merger. The Communications Workers of America strongly endorsed AT&T’s proposed $39 billion acquisition of T-Mobile. Deals this big — the merger would create the nation’s largest mobile-phone carrier, with about 39 percent of the market — have to run a bruising, multiple-agency regulatory gauntlet. Some consumer groups worry that it will reduce competition in the lucrative telecommunication sector, dampening incentives for innovation and possibly pushing up consumer prices. No doubt the deal merits close scrutiny. But having one of America’s largest private unions (700,000 strong) in its corner can’t hurt AT&T’s chances. C.W.A. represents 42,000 AT&T wireless workers and regards the company as reasonably friendly to unions. The merger gives it a better shot at organizing T-Mobile workers in the U.S. and in Germany (the company is owned by Deutsche Telekom, whose stock zoomed after the announcement.) For those workers, being absorbed into AT&T will mean “better employment security and a management record of full neutrality toward union membership and a bargaining voice,” said C.W.A. president Larry Cohen. This rare bit of good news for organized labor follows successful efforts by Republican governors in several states to curtail public workers’ right to collective bargaining. Although polls show majorities of Americans are opposed to denying bargaining rights, high profile battles in Wisconsin, Indiana and New Jersey have drawn the public’s attention to the adverse impact on state budgets of generous compensation schemes for state employees, especially pension and health care benefits. This is a huge problem for organized labor, which in recent decades has experienced growth only in the public sector. The picture is especially dismal in the private sector, where less than eight percent of workers are unionized. If they are going to reverse their long pattern of decline, U.S. labor unions need to redefine their economic role and relevance to American workers in a post-industrial economy. Cohen’s statement pointed to a mission that would be good for both U.S. workers and employers: building modern infrastructure to underpin America’s ability to win in global markets. “For more than a decade, the United States has continued to drop behind nearly every other developed economy on broadband speed and build out,” he said. In fact, a big national infrastructure push represents common ground on which big labor and big business can meet. In an “odd couple” pairing last week, AFL-CIO President Rich Trumka and Tom Donahue, head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, showed up to endorse a new proposal for a national infrastructure bank. Drafted by a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators including John Kerry, Mark Warner and Kay Baily Hutchinson, the bank would leverage billions of private investments in new transport, energy and water projects. If labor and business can get behind an ambitious project for “internal national building,” our equally polarized political parties surely should be able to follow their example. And that bodes well for an American economic comeback.

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Bausch + Lomb Appoints David Mordaunt, Ph.D. as Vice President, Development and Research, Surgical

March 24, 2011

ROCHESTER, NY–(Marketwire – March 24, 2011) – Bausch + Lomb, the global eye health company, announces the appointment of David Mordaunt, Ph.D. as vice president, Development and Research, Bausch + Lomb Surgical.

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Dr. Philip Neches: AT&T and T-Mobile: Back to the Future

March 24, 2011

Many analysts complain, with justification, that the proposed merger of T-Mobile into AT&T would create a duopoly in domestic cell phone service. The combined company would have roughly 42% market share; Verizon, the current leader, would come in second at 32%; Sprint would be a poor third at 17%; other carriers divide up the remaining 9%. ( GAO 2009 data ) After three decades of invention, growth, and consolidation, we would be back to 1982. That’s when the FCC granted the first commercial license for cellular service to Advanced Mobile Phone Service, Inc. — a subsidiary of AT&T. The license came with a hard-fought condition: the FCC would license a second carrier in each city. The cell phone, like so much of the technology we take for granted today, was invented at Bell Labs . A 1947 paper by D. H. Ring (that’s really his name!) described the idea of using many low-power transmitters, each serving a relatively small “cell”. The cells would be arranged in a hexagonal “honeycomb” pattern. The paper described a hand-off of a call from cell to cell as the caller moved around. It also described how the same frequency could be re-used in different cells, allowing far more calls to be handled. The concept was far beyond what even Bell Labs could implement in those days of relays and vacuum tubes. It sat on the shelf until the 1960s, when Richard Frenkiel and Joel Engel took up the challenge by applying integrated electronics and computers. President Clinton recognized their work with the National Medal of Technology in 1994. In 1971, AT&T proposed the first cellular service concept to the FCC. Years of hearings followed. The two-carrier decision emerging along the way to first field trials in 1978 in Chicago and Newark. By 1982, it was ready for to go commercial. The same year, AT&T broke up into seven “Baby Bell” regional operating companies and “Ma Bell”: long distance, Bell Labs, and Western Electric. The FCC’s earlier decision to require at least two cell phone carriers per city proved prescient. While the Baby Bells lumbered into the cell phone business, literally hundreds of entrepreneurs stormed out of the gate, each building out service in a single city. A few years earlier, the same thing happened with cable television service. Entrepreneurs wired cities and towns. Then a few entrepreneurs started consolidating local operations into larger and larger regional, and ultimately national, providers. A few, like Comcast in cable and McCaw in wireless, became giants. At the same time that local systems were consolidating into regional and national systems, both cable television and cellular phone service started to replace their original analog technologies with digital. Digital expanded the capability of both services by factors of 10 to 100 (number of channels for cable, number of calls for cellular), while lowering the cost. Plus, digital meant entirely new kinds of wireless services became possible: text messaging, mobile e-mail, mobile Internet, and so on. Demand exploded, and in less than a decade, cellular went from relative luxury to everyday necessity. The United States was the first nation to have cell phones, and was the first market to saturate: today 96% of Americans have cell phones . Market saturation means that carriers have less motivation to innovate to win new customers, because there are few unserved customers left to win. Competition among cellular carriers devolved into a stark battle to retain customers and margins. That’s hard enough to do when you have strong differentiation: it’s very, very hard when there is little difference in the nature, quality, or price of the service. Innovation is still very important in a late-stage market. But it’s more difficult, because the new product or service must fit into the existing base. Old customers will not abandon everything they are used to even for a very compelling innovation. That is why products like Apple’s iPhone and iPad are so hot: they make existing services easier to use and provide a platform for applications that provide new utility on top of existing services. Thus AT&T was willing to concede so much to Apple to be the exclusive provider of cellular service for iPhones. It may have been a Faustian bargain for AT&T, however. While the iPhone got existing AT&T users to upgrade their service and won customers away from other carriers, iPhone users put far more stress on AT&T’s network, driving up their costs. While good for AT&T’s top line, it is not entirely clear that it was good for their bottom line. The cellular industry adopted so-called “friends and family” plans as a way to retain customers (reduce “churn”). These pricing plans offer reduced monthly rates for keeping several phones active with the same carrier. They also eliminate per-minute charges for calls to selected phone numbers, and, more important, to any cell phone served by the same carrier. The larger the user base of a carrier offering a “friends and family” plan, the better the economics turn out for both the carrier and the customer. The customer benefits from access to more cell phone numbers for which per-minute charges are waived. The carrier benefits from having the contract be “stickier” to more customers: fewer customers are likely to give up the benefits of the family plan by switching to another carrier, thus saving the carrier the marketing costs of acquiring another customer or re-acquiring the same customer. Why is this so important? Because of a dirty little secret of the telecommunications service business: it costs more to market to customers than to handle their calls. Thus, the T-Mobile acquisition by AT&T could be particularly bad for Sprint. Ironically, Sprint was the first large carrier to offer “friends and family” pricing, starting in their long-distance business. If Sprint and T-Mobile combined, the resulting carrier would still be third, but a close third (32% Verizon, 30% AT&T, 29% Sprint/T-Mobile). The carriers would be more closely matched on the criterion that could have the most influence on buying decisions: the number of other users your calling plans could access at reduced rates. Three well matched competitors would be better than two giants, a runt, and a crowd of pygmies, some say. Thus, it is conceivable, although perhaps not likely, that the FCC or DOJ will reject the deal out of hand, giving Sprint another shot. The larger story is that the US cell phone business has matured. It is no longer the wild rush of rapidly advancing technology and raw entrepreneurship in pursuit of new users. To find those conditions, one now has to look to the developing world. And indeed, that’s where most of the innovation is happening. But for the US, we could be headed for an effective duopoly of two giant carriers. Back to the future. The author was a senior officer of AT&T and a member of the Bell Labs Executive Council from 1992 to 1996. He also served on the Board of Directors of Evolving Systems, Inc. , a supplier of telecommunications software, from 2005 to 2011.

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10 Unexpected Members Of America’s Monopoly Club

March 24, 2011

A common definition of a monopoly is when a company has such effective control of its market that it can set prices and stifle innovation by depriving competition of any chance of profit. The offending company only has to continue to do extraordinarily well in its field regardless of what antitrust regulators have to say. 24/7 Wall St. found ten instances that could be considered de facto monopolies though the government will not take action in each case.

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Jerry Chautin: The Five Cs of Lending Are Key to Funding Your Business

March 24, 2011

Capacity, capital, collateral, credit, and character are the “Five Cs” that loan offers learn in Lending 101. But to most small-business loan applicants in need of money, it is an esoteric exercise that makes them garner reams of paperwork without a clear path to funding. Financing a business “is based on a simple principle,” Charles Green says. He founded a community bank in Atlanta, Georgia, received a financial services award from the U.S. Small Business Administration for making lots of small business loans and recently published his third edition of The SBA Loan Book . The simple principle, he says, is “lenders always require the borrower to agree that the loan will be repaid.” If it were that simple, of course, all applicants would walk out of banks with wads of cash. Bankers want a comprehensive business plan supporting “your ability to repay the loan,” Green says. “The lender will expect you to provide realistic projections about how the proceeds of the loan will be invested to generate revenues for your business.” Furthermore, the revenues generated, less the business operating expenses, must be sufficient to make the loan payments. Additionally, lenders require a cash-flow cushion should revenues decline or operating expenses increase. The projections and an extensive narrative about how you arrived at your numbers is the crux of your business plan. Yet many loan applicants are stumped when it comes to projecting income and operating expenses. To help, most SCORE chapters are offering a course called, “Financial Projections.” It is part of their QuickSTART workshop series and explains how to project believable numbers. Believable means that your projections and financial ratios must pass muster with the bank’s underwriters. Moreover, the underwriters have to accept your narrative describing how you arrived at the projections. “The integrity and reasonableness of these projections are often the most important factors in granting loans approval,” Green says. Paradoxically, “The lender is not an expert in your field and may not recognize exaggerated revenue projections or inadequate expense estimates.” Even more perplexing for underwriters, small businesses within the same industry can be very different. That is why projecting your numbers and getting the lender to buy into them is as much an art as it is a science. The science is learning the lender’s acceptable range for key financial ratios in your industry. The art is doing impeccable market research and citing it as the rational for getting your projections to fit. In other words, you have to know the benchmarks that your lender uses. Then, extensive research and the resulting narrative will support your projections. Many lenders use the Risk Management Association’s “RMA Annual Statement Studies Users Guide” to glean average financial ratios by industry. Thus they will match your projections against others in similar businesses. Any variances from RMA need to be explained. Furthermore, your proficiency in explaining the variances can mean the difference between approval and rejection. The trade associations in your industry will likely have average and mean financial ratios in your industry. They may also segment businesses within the industry more definitively than RMA. You can find a list of trade associations in the Encyclopedia of Associations . Many libraries have it in their reference section or you can purchase a copy online. Green, the former banker, says, “The company may not compare well with RMA results because of extraordinary local reasons.” So get data from local chambers of commerce, business owners and franchise operators merchandising similar products and services. Interpret the data to explain how your company differs from RMA’s averages. I will write about the other Cs of lending in future columns. Jerry Chautin is a business columnist and SBA’s 2006 national ” Journalist of the Year ” award winner. He is a former entrepreneur, commercial mortgage banker, commercial real estate dealmaker and business lender.

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Fatima Goss Graves: What’s at Stake for Women in Wal-Mart v. Dukes

March 24, 2011

Remembering Women’s History Month and the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire , New Deal 2.0 tells the surprising story of how women became citizens — and how their economic lives have evolved along with their rights. Fatima Goss Graves shines a light on how the wage gap undermines our meritocracy ideals, and why the class action suit against Wal-Mart must go forward. No matter how available wage data is sliced and diced, a single truth remains: a wage gap exists between male and female workers. On average, full-time female workers make 23 percent less than male full-time workers. And for women of color, the gap in wages is even larger. African American women and Hispanic women working full-time make far less, on average — 62 percent and 53 percent respectively — compared to white, non-Hispanic men. There is a gap in wages in every part of the country , with women in Wyoming and Louisiana making just 66 percent of male earnings. Even in the District of Columbia, where the wage gap is the smallest, women make 88 percent of male earnings. And although the Department of Labor has documented a gap in wages in every field, sales occupations are particularly behind the times. Women working full-time in sales occupations earned only 64 percent of their male counterparts’ earnings in 2010 — the highest of any occupation. In fact, the last time the overall wage gap was so large was 1981, when women across all occupations earned just 64.4 percent of men’s earnings. This gap in wages is not merely the result of women’s “choices” in career or family, as study after study has demonstrated. Even when researchers have controlled for demographic differences between male and female employees, such as worker qualifications, experience, occupation type, and industry, a persistent gap in wages remains. To name results from just a few recent studies, the gap in wages between male and female physicians has only increased over the past decade, even after controlling for medical specialty, hours and practice type. And women with MBAs were paid less than men in their first post-MBA job and experienced less salary growth thereafter. These and many more studies, together with the countless pay discrimination cases filed around the country, show that pay disparities remain an entrenched problem. Set against the backdrop of widespread disparities in pay, there is a tremendous amount at stake in the pay and promotions discrimination class action that will be argued in the Supreme Court on March 29th. In Wal-Mart v. Dukes , the Supreme Court will determine whether a nationwide class of women workers challenging alleged sex discrimination by Wal-Mart in pay and promotions can proceed. According to the plaintiffs’ evidence, women at Wal-Mart on average earned $5,000 less than men , even though women tended to have higher performance ratings and more seniority. Women also were less likely to be promoted to store manager positions and had to wait significantly longer for promotions than men. The Court’s decision will also effectively determine whether workers can continue to challenge company-wide discrimination by larger employers. Title VII was intended to eradicate precisely the type of pernicious discrimination that is alleged in this case. Indeed, a company-wide class challenge is the only effective way to remedy company-wide discriminatory practices. With the average wage gap at 77 percent, women and their families are watching closely to see whether the Court’s holding will continue to allow the class action vehicle to be a critical tool for employees to challenge pay discrimination. In this economy, the stakes could not be higher. This post originally appeared on New Deal 2.0 .

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Your Home’s Value Never Actually Rose [CHART]

March 24, 2011

By Catherine Mulbrandon VisualizingEconomics.com A $10,000 house in 1890 would be worth almost the same in real dollars in 2010 but more than $350,000 in nominal dollars in 2010. Which matters to the home seller, real or nominal prices? If a seller is holding a mortgage then the question is: Can I sell for more or less than I owe? Since that loan amount is not adjusted for inflation then the nominal value is more importent both the seller and the mortgage holder. It is when nominal prices fall that banks have trouble with high rates of mortgage defaults. But if you are looking at the long-term value of real estate as an investment (compared to stocks or bonds) then you need to take into account the real growth. Data Source for Housing Price Index from Robert Shiller’s Irrational Exuberance . Visualizing Economics is a website by Catherine Mulbrandon dedicated to publishing infographics about economic data. Visualizing Economics has been featured at Slate.com, NPR.org, WashingtonPost.com, The Big Picture, Seeking Alpha and on MSNBC. Find more graphics explaining the U.S. economy at VisualizingEconomics.com

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David Sharkey Appointed General Manager of Princeton Marriott Hotel at Forrestal

March 24, 2011

24-Year Marriott Veteran Now Heads Princeton Accommodations

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Janis Bowdler: Time to Move On: Families Facing Foreclosure Need Better Solutions Than HAMP

March 24, 2011

More than one million Latino families have either lost or will soon lose their homes. In California, Hispanic-owned homes account for nearly half (48 percent) of all foreclosures. The rapid loss of homes among Latino and Black homeowners has increased the gap in homeownership rates between White families and families of color. Our research shows that foreclosures wipe out wealth that should have paid for retirements and college educations, depress neighborhoods and home values, and harm family relationships . Our efforts to support community-based housing counselors working with families in foreclosure has helped us better understand how national foreclose prevention programs and policies can effectively reach the ten to 13 million families expected to lose their home during this calamity. As did others who are deeply concerned about the impact of the housing crises on families, we worked tirelessly to share information and provide guidance and recommendations to Congress and the administration. We had high hopes for the Obama administration’s signature Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). And when we recognized signs of trouble with HAMP’s implementation, and complaints from the community began to mount, we offered additional options and solutions to administrators. Unfortunately, many of our recommendations went unheeded. While HAMP set out to provide three to four million modifications, only 600,000 families have received permanent loan modifications through the program. Treasury has made some tweaks, but fundamental changes are needed to reach more families in distress. Our counselors still report difficulty obtaining modifications for worthy homeowners, and the lack of compliance has made justice unattainable for those wrongfully foreclosed upon. Moreover, the private sector’s move away from HAMP―proprietary modifications outnumber HAMP modifications two to one―suggests that the program’s influence and relevance are waning. At best, HAMP addresses the housing crises of yesterday; continued congressional focus on the program is preventing us from taking the bold steps that are needed to help millions of Americans facing foreclosure today. For these reasons we are left with little choice but to support the “HAMP Termination Act of 2011″ (H.R. 839). It’s time to focus on foreclosure prevention remedies that reach further. Congress and the administration must consider more effective approaches, such as these five promising ideas: • Leverage private-sector innovation. Rather than modifying mortgages one at a time, remaining HAMP funds could be leveraged to negotiate directly with investors to buy toxic mortgages in bulk. The savings can be passed to the homeowner in the form of principle write-downs and other modifications. Wall Street is way ahead on this, and similar models should be brought to scale. • Support local success . Boston Community Capital is helping evicted homeowners reclaim their property. States are using the Hardest Hit Fund to respond to unique local conditions. Congress and the administration should elevate and scale local victories. • Require more accountability from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The OCC called for an end to the “dual tracking” of foreclosures and modifications, and Bank of America has committed to partnering with others to address this unfair practice. Their efforts are severely undermined, however, without Fannie and Freddie on board. The Treasury and FHFA must compel the GSEs to implement this basic tenant of responsible foreclosure prevention. • Give the state attorneys generals (AGs) a shot. The AGs must accomplish what the Treasury has not―set firm, enforceable rules for modifications that include principle write-downs. The recently leaked terms raise concerns that the settlement might not go far enough. The AGs must conduct a rigorous inquiry and not settle until they have the best deal for their state. • Give homeowners some leverage. Many deserving homeowners miss out on modifications because they are mired in their servicer’s bureaucracy. A little leverage in the form of a bankruptcy safety net would prompt more thorough customer service. Bankruptcy reform has failed in the House and Senate, but this budget-neutral option should be reconsidered for struggling homeowners. Other efforts show more promise―namely the Neighborhood Stabilization Program and state endeavors through the Hardest Hit Fund―but these programs are not a substitute for a national strategy to modify mortgages for deserving homeowners. Stabilizing our housing market is essential to our economic recovery and should be a concerted, bipartisan effort. We call on Congress and the administration to set politics aside and work together on a comprehensive strategy to put an end to needless and wrongful foreclosure.

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Can Alibaba’s Jack Ma Win Back Trust?

March 24, 2011

Jack Ma is furious. It’s been two weeks since the lead founder of Alibaba Group, China’s largest e-commerce enterprise, told the world about the scandal at his company. Now, in his first interview since, he’s leaping out of his chair, still worked up about the 100 salespeople he fired for cheating thousands of foreign merchants–or looking the other way.

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Danny Wong: How Yahoo Can Save Itself

March 24, 2011

After being seen as a repeated failure of a company over the past couple years, Yahoo may just yet redeem itself with its latest search engine update, Search Direct . While this reminds most Google users of one of the latest and biggest Google updates, Google Instant, with its real-time results as you type, Search Direct is less about helping you find the most relevant links for your search query and much more about giving you the appropriate answer, right then and there, to what you are searching for, because the fact is, we all search to ultimately find an answer, information about the thing we’re searching for. This is actually quite an exciting update to Yahoo’s search index, which I first heard about after Anthony Ha reported it on VentureBeat. This advancement in the usability of search engines is incredible. It was first thought that the Google Instant update was exciting because it eliminated the use of having to hit the search button to perform your search query. But now, you don’t even need to click the first link in the results page to get the answers you want to the most common of queries, easily finding out things like the local weather forecast, stock performance, even where to find a local theatre playing the films you want. Yahoo has been seen as dying for several reasons: 1. It’s becoming less innovative in the search game. Yahoo hasn’t done anything exciting with its search algorithm in a while, and while Bing is gaining popularity amongst shoppers and media consumers, Google reigns king because it continues to deliver the best search results, despite some of the bad press it’s received as of late in terms of spammers compromising their search quality. 2. It’s becoming less prominent a company. With less big acquisitions, Yahoo doesn’t have prominence like Google who’s snatching every hot business up both for branding and for profit purposes. No one thinks about Yahoo much anymore because Yahoo’s not doing much of anything that’s interesting, or applicable to our everyday lives. I’ve even stopped using my Yahoo mail for the most part, and use two Gmail accounts, one for personal use and one for professional use. 3. As a media company, they’re not doing anything special. AOL is getting most of the spotlight these days as the big media company to end all media companies, especially with its recent merger with the Huffington Post to house all of its media properties under the Huffington Post. Yahoo just continues to aggregate content from the newswire and isn’t doing enough news publishing itself. What Yahoo can do now to save itself: 1. Actually make Search Direct awesome. While the concept of Search Direct is amazing, and they have rolled out their public beta for the system, I’m sure there’s a lot more to do in updating their algorithms and ensuring that quality answers are always provided for search queries that could easily be answered and immediately displayed without searchers having to click a search results link to find the answer they are looking for. 2. Get back on the media’s good side. Yahoo should be doing more amazing things as a company, and should also be creating more value for users. As such a large company, the media will always bite at anything special going on with Yahoo, so as long as Yahoo is continually building better products for users, it’ll get better press and more people will begin to trust and use Yahoo again. 3. Become an integral part of users’ lives. While Yahoo failed in making Delicious their Yahoo owned service that everyone used and associated Yahoo with, Yahoo can acquire similar companies, or perhaps build its own products and services that millions of users will use each and every day, solidifying its place in users’ daily lives. Yahoo has a long way to go before it redeems itself again as the golden company it once was, but luckily, it’s far from dying anytime soon, so we’ll just have to wait and see how Yahoo develops. Danny Wong is a Boston-area entrepreneur running Blank Label Group , which powers the startups Blank Label , Thread Tradition and RE:custom . Danny also blogs at TheNextWeb and ReadWriteWeb .

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Greg Becker: Why Helping Only ‘Main Street’ Won’t Fix The Economy

March 24, 2011

All small businesses are not the same. Until this is registered and embraced by our legislators, this country will not succeed in its efforts to promote economic growth through innovation or unleash our full capacity to compete globally. As a participant in Treasury’s Access to Capital Conference held Tuesday in Washington D.C., I was invited to speak on a panel about fostering growth and innovation for high growth small businesses, with a specific focus on the role that debt can play. I was appreciative of the opportunity to represent the needs of truly innovative companies that contribute substantially to U.S. GDP, U.S. competitiveness and U.S. job creation. When the agenda arrived I was surprised. The conversation about innovation was set up once again as a general conversation about funding small business — any small business. High-growth small businesses are fundamentally different from “Main Street” small businesses. Main Street small businesses – businesses that, even if successful, intend to stay small and grow at a slower pace — are important to the health of our communities and are an important part of our overall economy. But the needs of “Main Street” small businesses require different support and regulatory reform than high-growth, mainly venture capital-backed companies. High-growth small businesses are critical to our nation’s economy for a host of reasons. Using companies that receive venture capital backing as a proxy for the high-growth sector more generally, the data clearly demonstrates that relatively small investments — on the order of 0.2 percent of GDP — have generated roughly 11 percent of all U.S. private sector employment and the equivalent of 21 percent of U.S. GDP. Venture-backed companies outperform the broader economy, whether measured in terms of job growth or revenue growth. They create new, long-lasting companies and industries: from information technology, biotechnology, semiconductors and online retailing to emerging industries such as clean technology, social media and cloud computing. They are an important source of growth for more mature businesses, across the broader economy. The innovative technologies they develop and commercialize contribute to U.S. productivity growth and economic competitiveness. And they improve Americans’ quality of life by expanding access to information, providing higher quality goods and services, improving health care quality and access, and fostering a more sustainable environment. As discussed in a letter I gave to Treasury secretary Geithner’s team and during the Treasury Conference today, we believe that there are five areas policymakers should focus on as part of an innovation agenda: promote a culture of entrepreneurship by providing an environment that is conducive to risk taking; develop our talent pipeline through a combination of sound education and immigration policies; create a robust idea pipeline by funding research and development and focusing on commercializing new innovations; ensure that there is adequate, appropriate risk capital to meet the needs of growing companies; and develop policies that promote sound, predictable, competitive markets. In addition, I provided three specific actions the administration can take immediately to support entrepreneurs and foster growth of our nation’s most innovative companies: 1) Treasury should work with the Federal Reserve, the SEC and other agencies to ensure that the Volcker Rule is implemented in a way that does not artificially restrict the flow of capital into innovative companies. Congress included the so-called “Volcker Rule” in the Dodd-Frank financial services reform bill in order to get banking entities out of activities it saw as highly risky. Specifically, it prohibited banks from engaging in proprietary trading and from investing in or sponsoring hedge funds and private equity funds, other than as specifically set forth in the statute. When one reads the legislative history, it is clear Congress did not intend for the Volcker Rule to artificially restrict the flow of capital to venture capital funds and, through these funds, to startup companies. Venture capital drives the innovation sector, and does not present any of the risks the Volcker Rule was designed to address. However, Congress failed to explicitly distinguish venture funds from private equity/buyout and hedge funds in the statute. In January of this year, the Financial Stability Oversight Council issued its Report and Recommendations on the Volcker Rule . The Council noted that “a number of commenters suggested that venture capital funds should be excluded from the Volcker Rule’s definition of hedge funds and private equity funds because the nature of venture capital funds is fundamentally different from such other funds and because they promote innovation.” It stated its belief that “the issue raised by commenters in this respect is significant” and recommended that the regulatory agencies charged with implementing the Volcker Rule carefully evaluate the range of funds and other legal vehicles that fall within Volcker’s definition of private equity and hedge funds, and consider whether it is appropriate to narrow the statutory definition by rule in some cases. Regulatory agencies should take up the Council’s recommendation and implement the Volcker Rule in a way that does not restrict the flow of capital from (and through) banks to venture capital funds and through these funds to startup companies. 2) The Administration should urgently address the FDA approval process and the broader regulatory environment affecting life science companies. The delay, cost, and uncertainty of the FDA approval process and the overall burden of the U.S. regulatory environment for life science companies have grown significantly in recent years. This trend is having a strong, negative effect on the life sciences sector. Investors and entrepreneurs are increasingly less likely to start, grow, and fund new businesses in the United States, electing to re-focus their efforts overseas (including in Europe) and/or on other less capital intensive, less risky sectors of the innovation economy. The results of a recent survey of Silicon Valley Bank’s early stage technology companies clearly illustrate the negative impact the regulatory environment is having on life sciences companies. When compared to their peers in the software/internet and hardware sectors, life science companies are: less optimistic about their business outlook in 2011, significantly more likely to report challenges to their business growth, less likely to say they will hire new employees in the coming year, and significantly more likely to cite regulatory/political issues as a major challenge. In fact, 64 percent of life science companies sector listed the regulatory/political environment as a challenge. For life science companies, it was a bigger issue than finding talent, accessing equity or debt financing, competition, and a bigger problem than scaling their operations for growth. And when we asked what makes it appealing to keep their businesses in the United States or move them overseas, life science companies were two to three times more likely than hardware and software/internet companies to cite the regulatory environment as a reason to move abroad. There is a real risk that, if we do not take steps in the very near term, our regulatory system will drive innovation and investment in medical technologies overseas, leaving U.S. entrepreneurs and investors focused on more capital efficient and/or less risky sectors. This will have a serious, negative effect not only on the robustness of the innovation sector per se, but on our country’s leadership in medical technology and its ability to use these technologies to address our health care challenges. 3) The Administration can work with Congress to adopt a meaningful, effective co-lending program to meet the needs of clean energy companies. One of the pockets in which there is a clear shortage of capital is the clean energy sector — in particular, in capital intensive areas such as energy generation, and for capital intensive projects such as the construction of commercial-scale facilities. These projects present regulatory, commercial, market and operational risks that place them beyond the risk appetite of commercial lenders. For the past two years, we have tried to work with the Department of Energy to create a co-lending program within DOE’s overall loan guarantee program that would help meet the needs of smaller, more innovative companies in the clean energy sector. To date, DOE has declined to go down this path. As a result, in our view, the DOE loan guarantee programs have not addressed the very real needs of smaller clean energy companies in a meaningful way. Treasury could work with the Office of Management and Budget and other relevant federal agencies to implement a co-lending structure for smaller clean energy companies and projects. We believe the government can build upon the Export-Import Bank’s very successful co-lending approach to leverage — rather than try to replicate — private sector lending expertise. Such an approach would help ensure that taxpayer funds are used wisely; provide a framework within which credit scoring could be done rapidly and responsibly; and dramatically increase the impact the loan guarantee program could have on the United States’ efforts to promote energy innovation. Our policy makers are pursuing the right goals. We just need to make sure they have a special focus on those companies that can make a substantial impact and create an environment in which they can actually make it.

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Jeremy Halbreich Named New Chairman Of Sun-Times Media

March 24, 2011

CHICAGO — CEO Jeremy L. Halbreich has been named to the added role of chairman of Sun-Times Media Holdings, which owns the Chicago Sun-Times and other newspapers. Halbreich succeeds James Tyree, who died last week at 53 after battling stomach cancer for months. Halbreich, 59, is a former general manager of The Dallas Morning News. He’s been vice chairman and chief executive officer at Sun-Times Media. He’ll keep the CEO title. Halbreich calls his appointment “a wonderful and very flattering endorsement by our investors of our entire management team and all the employees.”

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Parsons Appoints Anido as Senior Vice President and Regional Development Executive for Florida

March 24, 2011

PASADENA, CA–(Marketwire – March 24, 2011) – Parsons is pleased to announce that Guillermo (Bill) Anido, Jr., has joined the firm as Senior Vice President and Regional Development Executive for Florida. In this role, he will be responsible for developing our municipal and regional relationships in the Florida market, representing Parsons to key stakeholders in the communities where we are expanding our presence.

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Parsons Appoints Bannister as Senior Vice President and Regional Development Executive for Greater Chicago

March 24, 2011

PASADENA, CA–(Marketwire – March 24, 2011) – Parsons is pleased to announce that Leroy W. Bannister, Jr., has been appointed Senior Vice President and Regional Development Executive for the Greater Chicago Region. While the primary focus of Mr. Bannister’s position will be on Greater Chicago, he has a wealth of experience in the Midwest and will be assisting corporatewide efforts to pursue work in many surrounding states.

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Best Buy’s Smartphone Sales Offset Weak Demand For Televisions

March 24, 2011

By Dhanya Skariachan NEW YORK – Best Buy Co Inc beat quarterly profit estimates as strength in its mobile business offset weak demand for televisions and entertainment software in the all-important holiday season. But analysts were cautious about the longer term outlook for the company. The top U.S. consumer electronics chain, which recently announced plans to open about 150 Best Buy Mobile small-format stores in the United States, saw a low double-digit comparable store sales increase in mobile phones even as overall comparable-store sales fell in the fourth quarter. The retailer is focusing on selling more mobile phone, broadband and TV connections rather than expensive televisions as post-recession U.S. shoppers keep a tight rein on spending amid rising gas prices and high unemployment levels. Despite the big focus on its profitable mobile business, many raised concerns about Best Buy’s long term prospects citing continuing pressure on its ailing TV business. “It is very difficult for Best Buy to post positive comps when a category that is 20 percent of their sales is comping down double digits,” BB&T Capital Markets analyst Anthony Chukumba said. Net income fell to $651 million, or $1.62 a share in the fourth quarter ended February 26, from $779 million, or $1.82 a share, a year earlier. Excluding items, it earned $1.98 a share, well ahead the analysts’ average estimate of $1.85 a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. (For a related graphic, click: r.reuters.com/kax68r) Best Buy shares were down 7 cents at $31.78, reversing course after being up 3 percent earlier on Thursday morning on the New York Stock Exchange. “The stock appears to be getting a ‘better than feared’ reaction,” JPMorgan analyst Christopher Horvers said. “Given the lack of sales visibility and little reason to be optimistic before easy back-half comparisons, the arrival of more competitive tablets, and a labor market rebound, there isn’t much else to hold on to for the next two quarters that can put a significant dent in the secular bear case.” Best Buy has consistently lost bargain-hungry shoppers to online retailer Amazon.com Inc and mass merchants Target Corp and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. “Best Buy should see some near-term relief from the concerns circling the name,” Stifel Nicolaus analyst David Schick said. “The problems re-emerge, though, as the longer-term view is taken.” For fiscal 2012, the company sees earnings of $3.30 to $3.55 a share, excluding previously announced restructuring charges and potential share repurchases. The outlook compared with Horvers’ estimate of $3.44 and consensus of $3.57. On Thursday, GameStop Corp, the world’s largest retailer of video game products, also posted a higher-than-expected quarterly profit. Best Buy’s decision to focus on promoting pricier televisions backfired in the early part of the holiday season. The retailer advertised cheaper TVs later in the season, but its December same-store sales still fell 4 percent. Same-store sales fell 4.6 percent in its fourth quarter, including a 5.5 percent decline at its U.S. stores open at least 14 months. Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter was looking for a 2.2 percent same-store sales decline in the quarter, including a 3 percent decline at its U.S. stores open at least 14 months. (Editing by Dave Zimmerman) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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Ed Mierzwinski: In The Public Interest: Checking the "Fact Check" From CFPB Opponents

March 24, 2011

Professor Elizabeth Warren, the architect of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) , was in the press often this week letting the public know about the progress of “standing up” the new consumer protection agency. Her opponents took notice, and posted a “Fact Check” purporting to find errors in one of her interviews from earlier in the week. But their “Fact Check” needs a fact check. It’s a political spin job, not a policy paper. In its short length, it manages to make several factual mistakes while also completely missing the point. The “Fact Check” incorrectly claims that only the CFPB’s director can set the budget. In fact, the Bureau’s power and authority are similar to that of other bank regulators, except that in two respects it is more, rather than less, limited. Like them, it is subject to Congressional oversight. In addition, unlike any other bank regulator, it can have its decisions overruled by a committee of the other banking regulators under some circumstances, and its budget is capped, while other bank regulators’ budgets are not. More importantly, the “Fact Check” fails to check history. It fails to go back to the Great Crash of 2008 and recall that our economy failed because the system before – with no dedicated agency looking out for consumers – failed to protect us. The real difference between the CFPB and the other regulators is not that it will have too much power. The real difference is that the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be the first banking regulator with one job- protecting and standing up for consumers in the financial marketplace. For too long, enforcement of consumer protection laws in the financial market was left to regulators whose main mission was ensuring the financial stability of banks. It didn’t work. The real outrage is the fact that existing regulators, like the Federal Reserve – (a much less accountable agency, by the way) – had the responsibility to protect the market from products like abusive subprime mortgages, but financial industry special interests objected, and they failed to do so, with disastrous consequences. What opponents of the CFPB really fear is that we now have a regulator that will put consumer interests first and hold Wall Street accountable. Wall Street plain and simple doesn’t want a consumer cop on the beat . But consumers do.

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Fred Hochberg: American Business Needs to Get in the Game

March 24, 2011

Teamwork. Cooperation. Intense preparation. That’s what is needed to win at the highest levels of athletic competition. It also is what will be needed in Brazil as the country prepares to host two of the world’s largest sporting events: the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics. As I traveled with President Obama in Brazil, you could see the anticipation and excitement building for these events; you also could see the enormous investment and planning that is required to ensure that they will be successful. Brazil is planning to spend $200 billion in additional infrastructure across the country on everything from roads and public transportation to airports and sports stadiums. World Cup events alone will be played in 12 cities. It is critical, as President Obama told business leaders in Brazil, that America does more than just watch these projects from the stands. It is critical that we get in the game. We may not always win on the soccer field, but when it comes to providing the engineering services, machinery, security systems and IT support required to build and run the stadium, or the buses and transportation systems needed to get fans into their seats, American business is second to none. This is no time for the United States, particularly our business community, to be sitting on the sidelines. These projects play into America’s strength — and require the types of high-quality capital goods and services that U.S. companies lead the world in producing. To ensure that Brazil can obtain more American-made products and services for these important projects, President Obama announced $1 billion in financing through the Export-Import Bank of the United States. Its purpose is to facilitate the purchase of more American goods and services for various infrastructure projects, including those associated with the World Cup, the Olympics and the rebuilding that is needed in the wake of recent flooding in Brazil. One of the key points President Obama emphasized in our meetings was the enormous opportunity for Brazil and the United States to be doing more business together. And to be doing the kind of business that is mutually beneficial for our countries — the type that creates good jobs and boosts local economies. 2010 was a strong year for that type of cooperation and teamwork. And there is reason to be even more bullish on the future. U.S. goods exports to Brazil were up 35 percent in 2010. These sales support about 250,000 U.S. jobs. And over the last five years we have doubled our exports to Brazil. This has allowed our countries to build a strong and mutually beneficial $80 billion trading relationship — and we see enormous opportunity to grow and deepen these economic ties in the coming years. Brazil’s economic trajectory has been remarkable. Today, it is the world’s seventh largest economy –a nd this growth has helped put millions of Brazilians on a path to the middle class. However, meeting the needs of this growing middle class will require significant additional investment in building power capacity and infrastructure. In Rio today, 16 percent of people move around the city using mass transit. The country is making plans to raise that figure to 50 percent by 2016. This will require an incredible investment. The city currently has 25,000 hotel rooms. To meet the demand for upcoming events, they are looking to grow that by 4,000 rooms by 2013, with the goal of further increasing capacity for the Summer Olympics. In addition to these infrastructure projects, Brazil is expecting electricity consumption to grow more than 60 percent between 2009 and 2019, requiring total investment of more than $128 billion. To address this, Brazil is rapidly developing its renewable energy sector, with a particular focus on biofuels, hydropower, wind and solar. The country also recently discovered deepwater oil reserves that are twice the size of our reserves. These are all additional areas of opportunity and for partnership between our countries — and they are sectors where private investment is critical. They also happen to be areas where Ex-Im Bank’s financing is particularly effective at ensuring the success of a project. We have a long history of working with Brazil, beginning back in 1936. Much of our early work involved financing the sale of millions of dollars of American-made electrical, railway, mining, and cargo equipment. As Brazil continues to build and rebuild, there is an enormous opportunity for the U.S. to assist on these critical projects. And we are continuing to look for new and innovative ways to finance these transactions. In the last two years, our nation has made real progress in building the foundation for an export-focused economy. And the results are beginning to show: Exports were up 16.7 percent in 2010, putting us on target to meet President Obama’s goal of doubling exports by 2015. And in January they hit the highest one-month total ever recorded. To continue building on that momentum, we need to focus on strategic partnerships with key markets across Latin America. In today’s global economy, nations that build together — and buy from each other — are invested in ways that go far deeper than just business transactions. They are investing in each other’s prosperity, security and economic vitality. They are investing in the hopes and dreams of each other’s citizens. When we make these investments, regardless of what happens on the playing field, both our countries — and our citizens — come away winners.

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Timothy Karr: Five Things Wrong with AT&T’s Mega-Merger

March 24, 2011

AT&T’s $39 billion takeover of T-Mobile USA is yet another in the series of large telecom mergers that over time are slowly reassembling the Ma Bell monopoly of old. It’s now left to federal regulators at the Department of Justice and the Federal Communications Commission to decide what’s really best for Americans. Should they let two national wireless carriers dominate our mobile world? Would giving AT&T and Verizon near complete control benefit smart phone users, create more jobs, make broadband access widespread and affordable, and fuel our sputtering economy? It seems unthinkable to suggest that taking one of the most innovative sectors ” back to the future ” would help us. Consolidation of the scale proposed by AT&T and their boosters in Washington resembles the old railroad and oil trusts of the 19th century. Why go there? Yet AT&T wields unparalleled political power in Washington, and stands a good chance of “convincing” regulators and Congress to discard with common sense , stand aside and let this mega-merger sail through on approval. Here are five reasons that all Americans – and not just T-Mobile and AT&T customers — should be concerned by the return of the new, old Ma Bell: 1. The merger would further erode what little competition exists in the wireless market. The merger hands two companies, AT&T and Verizon, control over nearly 80 percent of the wireless market. That translates to widespread abuses of market power, something AT&T is already known for. In any other industry, allowing this much concentration, especially without any meaningful oversight or regulatory protections, would be unthinkable. By comparison, the top 10 oil producing firms combined control less than 80 percent of the U.S. market, but this merger will give that level of market dominance to just two companies. Imagine if ExxonMobil were to merge with BP, Shell, Chevron-Texaco, and Citgo. That would net ExxonMobil the same level of market control as AT&T will have with this deal. And unlike the gasoline market, where consumers can just drive another block to choose another station, wireless users are locked into long-term contracts. 2. The merger would result in higher prices and fewer choices for wireless consumers. AT&T and Verizon currently control nearly two-thirds of the market and have a long history of raising prices in concert, as they both did early last year by requiring all customers on feature phones to add data plans. Sprint and T-Mobile (the third and fourth largest of the four national carriers) were meant to exert some competitive discipline on the big two. The average fee for AT&T users ($63 per post-paid subscriber) is some 20 percent more than the amount T-Mobile users pay ($52 per T-Mobile &T subscriber). You take T-Mobile’s lower cost structure out of our wireless equation and the remaining providers have even fewer checks against raising prices on every user. And prices have risen steadily, according to J.D. Power and Associates . In December 1998, the monthly Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) for wireless companies was $39.43. By the end of 2010, this has risen to more than $49. This steady price increase comes despite the fact that carriers’ own operating costs have declined substantially, as their profits have risen. This change will be particularly acute for the 34 million people who now subscribe to T-Mobile. Even if AT&T agrees to honor their existing contracts for their remaining length, they will surely see higher prices when those contracts expire or when they need to buy a new handset or make changes to their contracts. 3. This merger will kill tens of thousands of U.S. jobs. When was the last time a merger actually created jobs for Americans and not more pink slips? This merger is no different. And yet that hasn’t stopped AT&T from wrapping itself in the flag by noting that T-Mobile is a subsidiary of a German company. But T-Mobile USA is based in Bellevue, Washington and employs nearly 40,000 U.S. citizens. The plain fact is that AT&T plans to put these American jobs at risk. Their executives say the plan to save $40 billion through merger “synergies.” This means that many of the T-Mobile jobs at retail stores and call centers will be eliminated. The planned shuttering of thousands of wireless towers will result in the firing of an untold number of technicians. And there will be more jobs lost as the cost-cutting effects of this merger ripple through the broader economy. 4. This merger is a raw deal for American innovation. AT&T has a history of making handset manufactures cripple features like WiFi on devices, and of blocking the use of certain applications like Google Voice and Slingbox. The merger would stifle innovation both in devices and on the network. The combined carriers would be able to leverage an unfair amount of market power to prioritize which handsets get used, what technologies work on those handsets and which Apps you’ll be able to upload from the network (Imagine AT&T prioritizing it’s own inferior voice recognition and navigation applications over those offered by Google or a innovating startup). According to the Wall Street Journal , handset manufacturers are remaining mum on the deal, possibly out of a “fear of angering a powerful customer” in AT&T, which can make or break a device by simply deciding to allow it on its network. Would a merged AT&T permit any device innovation that challenges its bottom line? Using history as a guide, the likely answer would be, “no.” 5. The merger is a threat to free speech and openness on the wireless web. AT&T along with Verizon has fiercely opposed any wireless Net Neutrality requirements, with AT&T brokering a deal with the FCC to ensure they have the legal right to block online content and charge application developers additional tolls just to reach AT&T customers. The FCC’s weak Net Neutrality decision was the result — exempting mobile services from openness protections based on Chairman Julius Genachowski’s assumptions that competition existed in wireless. With further consolidation AT&T and Verizon will be in an even stronger position to play gatekeeper on the wireless web, picking winners and losers, limiting our ability to connect and share information and ultimately slowing the pace of the mobile Internet innovation. The fact of this merger shows how the U.S. must have strong Net Neutrality rules, according to Sen. Dick Blumenthal of Connecticut: “Regulatory approval should contain strict conditions to ensure that consumer concerns about cost, access, choice, and competition are adequately addressed. Moreover, such high wireless market concentration raises serious potential net-neutrality concerns that should be addressed. The largest mobile network in the nation must not be allowed to limit access to content in a discriminatory manner.” — Co-authored with S. Derek Turner, Free Press research director.

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NPR’s Surprisingly Firm Financial Footing

March 24, 2011

For more than two decades, public-radio listeners have grown accustomed to the erudite questioning style of Fresh Air host Terry Gross. What many people don’t realize is that the program is profitable, although its unclear how much of a windfall it makes for WHYY, the Philadelphia NPR affiliate that broadcasts the show.

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Carly Schwartz: ‘To Catch A Dollar’: Poor Women, Small Business And A Chance To Succeed In America

March 24, 2011

Patricia, a Guyanese immigrant living in Queens, N.Y., had long dreamed of running her own business. An avid baker, she hoped to open a shop where she could sell the cakes and pastries she made on a smaller scale in her spare time. But she lacked the seed money to afford the necessary supplies. And without savings or collateral, she certainly didn’t qualify for a loan. Determined to make her vision a reality, Patricia connected with a local branch of Grameen America , an organization that provides small loans to low-income entrepreneurs. With her first check, she bought a key ingredient for her business plan. “My dream was to get me this big mixer,” she said later, beaming. “And I couldn’t believe it when I got a check from Grameen that day. I was like, I got my mixer!” She has since used loans from Grameen to grow her bakery into its own storefront, where she sells cakes and Guyanese food. Patricia’s story is chronicled in ” To Catch A Dollar ,” a documentary opening at the end of the month that follows industrious women on their quest to pull themselves out of poverty with the help of Grameen America, an arm of Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus’ iconic microcredit bank. The film explores Grameen’s efforts to empower struggling women by providing them means to establish their own businesses. Often unemployed single mothers living in tiny apartments and struggling to feed their children, the women Grameen works with are otherwise “unbanked,” completely shut out of America’s mainstream financial system. They can’t apply for a loan because they have no assets to their name, let alone the means to pay off interest. What these women lack in resources, they make up for in drive. Each profile subject in “To Catch A Dollar” talks excitedly about her goals, her dedication to her work, her determination to make a better life for herself and her family. Her business gives her something to be proud of, and more importantly, it pays off. Grameen’s services aren’t limited to handing out loans. As a condition of receiving such funding, borrowers must attend mandatory financial training sessions, make weekly payments and open a savings account. Clients can only use their loans for income-generating activities, and once they make enough money to repay Grameen in full, they are eligible to receive further assistance. Each woman is required to form a group with four of her peers and meet with them weekly, along with a Grameen manager. In addition to providing a support network, these gatherings allow clients to track one another’s progress and hold each other accountable, while the bank likewise monitors them. “It goes further than giving money … it connects cultures and people and creates communities,” said Alethia Mendez, a Grameen America manager featured in the film. Yunus founded the original Grameen Bank in Bangladesh in 1976, operating under a more basic but similar microfinance system for poor women in rural areas, who used small loans to generate income for themselves — by buying a goat to sell its milk or purchasing yarn to use for knitting salable scarves, for example. Such microloans have proven widely successful, and through its decades in operation, Grameen has established centers in more than 40 impoverished nations around the world. The launch of its U.S. counterpart in 2008 marked a new experiment in microfinance: Can a system that works so well in rural pockets of developing countries be effectively applied to America’s urban centers? “To Catch A Dollar” explores this question, following the bank’s early days in the Bronx. Skeptics tend to doubt that an organization that gives away loans without demanding collateral could possibly be successful. But Grameen America boasts a 99 percent repayment rate . Supporters attribute this to a number of factors, including the sense of responsibility drawn from reporting to peers each week (a classic tenet of microfinance) to the work ethic of struggling women who see their loan as a rare lifeline. Still, while revered by many, microfinance maintains its share of critics. Aside from raising eyebrows at the idea of simply handing out loans to folks in need, opponents fear that encouraging large numbers of individuals to self-employ will lead to a bubble doomed to burst, citing the travails that saddled Bolivia at the end of the twentieth century. Yunus wrote a scathing editorial in the New York Times earlier this year denouncing the rise of “loan shark” microfinance as many lenders have shifted from non-profit to commercial enterprises. And even as I publish this piece, Grameen’s founder himself faces charges from Bangladesh’s government, which has demanded his removal from the company. Controversy aside, as Arianna pointed out when launching The Huffington Post’s “Small Business America” section, the entrepreneurial spirit in our country is alive and well. Given we’re facing the biggest unemployment crisis since the Great Depression, Grameen provides an opportunity for its clients to build themselves out of poverty by harnessing that drive. As in most industrialized nations, U.S. banking operates predominantly on the principle that the more you have, the more you get. “To Catch A Dollar” brings to life one of the few organizations turning that concept on its head. For the first time in their lives, the women in the film have a chance to succeed within a system in which the odds have long been stacked against them. The results are nothing short of extraordinary. Just visit Patricia’s bakery in Queens. “To Catch A Dollar” will be shown in theaters throughout the country on March 31, for one night only, as part of Grameen’s larger U.S. antipoverty campaign. You can pledge to see the film here and receive a $1 code to help a woman start or grow her business. You can also request to host a screening at a theater near you. Click here for more, and check out the trailer below.

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DH Capital Strengthens Team With the Addition of Aleetalynn Schenesky-Stronge

March 24, 2011

NEW YORK, NY and BOULDER, CO–(Marketwire – March 24, 2011) –   DH Capital, LLC, an investment banking firm serving companies in the Internet infrastructure and communications sectors, is pleased to announce the addition of Aleetalynn Schenesky-Stronge as a Vice President. Ms. Schenesky-Stronge brings more than 10 years of experience with a combination of financial and industry expertise that will strengthen DH Capital’s position as the leading investment bank serving the Internet infrastructure sector.

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Equisol Announces Promotions

March 24, 2011

WEST CONSHOHOCKEN, PA–(Marketwire – March 24, 2011) – Equisol, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Environmental Infrastructure Holdings ( OTCBB : EIHC ), which is the parent company of various environmental manufacturing, engineering and services companies, announced the following promotions effective immediately:

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The Most Valuable Tech Brands: Google, Microsoft Trump Apple

March 24, 2011

Brand Finance , a brand valuation consulting company, has just released its list of the most valuable brands in the world. Tech brands top the ranks, with Google and Microsoft leading the way at the world’s first and second most valuable brands, respectively. One tech brand is notoriously absent from the first few spots: Apple. The Cupertino company may be the world’s most valuable tech company, but it was ranked the world’s 8th most valuable brand. Facebook is also hundreds of spots down the list, coming in at 281st place with an “A” rating to the “AAA-plus” and “AAA” marks earned by Google, Microsoft, and Apple. See the top ten most valuable brands in the chart below, via Brand Finance . Which companies do you think should have ranked higher? Weigh in below.

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Vivian Norris: An Update on the Muhammad Yunus Situation

March 24, 2011

I have been receiving lots of emails with information which will help to explain the present situation of Nobel Peace Prize winners Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank. Supporters of Microfinance around the world stand in support of Dr. Yunus and are doing their best to help resolve this situation. Organizations such as Grameen Foundation, Grameen America, Accion, Women’s World Banking, The Microcredit Summit, Kiva, and others, have been working hard getting loans to those in need, which is what Dr Yunus has been working so very hard to do for most of his life. As Dr Yunus always says, “I am not the hero, the women are the heroes”. He added in a recent email, “We must keep fighting on, we must, for the poor women”. For those of you who have questions regarding where things stand and what the more long-lasting effects of Dr Yunus’ removal could be, please read these articles here: www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/south/Bangladesh-Says-Ready-to-Compromise-on-Yunus-118505054.html http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704438104576219731267941622.html http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/21/microfinance-under-fire/ www.muhammadyunus.org/Yunus-Centre-Highlights/nobel-laureate-yunus-and-the-judgment-of-king-solomon/ And from Microfinance Focus: “On March 31, 2011 theatres across New York City will screen Gayle Ferraro’s film “To Catch a Dollar: Muhammad Yunus Banks on America” which will be accompanied by a taped discussion with Dr. Yunus. The event will introduce American audiences to the potential for microfinance in the United States, and Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus’s Grameen Bank. The event will be moderated by CNBC anchor Maria Bartiromo, featuring special guests Suze Orman, President of Kiva.org, Premal Shah, and Robert DeNiro. The evening will also include video appearances by Hugh Jackman, Matt Damon, Russell Simmons, and many others”. For more info please visit: http://microfinancefocus.com/film-yunus’-true-story-be-screened-theatres-across-us For more updates, follow me on twitter: vivigive and visit: www.vigilante-vnm.com

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Global Central Banks Face An Essential Revolution

March 24, 2011

By Paul Carrel, Mark Felsenthal, Pedro da Costa, David Milliken and Alan Wheatley FRANKFURT/WASHINGTON – On a warm, Lisbon day last May, Jean-Claude Trichet, the ice-cool president of the European Central Bank, was asked whether the bank would consider buying euro zone governments’ bonds in the open market. “I would say we did not discuss this option,” Trichet told a news conference after a meeting of the ECB’s Governing Council. Four days later, the ECB announced that it would start buying bonds. Trichet’s U-turn was part of an emergency package with euro zone leaders to stave off a crisis of confidence in the single currency. By reaching for its “nuclear option”, the ECB had also helped rewrite the manual of modern central banking. That’s happened a lot over the past three years. Since the early days of the financial crisis in 2008, the European Central Bank, the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of England have all been forced to adopt policies that just a few years ago they would have dismissed as preposterous. And the Bank of Japan responded to the Sendai earthquake and tsunami by doubling its own asset-purchase programme, to keep the banking system of the world’s third-largest economy on an even keel. For a generation, the accepted orthodoxy has been to focus on taming inflation. Financial stability has taken something of a back seat. Now, whether mandated to do so or not, western central banks have bought up sovereign debt to sustain the financial system, printed money by the truckload to stimulate their economies, sacrificed some of their independence to coordinate monetary policy more closely with fiscal decisions, and contemplated new ways of preventing asset bubbles. Some — such as Bank of England Governor Mervyn King — have joined wider political protests at commercial banks that are still behaving as if they are “too big to fail”, and as if being bailed out is just a hazard of business. In the measured world of central banking, it amounts to nothing short of a revolution. Otmar Issing, one of the euro’s founding fathers and a career-long monetarist hawk, told Reuters that in buying government bonds the ECB had “crossed the Rubicon”. The question now for the ECB — and for its counterparts in Britain, the United States and elsewhere — is what they’ll find on the other side. EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES Don Kohn, a former vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve, realized central banking was changing forever at a routine meeting of his peers in Basel, Switzerland, in March 2008. The shockwaves from the U.S. subprime mortgage meltdown had begun rocking banks around the world and Kohn, a 38-year veteran of the U.S. central bank, listened as one speaker after another described the fast-deteriorating economic conditions. “It was terrible,” Kohn said. “One of the people at the meeting used the phrase, ‘It’s time to think about the unthinkable’.” Kohn left the meeting early to return to Washington, but the line stuck in his head. He would use it a few days later to justify his support for a Federal Reserve decision to spend $29 billion to help J.P. Morgan buy investment bank Bear Stearns, which was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. That financial meltdown caused a credit crunch that triggered a severe recession and, in countries such as Greece, a sovereign debt crisis. After slashing interest rates practically to zero, central banks desperate to prevent a new global depression had no choice but to expand the volume of credit, rather than its price, by reaching for the money-printing solution known as “Quantitative Easing” (QE). In the eyes of critics, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke was living up to his nickname of “Helicopter Ben” — a reference to a speech that he gave in 2002 in which he took a leaf out of the book of the renowned monetarist economist Milton Friedman and argued that the government ultimately had the capacity to quash deflation simply by printing money and dropping it from helicopters. Until that point, the Fed was a lender of last resort for deposit-taking banks. By invoking obscure legislation from the Great Depression, it also became a backstop for practically any institution whose collapse could threaten the financial system. Kohn and others at the Bear Stearns meeting had just done the unthinkable. “When the secretary of the (Fed) Board was reading off the proposals … my heart was racing,” Randall Kroszner, a Fed governor at the time, says of the decision. An academic economist from the conservative, free market-oriented University of Chicago, Kroszner was instinctively against intervention. At the same time, he knew that a decision by the Fed to stay above the fray would trigger financial panic. Before the meeting Kroszner had chatted with Bernanke, another scholar of economic history, about a historic parallel in which financier J.P. Morgan — the person, not the company — opted against stepping in to save the Knickerbocker Trust, precipitating a financial panic in the first decade of the 20th century. “I couldn’t believe that we were faced with these questions, and I couldn’t believe that I could support them,” Kroszner told Reuters in February. “In these extraordinary circumstances, it was very risky to just say no.” By the time the $600 billion second round of quantitative easing wraps up in June, the central bank will have spent a staggering $2.3 trillion — more than 15 percent of GDP — buying bonds. It has also created new lending windows to channel funds to financial institutions and investors and expanded its financial safety net for everything from money market mutual funds to asset-backed securities and commercial paper. The Fed argues that its loans have been repaid without any cost to taxpayers, and that the beginning of a recovery in the U.S. economy and the fading of the threat of deflation, which gnawed at Bernanke, justify its bold improvisation. But some experts, including a number of Fed officials themselves, believe the central bank is paying a big price. Some critics say the Fed’s open-ended provision of next-to-free money is encouraging more reckless risk-taking by banks and speculators. Others say the Fed has exceeded its remit and encroached on the turf of politicians. Some Republicans, in particular, want to curtail the Fed’s powers. The United States has not been alone. In Britain, the Bank of England has run its own programme of quantitative easing, spending 200 billion pounds (about 14 percent of GDP) mostly on UK government securities, and has introduced a scheme for financial institutions to swap mortgage-backed securities for UK Treasury bills. The ECB took three main steps: adjusting its money market operations to offer unlimited amounts of funds, lowering standards on the collateral it accepts in such operations, and buying bonds. The bond buying, though amounting to 1.5 percent of euro zone GDP, is less radical than the Fed’s because the bank absorbs back the money that its purchases release. But its initiative is still highly controversial. Issing, the ECB’s chief economist from 1998 to 2006, calls the bond-buying dangerous. But he also concedes that the problems of the past few years have required extreme measures. “It is difficult to justify within the context of the independence of the central bank,” says Issing. “But, on the other hand, the ECB was the only actor who could master the situation. What matters now is that it finalizes this programme and gets out.” BLOWING UP THE ORTHODOXY Central banks have historically often been subordinated to governments, but the high inflation and slow growth that followed the oil price shocks of the 1970s ushered in a relatively simple orthodoxy: their goal should be to keep inflation in check. Maintaining a slow and steady pace of price rises became the overriding aim of central bank policy, and independence from political pressures came to be seen as a pre-requisite for achieving this. Starting with New Zealand in 1989, central banks in more than 50 countries adopted explicit, public targets for inflation. Western governments claimed this was responsible for the Great Moderation, a two-decade period of relatively stable growth in developed economies. It still has many proponents, but the credit crisis has made a mockery of that overriding simplicity, exposing serious flaws in how central banks defined their mission and operated. One flaw: they did little to prevent the build-up of the asset bubbles that triggered the financial crisis, such as the boom in U.S. subprime mortgages. Another: the obsession with inflation blinded them to dangerous trends in banking. After all, what is the point of keeping inflation low if lax lending and feckless financial supervision threaten to tip the economy into the abyss? “The problem was not that the Fed lacked instructions to avoid a crisis,” says James Hamilton, a professor of economics at the University of California, San Diego and visiting scholar at the central bank on multiple occasions. “The problem was that the Fed lacked the foresight to see the crisis developing.” Fed Chairman Bernanke doubts central banks can know for sure that an asset bubble has formed until after the event, and feels monetary policy is too blunt a tool to arrest any worrisome developments. At the same time Bernanke, former vice-chairman Kohn and others agree that the central bank might be able to employ broader tools to prevent asset prices from getting too frothy. For example, the Fed regulates margin requirements for buying equities with borrowed funds; it could use these to rein in a galloping stock market. “The simplicities of extreme inflation targeting — which said if you meet your inflation target and keep inflation stable the rest of the economy would look after itself — have been blown apart,” Sir John Gieve, who was deputy governor at the Bank of England from 2006 to 2009, told Reuters. “The Bank’s objectives have become a lot more complicated. Some people have been quicker to realize this than others. If you talk to the Japanese, they would say they have been doing this for a while.” ANY ANSWERS? Could the Fed and its counterparts in Britain and Europe learn from Asian central banks, many of which limit the proportion of deposits that banks can extend as loans? Should they insist that a home buyer make a sizeable deposit when taking out a mortgage — a practice that might have tempered the U.S. housing bubble? Central banks in some emerging economies outside Asia already appear to be adopting such methods – known as ‘macroprudential’ steps – to complement traditional interest rate policy. Turkey has been raising commercial banks’ reserve ratios while simultaneously cutting interest rates, and Brazil signaled this month it would rely more on credit curbs and less on rate increases to fight inflation. Or should they look closer to home, for example to the central banks of Australia and Canada? Both are inflation-targeters, but they sailed through the global crisis without having to resort to extreme measures. A history of conservative banking regulation in those countries meant they never faced severe credit problems. “Prior to the crisis a lot more people were of the view that if it’s not broke don’t fix it,” said Dean Croushore, professor of economics at the University of Richmond in Virginia and a former economist at the Philadelphia Federal Reserve. “Policymakers didn’t react, particularly with respect to housing. Maybe being a bit more proactive is a good thing.” Then again, some Republican lawmakers want the Fed, which has a dual mandate to keep inflation low and maximize employment, to focus exclusively on the first task. They contend that monetary policy is not the right tool to create jobs. Buying up bonds and bailing out failing firms does indeed blur the boundaries between monetary and fiscal policy. Critically, it also suggests that supposedly autonomous central banks are doing the bidding of politicians. “Things cannot change in a measured way,” said European Central Bank policy maker Axel Weber earlier this month. He is also head of Germany’s Bundesbank, but last month he stood down as a candidate to succeed Trichet at the ECB. His outspoken opposition to the bank’s bond-buying underlined the rift between the traditional approach to central banking and the political expediency born of the crisis. “There will have to be fundamental change … If institutions are too big to fail, they are too big to exist,” Weber said, echoing comments by King at the Bank of England. MORE INTRUSIVE The shift is already happening. “Bond investors are not facing a future change; they are living through a change,” said Gieve, the former Bank of England deputy governor. Inflation remains very important, and I have no doubt my colleagues at the Bank of England take it very seriously … But they are also aware of the need to stabilize the financial system. They need to get the economy on a sustainable growth track.” Of course the Fed has never operated in a vacuum. Greenspan swiftly cut interest rates after the Black Monday stock market crash in October 1987 and again in September 1998, after the Fed had to organize a $3.5 billion rescue of LTCM, a big hedge fund. But some experts, including Stephen Roach, Morgan Stanley’s non-executive chairman in Asia, have long argued that an explicit financial stability mandate would force the Fed — and other banks — to pay closer attention to looming bubbles and weak links in the system rather than simply mopping the mess up later. Legislators are giving central banks more powers to keep an eye on financial — as distinct from monetary or economic — trends. Academics have also broadened their reach in that direction, with the Federal Reserve’s prominent Jackson Hole conference last summer featuring a paper arguing that policymakers should pay closer attention to financial variables in their macroeconomic assessments. That’s exactly the direction things are headed. Since the beginning of this year, ECB boss Trichet has chaired something called the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) — a body designed to take a bird’s eye view of Europe’s financial system and flag up emerging problems so the relevant authorities can act. In Britain, the government has decided to disband the Financial Services Authority and give the Bank of England the job of preventing any build-up of risk in the financial system, on top of its monetary policy role. And in the United States, newly enacted legislation gives the Fed a leading role in financial regulation as part of the Financial Stability Oversight Council. “From a regulatory standpoint, we’ll be more aware and more intrusive in monitoring institutions that are systemically critical,” Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher told Reuters in an interview. POLITICS, OF COURSE With those expanded roles comes a greater need for central banks to explain their actions to citizens, markets and politicians alike. Investors will no longer be able to anticipate how policy makers will act just by tracking inflationary trends as they did for a generation before the Great Financial Crisis. Bernanke made it a priority from the start of his tenure in 2006 to improve communications. He didn’t have to do much to improve upon his oracular and sometimes opaque predecessor, Alan Greenspan, who famously said, “if I turn out to be particularly clear, you’ve probably misunderstood what I’ve said.” But the crisis exposed the Fed to withering fire. “It’s hard to maintain mystique when there have manifestly been a series of policy errors, not just at the Fed but in many branches of government,” says Maurice Obstfeld, a professor of economics at the University of California at Berkeley. Even harder, when the big central banks themselves have yet to work out how they will implement their new powers. The new rules in the United States, for instance, give regulators more leeway to wind down global financial institutions deemed too large to fail in case they touch off a catastrophic domino effect as loans are called in. But how that will work in practice remains to be seen. “At the end of the day it comes down to whether or not the too-big-to-fail resolution mechanisms are robust. There’s still some thinking to be done on that,” David Altig, research director at the Atlanta Fed and a professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, said in a telephone interview. To judge by comments by Weber and King, that’s a big, unanswered, politically charged question. The BoE chief has been vocal in complaining that the concept of “too important to fail” has not been addressed, and that bankers continue to be driven by incentives to load up on risk. Then there’s the fact that deciding which firm should live and which not is an intensely political process. Look no further than the furor over the U.S. authorities’ decision to bail out insurer AIG and car maker GM, but to let investment bank Lehman Brothers go to the wall months after arranging a rescue of Bear Stearns. With an expanded awareness of their mandates, wouldn’t central banks be forced to take into account such dilemmas when they are setting interest rates? “It’s a risk, but one has to be aware of the risk and to avoid it,” says Issing, the former ECB chief economist. “It’s macroeconomic supervision; it’s not micro control of individual banks. But if the European Systemic Risk Board identifies systemic risk, it must be solved with tools of regulation and not by lax monetary policy.” A FACT OF LIFE In truth, central banking, by its nature, has always been an intensely political enterprise. To pretend otherwise is naive. War, revolution, depression and calamity have always subjugated central banks to political necessity, and most are still state-owned. Like a country’s highest court, a central bank cannot — no matter how vaunted its independence — be unaware of the political and social mood. The Fed chairman and the U.S. Treasury secretary worked hand in glove during the financial crisis and have the freedom to discuss a range of topics when they meet informally every week. The political nature of central banking was brought home last month when Weber decided to stand down early. He had judged that he did not have enough political support from the 17 members of the euro zone, and his relationship with German chancellor Angela Merkel was also rocky. He will hand over to Jens Weidmann, Merkel’s economic adviser. Critics of the appointment — and there is no shortage of them in a country that likes its central bankers tough and independent — worry that Weidmann will weaken the Bundesbank’s statutory freedom from political influence. That misses the point completely, says David Marsh, co-chair of the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, which brings together central banks, sovereign wealth funds and investors. Marsh says the launch of the euro in 1999 was a political act itself, one that has already led to a much more politicized regime of monetary management. “The interplay with governments — whatever the statutes say about the supreme independence of the European Central Bank — is a fact of life,” he says. “The mistakes and miscalculations of the last 12 years show how monetary union has to be part of a more united political system in Europe. That is not loss of independence. That is political and economic reality.” It is against this backdrop that Trichet’s apparent conversion on the road from Lisbon to Brussels last May must be seen. Niels Thygesen, a member of the committee that prepared the outline of European Economic and Monetary Union in 1988-9, says the euro zone debt crisis forced the ECB to show some flexibility by agreeing to the bond-buying programme. “It is a departure relative to the original vision for the European Central Bank, which was supposed to be a bit isolated from dialogue with the political world,” he says. “On the other hand, I never thought that was quite a tenable situation.” Thygesen, now a professor at the University of Copenhagen, said he did not particularly like the idea but acknowledged that the ECB might in fact have gained some clout by agreeing to the bond-buying plan. Trichet helped rally euro zone leaders into arranging standby funds and loan guarantees that could be tapped by governments in the currency bloc shut out of credit markets — relieving the ECB of some of the burden of crisis management. “It was part of a bargain and I’m sure Mr Trichet bargained very hard and in a way successfully,” says Thygesen. “The ECB has stood up well and gained substantial respect for its political clout in bringing about actions on the part of governments, which otherwise might not have taken place.” LESSONS FROM JAPAN It doesn’t always work out that way. Just ask the Bank of Japan. The BOJ embarked on quantitative easing as far back as 2001. But a decade on, it has still failed to decisively banish the quasi-stagnation and deflation that has dogged Japan’s economy since the early 1990s. Only once in the past decade, in 2008, has Japan experienced inflation of more than 1 percent — the central bank’s benchmark for price stability. When the global crisis hit, the BOJ revived a 2002 scheme to buy shares from banks and took a range of other unorthodox steps to support corporate financing. But its actions failed to placate critics who view it as too timid. Senior figures in the ruling party and opposition parties talk of watering down the BOJ’s independence and forcing it to adopt a rigid inflation target. “The government tends to blame everything on the BOJ,” Kazumasa Iwata, a former BOJ deputy governor, told Reuters. Makoto Utsumi, a former vice finance minister for international affairs, defended the bank’s current set-up, saying it would be “absurd” and “unthinkable” for a developed country like Japan to make its central bank a handmaiden of the government. The bank’s prompt response to the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami has since earned it widespread plaudits. The BOJ poured cash into the banking system, doubled its purchases of an array of financial assets and intervened in the foreign exchange market in coordination with the central banks of other rich nations to halt a surge in the yen that was hurting Japan’s exporting companies. Charles Goodhart, a professor at the London School of Economics who was on the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee from 1997 to 2000, believes a measure of central bank independence can be preserved, even if cooperation with ministers is needed to keep the banking system stable. “I think trying to maintain the independent role of the central bank in interest rate setting remains a very good idea,” he told Reuters. “When it comes to financial stability issues, at any rate under certain circumstances and at certain times, there will have to be a greater involvement of the government.” How to achieve that balance is the subject of a whole other debate. “None of this is going to be quite in the separate boxes it has been in the past,” says Gieve, the former Bank of England deputy governor. “If you have inappropriate monetary policy, all the macroprudential instruments in the world will find it very difficult to push water up hill.” IMPORTING INFLATION As if the political dimension was not enough of a headache, central bank rate-setters seem to be finding it harder to nail down the sources of the inflation they are tasked to fight. One reason is globalization. Central banks have traditionally turned a blind eye to a one-off rise in prices stemming from, say, an increase in consumption taxes, a sharp drop in the exchange rate that boosts import costs or, as now, a spike in oil. As long as the price jolt does not change inflationary expectations or worm its way into the broader economy by prompting workers to ask for higher wages, policy makers have usually felt comfortable in keeping their eye on underlying cost pressures at home. That remains the consensus, as demonstrated by the Bank of England, which has failed to keep inflation down to its 2 percent target for much of the past five years. But in a world of integrated supply chains, can inflationary impulses be neatly attributed to either domestic or international forces? Does it now make sense, as some analysts argue, to estimate how much spare capacity there is globally, not locally? The answers to those questions will have huge implications for monetary policy. Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, one of six members of the ECB’s Executive, has warned that sharper rises in the prices of commodities and goods imported from emerging economies will push up euro zone inflation unless domestic prices are controlled. “A permanent and repeated increase in the prices of imported products will tend to impact on inflation in the advanced countries, including the euro area,” he said in Bologna in January. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard admits the United States could not consider its own inflation outlook in complete isolation from the rest of the world. “Perhaps global inflation will drive U.S. prices higher or cause other problems,” he told a business breakfast in Kentucky in February. The ties that bind global banks and the ease with which capital flows across borders mean that central banks have to be more aware than ever of the international consequences of their policy actions. Because the dollar is the dominant world currency, the Fed came under widespread fire for its second round of bond buying. Critics in China and Brazil among others charged that dollars newly minted by the Fed would wash up on their shores, stoking inflation and pumping up asset prices. “How do we conduct monetary policy in a globalised context?” asks Richard Fisher, the Dallas Fed president. “How do we regulate and supervise and develop our peripheral vision for those that we don’t supervise in a formal way, in a globalised context? Not easy.” Structural shifts in the world economy also raise questions about how long central banks should give themselves to hit their inflation goals — further blurring the picture for investors. “The central bank always has the choice of the time horizon over which it hits its inflation target,” Thygesen, the Copenhagen professor, said. “As the Bank of England is now learning, it may have to extend that horizon somewhat in particularly difficult circumstances. There may be good reasons for doing it, but that is where the element of discretion lies.” The Bank of England expects inflation to remain above target this year before falling back in 2012. The ECB, which seeks medium-term price stability, is resigned to inflation remaining above its target of just below 2 percent for most of 2011. In the last 12 months, it stood at 2.3 percent. It all adds up to a significant shift in the environment in which central banks operate. Policy-making is a whole lot more complicated. With a broader mandate for keeping the banking system safe comes increased political scrutiny. With fast-expanding export economies like China becoming price setters instead of price takers, offshore inflation and disinflation are of growing importance. If the rise in oil prices is due to increased demand from developing nations, for instance, can western central banks still play down ever-higher energy bills as transient? That all means it will become tougher for central banks to preserve their most precious asset, credibility. “Look at the ’90s and the early years of this century — central banks were at the peak of their reputation worldwide, and I was already saying at that time that we know from experience that the risk is highest when you are on top,” Issing says. “Central banks have to take care to restore their reputation, if it has been lost. I think this is a difficult situation for central banks worldwide.” (Paul Carrel reported from Frankfurt, David Milliken from London and Mark Felsenthal and Pedro Nicolaci da Costa from Washington; Additional reporting by Rie Ishiguro in Tokyo; Writing by Alan Wheatley; Editing by Simon Robinson and Sara Ledwith) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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Carla Emil: One Job for America, One Month Later

March 24, 2011

A little over a month ago my husband Rich Silverstein and I launched our One Job For America initiative on the Huffington Post. 600 comments appeared at the time which indicates to me that regardless of what people thought of our idea it’s one that provoked a good deal of conversation. Since then we’ve had over 10,000 visitors to our One Job For America website. And to date nearly 160 businesses from all over the country have made a pledge to create one new job. I’m writing again one month later because I want to continue to encourage people to get behind this campaign. Rich and I are very pleased with the number of businesses that have signed on to our initiative but we’re obviously hoping for many more and we’re working hard to make this happen. We don’t, however, want to diminish the importance of what’s been achieved so far. The creation of 160 new jobs is in itself meaningful but we also have to remember that a single job affects the lives of many people. Even if we look no further than the family we can see that multiples of that number potentially reap the benefits of one new job. And we’ve been particularly heartened by the fact that so many small and mid sized businesses have responded so favorably to our initiative. For many of them the creation of even one new job isn’t an easy thing to do. Their participation in our initiative speaks to their sense of civic and social responsibility, optimism, and often even of patriotism and we hope that more small businesses (those that can) will join our campaign. We do hope to see larger companies pledge on our website as well. So far, other than a few, this hasn’t been the case. We understand their dilemma. Large businesses are always recruiting and hiring. They face employee attrition and are continually letting people go for many different reasons. So how do they participate in a campaign like ours? How do they identify one new job (or, even better, ten)? I can only suggest to large companies that if they believe in our initiative and want to participate that they find creative ways to make this happen. Only they understand their cultures and how to manage them. The opportunity for most of these businesses to create more jobs exists. And all businesses, large and small, know that there is always someone out there who will make their business better! When I wrote my blog a month ago I appealed to the readers’ sense of social responsibility. I talked about the idea of attempting to solve the jobs problem as a national community and suggested that we should work together to make this a better country and a better world. I’m sure some people scoffed at my idealism. But I just don’t know any other way to make this appeal when others with much stronger credentials have had little success in pushing this issue forward. Paul Krugman wrote in an OP-ED piece in the March 18 New York Times called “The Forgotten Millions” that we’re well on our way to creating a permanent underclass of the jobless and asked why Washington doesn’t seem to care. Well, I care and millions of Americans care and I believe that if no new job bills are being introduced in Congress and no job creation plans have been advanced by the White House then we as individuals have to do something about it. We as citizens have the responsibility to find new ways to encourage hiring in our country, put Americans back to work and move our economy forward. One Job for America is suggesting one viable way to do this. I continue to entreat people to focus less on why this idea can’t work and more on how they can make it work. So, once again, we want to ask you to visit our website. It’s been updated to include more information about companies that have made a pledge and will also now include those that have fulfilled their pledges. We believe that if you join our effort you can make a real difference. And we also believe we’ve only just begun.

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Inmates Bake Bread For Entire NYC Prison Population

March 24, 2011

NEW YORK — Each morning, and again in the afternoon, the blades of three bread-slicing machines are counted carefully. Only then does the bakery let workers go home – to their jail cells on Rikers Island. Twenty inmates of one of the nation’s largest jail complexes are part of a team that bakes 36,000 loaves of bread a week to feed the city’s entire population behind bars – about 13,000 people. Employees in orange-and-white-striped jumpsuits and surgical caps earn $31 a week churning out whole wheat bread. There’s not an apron in sight The prison bakers say they are learning skills that may keep them gainfully employed once they get out. “I’m learning teamwork,” says prisoner Nikos Alexis, 24, as he walks off in black leather boots caked with flour. He’s serving a four-month sentence for possession of a forged instrument, according to correction records. It’s a privilege to get this work assignment; only inmates already sentenced to one year or less in jail are considered. Most of the other Rikers residents are awaiting trial on charges including murder. The bakers behind bars get up before dawn and climb into a van for the ride to the other side of the 413-acre island in the East River between Queens and the Bronx. Passing a double row of razor wire-topped fences, they enter the mammoth, single-story bakery around 6 a.m., guarded by correction officers with a captain and a deputy warden. By the loading dock, a sign in the glass window of a supervisor’s office reads: “FAKE & BAKE” – a small try at making people smile in this grim community. More than culinary discipline is needed in this kitchen – part of a jail system where arguments between inmates or with guards can erupt in a flash, resulting in stabbings and slashings. In December, a Rikers correction officer had part of his thumb bitten off by an inmate. So far, the bakery itself remains violence-free. But it’s a dynamic, noisy place. Dangers include fast-moving industrial machinery tagged with hands-off warning signs and blinking yellow lights. The baking process starts in giant metal tubs where 1,600 pounds of dough is mixed for each batch – half white flour and half the darker one – and hoisted with a lift into a machine that divides it into balls that are shaped and fed into corn oiled pans. The finished bread is stored in a walk-in refrigerator with the words “Fort Knox” whimsically chiseled into its steel door. The soothing smell of warm, freshly baked bread drifts across the 11,000-square-foot space, a labyrinth of white-coated metal machines mixing, shaping, baking, slicing and packing the loaves. The men take turns at various stations, from mixing the flours in the tubs – “an awesome kind of combination,” says Alexis – to working the ovens. The brows of three young men drip with sweat as they gently load 240 risen loaves into a giant oven – a sea of dough that emerges golden a half hour later. In summer, with only fans whirring overhead, the air is hotter than the bread. “Man, it gets hot – sometimes up to 120 degrees!” says Aubrey Simpson, the supervising baker and a civilian who was once an army officer in his native Guyana. Above a conveyor belt is a sign in Gothic script that reads: “Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread.” And the Rikers bakery does – tens of thousands of wax-paper-wrapped loaves that fill two storage rooms, ready to be trucked out. The bakery’s products are not for sale to the public – even though prisoners agree it’s tasty enough to succeed outside the island. “I would definitely give it a thumbs up and say it’s better than the bread I buy at the store,” says inmate Taiwan Taylor, 32, who’s serving an eight-month sentence for criminal trespass. Taylor loves to bite into a fresh slice on his 10 a.m. break. “It’s delicious when it’s warm, when it first comes out of the oven,” he says. At about 1 p.m., the day’s baking is done. Then come the cleanup and maintenance of equipment, most of it dating to the 1960s. “It’s old, and any minute, something could go wrong,” says chief mechanic Andrew Sonni, also a civilian and Guyanese native who keeps dog-eared repair logs in his tiny office off the bakery floor. Tacked to a wall next to a pinup girl is a booklet with a two-word reminder scribbled on it in bold letters: “COUNT BLADES.” Keeping track of the blades in the slicing machines is a security measure to keep inmates from spiriting away any object “that might be turned into a handmade weapon,” says Stephen Morello, a Department of Correction spokesman. But the incarcerated bakers appear more interested in good behavior that could get them sprung early than in harming each other. Until two years ago, the jail bakery made only white bread. Under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a nutrition task force opted for the healthier wheat loaves. And to meet city budget cuts, prisoners in New York City now get a maximum ration of six half-inch slices a day, instead of the previous eight – saving the city $350,000 a year. For holidays, the prisoners also make “the best carrot cake I have ever tasted,” Alexis says. Simpson, the senior baker, made some changes in a recipe already in use when he started working at Rikers more than 20 years ago. When fellow baker Kay Fraser – also a civilian employee born in Guyana – arrived about five years ago, she tweaked the recipe some more. “I put in less cloves and allspice, and more ginger,” she says. “And I add a lot of love.” The work is done in 25-loaf batches, using 25 pounds of sugar, 25 pounds of eggs and 25 pounds of shredded carrots. When the cakes – shaped like bread loaves – emerge from the oven, she lets them cool. Then comes her special touch: wrap them in wax paper and refrigerate them “to seal the moisture.” In April, Alexis expects to cross the bridge linking the island jail with Queens – and freedom. “I want to just get back on my feet and do things the right way,” he says, “and bake bread for my mother.” ____ Online: Array

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Unemployment Claims Fall Slightly As Layoffs Slow

March 24, 2011

WASHINGTON — Fewer people applied for unemployment benefits last week, adding to evidence that layoffs are slowing and employers may be stepping up hiring. The number of people seeking benefits dropped by 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 382,000 in the week ended March 19, the Labor Department said Thursday. The fourth decline in five weeks lowered the four-week average to 385,250, the fewest for that measure since July 2008. The four-week average has fallen almost 11 percent in the past seven weeks. Applications at about 375,000 or below indicate a sustained increase in hiring. Applications peaked during the recession at 651,000. Weekly applications for unemployment benefits are considered a gauge of the pace of layoffs. The number of people receiving unemployment benefits fell for the fifth straight week to 3.7 million. But that doesn’t include 4.3 million people who are receiving extended benefits under emergency federal programs enacted during the recession. As applications have fallen, hiring has started to pick up. The economy added a net total of 192,000 jobs in February, the most in nearly a year. Many economists are expecting similar gains in March. The unemployment rate fell to 8.9 percent last month, the lowest since April 2009. Still, more hiring is needed to rapidly reduce the unemployment rate. More than 18 months after the recession ended, the economy has about 7.4 million fewer jobs than it did before the recession began in December 2007.

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Maine Gov. Orders Labor History Mural Taken Down

March 24, 2011

It’s Diego Rivera Redux in Maine, as Governor Paul LePage is taking down a mural in the state Department of Labor building depicting the history of the labor movement and changing the names of conference rooms that he deems too pro-labor.

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Buffett, Gates Try To Persuade India’s Billionaires To Give More To Charity

March 24, 2011

NEW DELHI (By Alistair Scrutton and C.J. Kuncheria) – Two of the world’s richest men, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, will meet the cream of India’s rich on Thursday to tap the wealth of a new generation of billionaires for charity in the rapidly developing Asian giant after a similar visit to China. The visit of two of the world’s most generous philanthropists has sparked a renewed debate about the willingness of India’s rich to part with their money to support the nation’s hundreds of millions below the poverty line. Gates, the founder of Microsoft and the world’s second richest man, has set up a $37 billion foundation focused on health in developing countries, usually targeting common diseases with high mortality rates, such as malaria, polio and AIDS. The 80-year-old Buffett, dubbed the “Oracle of Omaha” for his formidable investment decisions that have built up a $200 billion empire with Berkshire Hathaway Inc, has pledged to give 99 percent of his wealth to charitable causes. Much of that money will go to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Two decades of economic boom have propelled India’s industrialists and software moguls to the top table of the world’s rich, with two in the top 10 of the Forbes list of the richest people this year. Gates, arriving in the Indian capital after a visit to the poor northern state of Bihar, said while he had no “measurable outcome” in mind from the meeting, he hoped it would encourage India’s richest to emulate other philanthropists. “It’s fair experience that as you get people together to talk about philanthropy, they will hear why other people have committed and agreed to what they’re doing. It’ll encourage them to do more,” Gates told a news conference ahead of his meeting with the Indian billionaires. The Indian billionaires include software czar Azim Premji, who in 2010 donated $2 billion for education and social projects, and G.M. Rao, the chairman of the GMR group who last week pledged $340 million in charity. Separately, Buffett will also call on Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday. In a country where more than 450 million people live in poverty, around 50 billionaires account for 20 percent of India’s GDP. In 2010, there were six Indian industrialists on Forbes.com’s list of the world’s top 50 billionaires. With that have come some fantastic displays of wealth, including a $1 billion, 27-storey private home built by Mukesh Ambani of Reliance Industries in the country’s financial capital Mumbai. Bentleys now mix with bullock carts and rickshaws on the streets of Indian cities. But India’s billionaires have not been as willing to loosen their purse strings as their American counterparts, according to a study by the consultancy Bain & Co said in 2010. Charitable giving in India probably totaled about $7.5 billion in 2009, according to the study by Bain & Co, equivalent to about 0.6 percent of the country’s GDP. That percentage is higher than Brazil’s 0.3 percent and rival China’s 0.1 percent, but it falls way short of the 2.2 percent in the United States, and 1.3 percent in Britain, the report said. “Our crorepatis (billionaires) have a poor record of giving,” India’s NDTV said on its website. “They say they will turn up at the event to hear the wit and wisdom of the Oracle of Omaha — but may send him back with empty pockets.” (Writing by Matthias Williams; Editing by Sugita Katyal) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Twitter Co-Founder May Return To Company

March 24, 2011

Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey may be returning to Twitter full time, according to reports. Dorsey was Twitter’s CEO until 2008, when co-founder Evan Williams took over the role. Business Insider wrote in November, shortly after Williams stepped down as CEO, that Dorsey was reportedly consulting at Twitter “on a once-a-week-or-so basis.” Now, Business Insider writes that Jack Dorsey may move up to “something like a chief product officer,” according to an unnamed tipster. The New York Times makes a similar forecast about Dorsey entering “a product leadership role,” based on information from “three sources briefed on the discussions.” Dorsey is the current CEO of mobile payments service Square . The TImes says that he will retain this title, while Business Insider supposes that he will focus solely on the Twitter product. If the reports are true, the deal is not yet final, and Twitter’s official statement was vague. “We’re fortunate that our chairman, Jack Dorsey, has been able to get even more engaged in the company. His assistance has and will continue to be invaluable,” the company commented to the Times . Twitter on Monday celebrated its fifth birthday . Dorsey, who wrote the very first tweet , has recently been tweeting nostalgia from Twitter’s early days.

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England’s Slowing Economy Could Lead To Downgrade

March 24, 2011

(Reuters) – Britain’s triple-A sovereign debt rating could be at risk if slower economic growth makes it harder for the government to rein in its budget deficit, ratings agency Moody’s said on Thursday. “The government’s ongoing commitment to large-scale deficit reduction is very important to the Aaa rating and stable outlook,” Moody’s said the day after finance minister George Osborne revealed downgraded growth forecasts in his 2011 Budget. “Although the weaker economic growth prospects in 2011 and 2012 do not directly cast doubt on the UK’s sovereign rating level, we believe that slower growth combined with weaker-than-expected fiscal consolidation could cause the UK’s debt metrics to deteriorate to a point that would be inconsistent with a AAA rating,” Moody’s said in a statement. Moody’s downgraded its own forecast for British growth this year to 1.6 percent from 2.0 percent, below the 1.7 percent forecast by the government’s independent Office for Budget Responsibility in Wednesday’s Budget. Preserving the triple-A sovereign debt rating that Britain enjoys from the major ratings agencies is a top economic priority for the country’s coalition government of Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. Britain’s budget deficit totaled around 11 percent of gross domestic product in the 2009/10 fiscal year. (Reporting by David Milliken) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Portugal Unlikely To Seek EU Bailout Package

March 24, 2011

LISBON/BRUSSELS – The resignation of Portugal’s prime minister will dominate a summit of EU leaders on the European economy on Thursday and Friday, with pressure intense on Lisbon to seek a bailout package. Prime Minister Jose Socrates resigned on Wednesday after parliament rejected his government’s latest austerity measures aimed at avoiding EU financial assistance. But he said he would still attend the two-day summit in a caretaker capacity. Socrates remains adamantly opposed to requesting EU/IMF aid and has made it clear he intends to hold that line, at least until a new Portuguese government is formed in the weeks ahead. That leaves Portugal in limbo, but the likelihood remains that a bailout will have to be taken in the end. Asked if Socrates would ask for aid at the summit, a senior EU official said: “I would be surprised. There is a doubt on whether he has any mandate right now to do so … But I would not rule out.” Lisbon needs to refinance 4.5 billion euros of sovereign debt in April, which may prove a trigger for finally making the request for aid. One problem complicating Portugal’s situation is that any bailout request would have to be approved by parliament and the majority is opposed to asking for help. “I have always warned of the profoundly negative consequences of seeking foreign aid,” Socrates said as he resigned, vowing to continue to do everything to avoid it. If aid were to be requested — and EU officials have made clear they stand ready to provide one — it is estimated that Lisbon would need 60-80 billion euros. Portuguese benchmark 10-year bond yields rose further on Thursday, climbing to 7.90 percent, far above the 7.0 percent that is regarded as long-term sustainable. The euro weakened to $1.4070 from $1.4117. China, which has offered to buy Portuguese government debt in the past, said it saw continued risks from the euro zone debt crisis but added that it had increased its holdings of European government bonds to help the region. SUMMIT PROBLEMS The summit, which was originally expected to sign off on a “comprehensive package” of measures that EU leaders thought would help resolve their year-long debt problems, is now not expected to take any firm decisions on central issues. “We think that no agreement at the EU summit on the bailout facilities should erode euro support further in the near term,” said Valentin Marinov, currency analyst at CitiFX. Draft conclusions drawn up ahead of the summit showed that a decision on how to increase the effective lending capacity of the current bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, would not now be taken until mid-year, probably ahead of a summit in late June. While a technical issue — it centers on whether euro zone member states will provide capital or guarantees to raise the effective capacity of the EFSF from 250 billion euros to the full 440 billion — it risks further undermining market confidence in EU policymakers’ ability to resolve the crisis. Finland is one of the main obstacles to a decision, since it has dissolved parliament ahead of elections on April 17 and cannot therefore sign off on a deal. Helsinki opposes using more guarantees to increase the effective size of the EFSF. A new Finnish government is only likely to be formed by May at the earliest, and that government may include the euroskeptic True Finns party, which opposes some of the EU’s proposed crisis steps, further complicating the outlook. Over the last few months, EU leaders have made considerable progress in putting together the crisis package. They have decided in principle to expand the EFSF, agreed to create a permanent crisis fund — the European Stability Mechanism — to replace the EFSF from 2013, and agreed to strengthen economic coordination and increase productivity. But as well as being unable to agree on exactly how the EFSF’s capacity should be increased, there are doubts about how they will finance the 500 billion euro ESM using paid-in capital, callable capital and guarantees. A German official said on Wednesday that Berlin now wanted this week’s summit to alter a timetable agreed by EU finance ministers on Monday for injecting cash into the ESM. While this is another nitty-gritty issue, it contributes to a sense in financial markets that EU member states are endlessly at odds over how best to handle the debt crisis, and that everything could yet unravel. NO MOVE ON IRELAND The summit is also unlikely to make progress on reducing the interest rate on bailout loans extended to Ireland. Dublin says the rate is so high that it cripples the Irish economy, but agreement on cutting it has been held up by Dublin’s refusal to give in to German and French pressure for Ireland to raise its low corporate tax rate. “There is almost certainly not going to be a resolution of the Irish issues tomorrow or Friday,” an EU diplomat said on Wednesday. “The feeling is that the outstanding issues for Ireland, which are not just the interest rate but the banking question, that they are better dealt with as a package.” Dublin and the EU are only expected to start detailed talks on how to rescue the Irish banking system after the central bank publishes its assessment of Irish commercial banks on March 31. (Editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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World Shares Recover All Of Post-Japan Losses

March 24, 2011

LONDON – Global stocks inched higher on Thursday and are now higher than when Japan’s earthquake and tsunami struck, buoyed by confidence that the world economic recovery remains on track. The euro also recovered early losses to trade a touch higher despite negative signs from banking and politics in Portugal and Spain, the two countries now at the center of Europe’s continuing debt crisis. The single European currency was set for its largest weekly slide since early January, after the Portuguese parliament rejected a series of austerity measures and prime minister Jose Socrates stepped down, although equity markets rallied after gains in the heavyweight mining sector offset losses elsewhere. “Sentiment is still relatively good. The cycle is good. We are still mildly optimistic on the overall picture,” said Joost de Graff, senior portfolio manager at Kempen Capital Manageent in the Netherlands. Surveys on Thursday showed economic recovery continued in March, shrugging off Japan’s disaster, although Middle East tensions are sending prices rocketing and the impact of public sector cutbacks in Europe is a risk. The MSCI All-Country index .MIW0000PUS was last up 0.1 percent. In Asia, Tokyo’s Nikkei .N225 fell 0.2 percent. It remains 8 percent below its close when the earthquake hit on March 11. EU BAILOUT Much of the anxiety over the euro zone’s debt problems had been soothed by the prospect of a longer-term reinforcement of the EU bailout fund. But this has now been delayed until June, while Portugal faces what are viewed as unsustainable borrowing costs ahead of multi-billion euro bond repayments in April and June. The premium investors demand to hold Portuguese debt rather than benchmark German Bunds hit euro-lifetime highs, while the premium to hold other peripheral debt also rose, reflecting the growing preference among bondholders to own higher-rated paper. “If — and this is a big if — there is a bailout for Portugal, the question would be how it would be negotiated with a government in essentially a caretaker mode,” said David Forrester, currency strategist at Barclays Capital in Singapore. The euro was last up 0.1 percent against the dollar at $1.4101, having fallen earlier to a low of $1.4049, while against the yen it was flat at 114.11 yen. The yen itself was steady against the dollar at 80.95 yen, although market players are still wary Japan may intervene to sell the currency if the dollar breaches 80 yen. Euro zone government bonds were flat, with Bunds having pared some of their earlier gains to trade at 3.229 percent, while Portuguese 10-year yields rose 11 basis points to 7.931 percent, leaving the premium to Bunds at a euro-lifetime high of 470 basis points. European Union leaders begin a two-day summit on Thursday but the political turmoil in Portugal and looming elections in other countries are expected to delay any tough decisions to address the region’s debt problem. An official euro zone source estimated in January that if Portugal asked for international aid, it might need between 60 billion to 80 billion euros (up to $113 billion). European shares edged higher as gains in the mining sector offset some of the weakness in banking stocks, which came under pressure from persistent concern about the euro zone’s finance and after Moody’s downgraded 30 Spanish banks. .EU The FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 was up 0.2 percent at 1,113.49 points, while S&P 500 futures rose 0.1 percent, pointing to a modestly higher start on Wall Street later. .EU .N Brent crude was off 0.2 percent at $115.35, down for a second successive trading day. Spot gold traded around $1,43999 an ounce, in sight of its record $1,444.40 set earlier in the month. (Additional reporting by Kirsten Donovan and Harpreet Bhal in London and Alejandro Barbajosa and Alex Richardson in Singapore) (Reporting by Amanda Cooper; editing by Patrick Graham) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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XenaCare Holdings Announces New Director and Possible Expansion Into Real Estate Projects

March 24, 2011

BOCA RATON, FL–(Marketwire – March 24, 2011) – XenaCare Holdings, Inc. ( OTCQB : XCHO ) announced today that it has elected attorney Carlos J. Bonilla, to the Board of Directors.

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Video: Religare Capital’s Mostaque Recommends UAE, Qatar Stocks

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Emad Mostaque, chief strategist at Religare Capital Markets Plc, discusses the outlook for Middle East stocks. He talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: European Leaders Meet to Ratify Stability, Rescue Accord

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s David Tweed reports from Brussels where European leaders are meeting to sign off on measures aimed at drawing a line under the region’s sovereign debt crisis.

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Video: Fransolet Says He’s `Positive’ on Spanish 10-Year Bonds

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Laurent Fransolet, head of European fixed income strategy at Barclays Capital, talks about his bond strategy and the outlook for an international bailout of Portuguese debt. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Schmieding Says Portugal Will Need to Negotiate Bailout

March 24, 2011

March 24 (Bloomberg) — Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Joh Berenberg Gossler & Co., talks about the outlook for an international bailout for Portugal and the capital levels of Spanish banks. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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