July 2011

Dory Rand: Consumers and Lenders Both Better Off With Fully Functioning CFPB

July 21, 2011

I tend to be a “glass half full” optimist, so I’m pretty happy about the launch of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) on July 21. Having a regulator that looks out for the interests of consumers is definitely something to celebrate. When talking about “risk” with the old school banking regulators, such as the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve Board or the FDIC, the conversation was usually about “safety and soundness,” or risk to the financial institution’s bottom line and ongoing stability, or about “reputation risk,” or fear of being sued or getting bad press that might affect market price and assets. When dealing with predatory consumer products such as exploding adjustable rate mortgages and tax refund anticipation loans, advocates and regulators often had to frame the problems through that risk lens in order to indirectly obtain fair results for consumers. Those risky products were very profitable to lenders, at least in the short term, but very harmful to consumers and to our economic stability in the longer term. As we have learned now, I hope, allowing risky financial products to be marketed to some consumers ultimately hurts us all. So, when I attended a meeting at CFPB this month to discuss with advocates and industry representatives how CFPB should define the other “larger market participants” over which CFPB has jurisdiction (besides depository institutions, mortgage lenders and payday lenders), it was quite refreshing to hear the CFPB representatives speak about their oversight, enforcement, research and education duties mandated by the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in terms of risk to consumers. In meeting and talking with many of the new CFPB staff, I have been impressed with the high quality and diversity of people that Professor Elizabeth Warren has recruited. Warren is Assistant to the President and Special Advisor to the Treasury for standing up the independent bureau that was her idea. The CFPB has intentionally recruited staff from diverse backgrounds and viewpoints, including financial and labor industry representatives, consumer advocates, researchers and policymakers. The CFPB has embraced its commitment to diversity and transparency in the way in which it conducts outreach. Instead of meeting separately with consumer advocates and industry folks, for example, the CFPB has hosted joint meetings in which opponents can air their differences and find common ground. The CFPB’s use of its website and email outreach to solicit comments from the public on draft mortgage disclosure forms generated over 10,000 comments, likely many more than would have occurred through old school notice and comment processes, although these are still being used. The “half empty” part that tempers my celebration is the fact that, due to Senate Republican statements that they will refuse to confirm any person nominated by the president to head the CFPB, the president delayed his nomination until this week and passed over Elizabeth Warren, nominating Richard Cordray instead. Cordray, a highly qualified former Ohio Attorney General, is a great choice to head the Bureau and deserves to be confirmed quickly. Failure to confirm him quickly would mean that the CFPB lacks enforcement authority over non-depository financial institutions and cannot level the playing field between banks and other industry players. American consumers and financial firms will both be better off when the CFPB levels the playing field by fairly and consistently regulating all providers of financial products and services with the primary goal of protecting consumers. The sooner the Senate confirms Richard Cordray as director of the CFPB, the sooner we can all benefit from better oversight and consumer protections.

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Jeff Reeves: Three Private Companies Building Space Shuttle Replacements

July 21, 2011

It’s amazing how a simple signature in Washington can cause an explosion in innovation. No, I’m not talking about new laws, but rather, the loosening of federal oversight that opens the door to the private sector. Consider a seemingly arcane move in 2000, made by President Clinton, to change Global Positioning System data from “selective availability” to public record. His approval opened the floodgates to spawn an entire consumer technology industry for GPS systems we now take for granted. Savvy investors who saw the big potential in privatization made a killing as a result. Consider that from 2001 to 2007, Garmin (GRMN) stock soared from less than $10 in 2000 to more than $120 in 2007, while the market added about 25% in the same period. As the space shuttle Atlantis returns to earth this week and closes the curtains on two decades of NASA’s shuttle program, privatized space flight may provide a similar opportunity for innovation – and investors. So which corporations could be the biggest players in this new space race? Here are three publicly traded companies that could be big players: Orbital Sciences A great small-cap space stock with potential in the private space race is Orbital Sciences Corporation (NYSE:ORB). Orbital Sciences develops and rockets and space systems for commercial customers, the military and NASA. The space stock mostly places satellites into orbit, but manned space missions wouldn’t be much of a stretch for this company. Early indications are that Orbital Sciences is looking to the stars. In December 2010, Orbital submitted its plans for a space shuttle replacement to NASA. Orbital’s vehicle would launch atop an expendable rocket and return to Earth with a conventional runway landing like that of the shuttle. A shuttle replacement vehicle is initially needed to ferry astronauts to and from the International Space Station, and Orbital Sciences designed a vehicle with four seats. What’s more, alternative designs would allow room for commercial passengers in future years if private pleasure cruises to space become a reality. Lockheed Martin: Lockheed Martin is no stranger to working with the government on aerospace programs. Over 70% of its revenue from the Department of Defense thanks in large part to iconic flying machines. Warbirds from Lockheed and its famous “skunk works” include the iconic F-16 and the F-117 stealth fighter. But if you think fighter jets are all Lockheed makes, think again. It has history with the space program that dates back to 1955 when Uncle Sam awarded the then-named Martin Company with a contract to build Titan rockets in the space race against Russia. And a long list of Lockheed components have been a part of the space shuttle program for years. Lockheed also submitted shuttle replacement plans to NASA a few months ago – its design includes returning a capsule to earth with a parachute landing like vehicles from decades past to simplify the technological requirements and reduce costs for space flight. And of course I have to mention the now-infamous X-33 space plane, an “sub-orbital” aircraft that aimed to eventually replace the space shuttle. NASA invested $922 million in the project before cancellation in 2001, while Lockheed Martin dumped a further $357 million of its own money into the X-33 development. Critics call this a boondoggle, but Lockheed claims to have continued the program and seen success from related technologies as recently as 2009. And you can bet that after all that money invested and all the potential revenue from privatized space flight, Lockheed has been scurrying to put its X-33 research to good use now that the shuttle will be retired permanently. Boeing Of course, you can’t overlook one of the other major aerospace contractors as one of Lockheed’s chief competitors in the race for private space travel: Boeing. After all, Boeing was a crucial part of the Apollo space programs that sent America to the moon — including building the first stage of the Saturn V rocket that launched the spacecraft and providing NASA with the lunar rover that bounced astronauts around the moon. Boeing’s 2000 acquisition of Hughes Space and Communications Company has made it one of the primary providers of commercial satellite launches for companies that include Sirius XM and DirecTV, among others. And Boeing was awarded $18 million from NASA in the past year as seed money to advance the concepts and technology necessary to build a commercial space transportation system. Boeing isn’t alone, of course, and the contract was one of several efforts by the government to jump-start new spaceship development and fill the void left by NASA’s retiring shuttles. But clearly such acknowledgement from Washington and such a considerable sum gives Boeing a leg up in the new private space race. Jeff Reeves is editor of InvestorPlace.com. Write him at jreeves@investorplace.com.

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Will Marshall: Welcome Back, Gang of Six

July 21, 2011

Not a moment too soon, the Gang of Six has resurfaced in the U.S. Senate, breathing new life into hopes for a bipartisan “grand bargain” on deficit reduction. Even if Eric Cantor were abducted by aliens, there’s no way that Congress could pass the Gang’s elaborate plan to solve the debt crisis before Aug. 2. But the Gang’s resurgence, with growing support from GOP senators, adds to mounting public pressure on House Republicans to end their self-isolating intransigence on taxes. Several weeks ago, the Gang looked moribund after a key member, Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), went on walkabout. To their immense credit, however, Gang leaders Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) persevered, got Coburn back in the fold, and unveiled their new plan before 46 Republican and Democratic senators this week. President Obama, who has stood strangely aloof from the Gang’s efforts to find common ground, pronounced the new package “consistent” with his views. The new blueprint, like the original, is based on the Bowles-Simpson fiscal commission plan. It envisions two steps: First, an immediate, $500 billion “down payment” on deficit reduction; followed by more comprehensive reform. Altogether, the Gang calls for $3.7 trillion in debt reduction over the next decade. That’s about what budget experts say is necessary to first stabilize, then start shrinking, the national debt. Another Gang leader, Sen. Kent Conrad (D-Mont.), said today there is talk on Capitol Hill of using the $500 billion cut to win a short-term extension of the debt limit. That could give lawmakers more time to hammer out a permanent solution to the fiscal crisis that includes both increased tax revenues and entitlement reform. The Gang’s revised plan proposes deep cuts in Medicare and other health spending, while — sorry Rep. Ryan — apparently maintaining the structure of Medicare and Medicaid. It would achieve about $1 trillion in savings by capping domestic spending, including defense, over the next decade. These cuts are way beyond cosmetic. The new plan also embraces the fiscal commission’s key proposal on tax reform. It would raise around $1 trillion over the next decade by closing tax loopholes, using the savings both to dramatically lower income and corporate tax rates, and reduce the deficit. Spared are tax credits for low-wage workers and families with children. More affluent taxpayers will welcome the Gang’s call to abolish the Alternative Minimum Tax. The fiscal commission achieved a political breakthrough when Republicans senators embraced tax reform, and some Democrats agreed to cut Social Security benefits for affluent retirees and raise the retirement age. Here the new blueprint disappoints. Basically it punts to the Senate Finance Committee, which is charged with drafting a plan to assure Social Security’s solvency over the next 75 years. The Gang also says efforts to reform Social Security should only take place “on a separate track… any savings from the programs must go toward solvency.” This may placate liberals, but could alienate conservatives who suspect Democrats aren’t really serious about entitlement reform. The big question, of course, is whether the Gang’s plan could ever get through the House. For starters, it violates the Tea Party’s prime imperative — that revenues can be raised for no other purpose than cutting tax rates. Moreover, Ezra Klein reports that it also appears to assume the expiration of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy. If House Republicans won’t yield on taxes, don’t expect House liberals to deal on entitlement reform. Still, a lot depends on how the debt limit battle plays out. New polls show voters are more likely to see Republicans as standing in the way of compromise than Obama and the Democrats. If things get really ugly — if the federal government can’t pay salaries or mail benefit checks on Aug. 3 — such suspicions could quickly turn into a furious backlash. In any case, the Gang’s initiative illuminates a growing rift between House and Senate Republicans, both on taxes and negotiating tactics. By saying, in effect, “Hell no” to balanced proposals to cut deficits, House Republicans are forfeiting a rare opportunity to get Democrats to swallow huge, multi-trillion-dollar cuts in federal spending. Apparently, real conservatives prefer big government to tax hikes. On the other side, progressives aren’t likely to get a better offer than the one Warner and company are offering. No one knows this better than President Obama, who’s been beating his head against the wall of GOP recalcitrance for weeks. And that’s why, once the debt limit is raised, he ought to throw in with the Gang of Six. This item is cross-posted at Progressive Fix .

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India Weddings Faulted For Prodigious Food Waste

July 21, 2011

NEW DELHI — When the daughter of businessman Mohammed Sultan got married recently, guests were treated to a lavish 30-course meal served in super-sized silver platters. The Kashmiri feast, prepared by an army of chefs, included more than 20 meat and kebab dishes rich with spices to go with the saffron-flavored rice and naan breads. Hours later, after the more than 500 guests had eaten their fill, the leftovers were dumped by the cartload at a nearby garbage site. As the ranks of India’s wealthy surge with rapid economic growth, many families are staging extravagant displays of food at their children’s weddings to show off their newfound affluence. The prodigious waste that follows has horrified many in a nation where food prices are skyrocketing and tens of millions of young children are malnourished. At the recent wedding of the son of a ruling party leader, more than a 100 dishes representing Thai, Chinese, Mediterranean and Indian cuisines were served to over 30,000 guests. About 20 percent would’ve been thrown away. India’s Food Minister K.V. Thomas wants to curtail what has become known as the Big Fat Indian Wedding. He says about one-fifth of the food served at weddings and social gatherings is discarded. “It’s a criminal waste,” Thomas told The Associated Press. The tons of food wasted at social gatherings across the country each day contrasts sharply with the food shortages, often bordering on chronic starvation, faced by millions of poor Indians. Like elsewhere in Asia, food prices in India are rising fast – by 8.4 percent in June alone – as demand outstrips production. And the burden is falling disproportionately on the poor. Experts say the jump in prices for staples to record highs over the past few months has pushed another 64 million Asians into poverty. According to the food minister, around 100,000 weddings and social events are held in India every day. He says food wasted each day at weddings and family functions in Mumbai alone would be enough to feed the city’s vast slum population. The International Food Policy Research Institute ranks India 67 out of 84 countries in its 2010 global hunger index, a survey of the prevalence of child malnutrition, child mortality and the proportion of people who are calorie deficient. A committee Thomas established toyed with restricting the number of guests at weddings and the number of dishes that could be served. But the idea was quickly shot down by critics who said it would simply give corrupt inspectors another reason to solicit bribes. Instead, the committee has decided on a public awareness campaign through the media and outreach to schools and social organizations to spread the word that less is more when it comes to weddings. If the awareness campaign fails to make a dent, Thomas said he would consider resurrecting the guest limit proposal. It would not be the first time. In the early 1960s, in the aftermath of a brief border war with the Chinese, food shortages led the government to impose a ‘Guest Control Order’ limiting the number of wedding guests. The restrictions were short-lived, although it did focus public opinion on adopting a measure of frugality. Today, austerity is far from the minds of India’s wealthy, who fly in orchids from Thailand to decorate overstuffed buffet tables. “It’s my only daughter’s wedding. I don’t want to stint on anything. And certainly not on food,” said Alka Gupta, a businesswoman, as she studied a sheaf of menus from wedding caterers while planning her daughter’s December marriage. “My husband and I have worked hard all these years. Now we want a spectacular celebration to invite all our friends,” she said. Sociologist Abhilasha Kumari says that for the burgeoning middle classes, making a spectacle of weddings has become quite the accepted norm. Bollywood, India’s Hindi language film industry, has done much to popularize the theme of the big Indian wedding, says Kumari. “Conspicuous consumption is no longer viewed with distaste as it once was under India’s earlier socialist ethos,” she said. “It’s a new India where there are new value systems. Over-consumption is the norm.” The mere idea of scaled down celebrations has, not surprisingly, prompted a host of objections from businesses who bank on big weddings. Cutting down on the number of dishes may not be an easy task, says Nitin Luthra, a leading New Delhi caterer who has organized some of Delhi’s most spectacular weddings. “People have begun demanding exotic cuisines. What they want is a memorable evening for everyone who attends the wedding,” Luthra said. Wedding planners scoffed at the idea of a cap on wedding guests as a measure to curb food shortages. “It’s a knee jerk reaction, a populist measure,” says Ashish Abrol, a former IBM executive who in 2010 set up a wedding planning firm, Big Indian Wedding. “It would be an utter failure since it’s impossible to implement. The net result would be more corruption,” Abrol said. Suresh Misra at the Indian Institute of Public Administration, a New Delhi-based think tank, agrees that legislation to end the waste may not be “feasible or workable.” “It is true that we cannot force people to cut back on wasteful displays of food and spending, but if we get people thinking about the enormous amounts of food that’s wasted, that itself would be a step forward,” says Misra, who is a member of Thomas’ committee. But efforts to pick up the leftovers and distribute them to the poor have not taken off due to lack of infrastructure. Also, many Indians are reluctant to eat leftovers, partly because food spoils quickly in the country’s hot climate. Before cracking down on weddings, the government plans to cut back on its own excesses. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s office has sent out letters to government departments urging austerity at seminars and conferences. And in what could prove to be a landmark initiative, the government has prepared a draft law that would make access to food a basic right of every citizen. Under the proposed law, almost 70 percent of the population would be entitled to subsidized food. Rising food costs, coupled with steep increases this year in the price of cooking gas and gasoline, have led poor families to pare food budgets. But there are no such concerns for India’s moneyed elite. Gupta, the businesswoman, says for the affluent classes, rising prices are not the overriding concern when planning a wedding. “I would like to scale down things, but feel helpless. There are so many expectations riding on the children’s marriage. Very often it’s not in our hands,” she said. “If we resort to a scaled down wedding, it could send the wrong signal to our business associates.” Another problem is that most Indians don’t take the R.S.V.P. seriously. Wedding planners and caterers have to be prepared for huge turnouts at wedding parties, with the danger that the food may run out. If attendance is lower than expected, that extra food is scrapped. “You have no idea how many will turn up at the wedding reception, and have to plan for both contingencies,” said Gupta. “We would lose face, and it would look so bad, if the food ran out.” ____ Associated Press writer Aijaz Hussain in Srinagar, India contributed to this story.

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Microsoft Profits Top Estimates

July 21, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — Microsoft Corp. reported record fourth-quarter revenue Thursday, helped by strong sales of its Office software suite. But revenue from the division that includes Microsoft’s Windows operating system fell 1 percent from the same time last year, marking the third straight quarter of decline. The drop suggests that consumers are buying fewer computers that use Microsoft’s software. It may also indicate that more consumers are moving to tablet computers, rather than upgrading their existing laptop and desktop computers. Total revenue for the fiscal fourth quarter rose 8 percent from last year to $17.4 billion, higher than the $17.2 billion that analysts polled by FactSet expected. Growing Office sales helped revenue from the company’s largest division climb nearly 8 percent to $5.78 billion. Microsoft said its results were also aided by higher software and server sales to businesses and the popularity of its Xbox 360 video game console and Kinect motion-sensing game control device. However, sales in the company’s Windows and Windows Live division were soft, dipping to $4.74 billion from $4.78 billion. Investors have been focused on this segment of the business amid concern that the increasing popularity of tablets like Apple Inc.’s iPad are cutting into sales of computers that use Microsoft’s ubiquitous software. Since this unit already declined in the previous two quarters, pressure had intensified on the world’s largest computer software maker to show growth during the three-month period that ended in June_ especially since worldwide PC shipments rose in the range of 2.3 percent to 2.6 percent during the quarter, according to two different reports from research firms IDC and Gartner. And with Apple’s report earlier this week that iPad sales nearly doubled year over year to 9.25 million, Microsoft may have an even harder time showing that it can compete as the computing world continues to move toward tablets. The iPad’s success prodded Microsoft to develop an operating system for tablets, but that isn’t expected to hit the market until next year. Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft earned $5.87 billion, or 69 cents per share during the quarter, compared with $4.52 billion, or 51 cents per share, a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet expected a profit of 59 cents per share. For the full fiscal year, Microsoft earned $23.2 billion, or $2.69 per share, on $69.94 billion in revenue. This compares with net income of $18.8 billion, or $2.10 per share, on $62.5 billion in revenue a year earlier. Microsoft shares fell 19 cents to $26.90 in extended trading. The stock finished regular trading up 3 cents at $27.09.

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Lyle Denniston: Constitution Check: Must the Next Federal Budget Be Balanced?

July 21, 2011

“The Secretary of the Treasury shall not exercise… additional borrowing authority… until the Archivist of the United States transmits to the states… a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution.” – Sec. 301, Bill H.R. 2560, adopted by the House of Representatives on Tuesday by a vote of 234-190. The measure now goes to the Senate. The constitutional response: It’s a safe bet that when the new fiscal year for the federal government begins on October 1, the Constitution will not require a balanced budget. And, probably, neither will it be required of any budget after that ( read more about the constitution and the National Debt here ). But that won’t be for lack of trying. Library of Congress analyst James V. Saturno once wrote : Since the 1930s, dozens of proposals have called for laws or constitutional amendments that would require a balanced budget… The accumulation of large deficits since the 1970s has heightened the feeling of some policymakers and other observers that the Constitution should be amended to require the federal government to balance revenues and expenditures. That was written 13 years ago. Today that “heightened feeling” not only persists, but seems to be even more intense. As the U.S. Treasury approaches the limit of its borrowing capacity on August 2, deficits are now so routine in federal budgets that they are at the center of Washington bargaining over what to do next. The approval in the House of Representatives on Tuesday of a call for a balanced budget amendment was widely regarded by Washington insiders as a symbolic gesture that now clears the way, politically, for a supposedly final round of negotiations about whether, and how, to raise the debt ceiling, and cut the budget in the process. On that, there is surely more to come, perhaps even later this week. In the meantime, whether symbolic or not, the House vote does send a lesson in constitutional arithmetic: while the proposal drew 234 “yea” votes, it was still 56 votes short of what the Constitution would require to propose a constitutional amendment — a two-thirds majority in both houses to send the measure to the states for consideration, at which point three-quarters of the states (38) would have to approve to actually put it into the Constitution. (The president, by the way, has no say in the amending process.) Given the difficulty of amending the Constitution (that has been done only 27 times since the original document was ratified in June 1788), the popularity of proposals to amend the Constitution far outshines the prospect of actually doing so. And few ideas for amendments are as popular as the one to mandate that the government live within its fiscal means. A closer examination of what the House adopted on Tuesday shows some other ideas for fundamentally altering the existing Constitution: * While it would raise the federal debt ceiling, the added borrowing power could not be used until the House and Senate had approved the proposed balanced budget amendment. * The amendment described in the bill would require a three-fifths vote in both the House and Senate to unbalance any budget. * Any increase in the debt limit would also need three-fifths approval in each chamber. * No bill to raise revenue — either by increasing tax rates or closing loopholes — could be adopted unless it had the approval of two-thirds of each chamber. * The amendment could be suspended by Congress in any year in which Congress had formally declared war. It also could be suspended during a military conflict — short of declared war — that threatened national security. As a political reality, the super-majority requirements probably could seldom if ever be reached. Thus, balanced budgets would be the norm, except in war time. And that, of course, is precisely the idea. This post first appeared on Constitution Daily.

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Google Drops Record Dollars In D.C.

July 21, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — Google Inc.’s quarterly lobbying expenses surpassed $2 million for the first time as the U.S. government conducts a wide-ranging investigation into the Internet search leader’s business practices. The company spent $2.06 million trying to make its points with lawmakers and regulators during the April-June period, a 54 percent increase from $1.34 million a year earlier, according to documents filed late Wednesday. This year’s second-quarter lobbying bill is by far the largest that Google has run up since opening its Washington, D.C., office in 2005 to push its agenda. The previous high came during the first three months of the year when Google’s poured $1.48 million into its lobbying efforts. In another first, Google is now spending more on lobbying than Microsoft Corp., a fierce rival and critic that has urged government regulators to rein in Google. Microsoft, traditionally one of the technology’s industry’s big spenders in Washington, put $1.85 million into lobbying during the second quarter. Google’s increased focus on lobbying comes at a time it is facing the same kind of regulatory heat that Microsoft dealt with during the late 1990s. The U.S. Justice Department ultimately filed a lawsuit alleging that Microsoft had used its dominant Windows operating system to kill competition in the then-nascent Web browser market. That sparked a legal battle that distracted Microsoft for years and forced the company to change the way it bundled its Internet Explorer browser with Windows. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission last month launched its own inquiry into whether Google is abusing its dominance of Internet search to funnel online traffic to its own services and drive up the prices of the ads that generates most of its revenue. European regulators opened a similar investigation into Google late last year. Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt is expected to defend the company’s business practices in September when he is scheduled to appear before a U.S. Senate committee that focuses on antitrust law. The state of Internet competition was among the topics that Google lobbyists addressed during the second quarter, according to a statement filed with the U.S. Senate’s secretary’s office. Google discussed the matter with members of Congress, the FTC and the Justice Department, the filing said. To help make its case, Google hired Stewart Jeffries, a former antitrust counsel for the House Judiciary Committee, this year. Jeffries was among Google’s registered lobbyists in the second quarter. Other issues covered by Google’s lobbyists included: regulation of online advertising and privacy; patent reform; online security; renewable energy, international free speech and censorship; and international tax reform. The company directed its powers of political persuasion at the Commerce Department, the executive office of the President, the Federal Communications Commission, the Department of Homeland Security and the U.S Trade Representative. Besides Jeffries, Google’s team of lobbyists includes: Pablo Chavez, former chief counsel to Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.; Harry Wingo, former counsel to the Senate Commerce Committee; Johanna Shelton, former counsel to the House Energy and Commerce Committee; Frannie Wellings, a former legislative assistant to former Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D.; Katherine Oyama, former associate counsel to the office of Vice President Joe Biden; and Seth Webb, who has held a variety of positions for lawmakers and House committees.

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Greece: European Leaders Set To Give Financial Rescue Fund New Powers

July 21, 2011

Update: European leaders have agreed to a new Greek rescue plan that will temporarily cause the country to default on some of its debt, according to The New York Times . BRUSSELS (Luke Baker) – Euro zone leaders were set to give their financial rescue fund sweeping new powers to prevent contagion and help Greece overcome its debt crisis, according to the draft conclusions of an emergency summit on Thursday. The leaders met in Brussels after the European Central Bank signaled in a policy reversal that it was willing to let Greece default temporarily as part of a plan involving longer official loans at cheaper rates, a debt swap, a bond buyback but no new tax on banks. Minds have been concentrated by the danger that Europe’s debt crisis could engulf the much bigger economies of Spain and Italy. Greece, Portugal and Ireland have already succumbed. The draft summit statement obtained by Reuters showed the EFSF rescue fund would be allowed for the first time to help states earlier with precautionary loans, to recapitalize banks and to intervene in the secondary bond market. “To improve the effectiveness of the EFSF and address contagion, we agree to increase the flexibility of the EFSF,” it said, listing those three key steps, all of which Germany had previously blocked. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy crafted a common position in late night talks in Berlin with ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet. “I expect we will be able to seal a new Greece program. This is an important signal. And with this program we want to grasp the problems by their root,” Merkel told reporters on arrival in Brussels. Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager said a short-term or selective default for Greece, long vehemently opposed by the ECB, was now a possibility. “The demand to prevent a selective default has been removed,” he told the Dutch parliament. According to the draft, the maturities on euro zone rescue loans to all three assisted countries would be extended to 15 years from 7.5 and the interest rate cut to around 3.5 percent from between 4.5 and 5.8 percent now. The EFSF would be able to lend to states on a precautionary basis instead of waiting until they are shut out of market funding, and to recapitalize banks via loans to governments, even if they are not under an EU/IMF assistance program. It would also be allowed for the first time to intervene in secondary bond markets, subject to an ECB analysis recognizing “exceptional circumstances” and a unanimous decision. Germany blocked all these measures when the European Commission proposed them back in February, at a time when the crisis was less acute, EU sources said. The wider EFSF powers could help deter or minimize any market contagion in case of a temporary Greek default. In an apparent trade-off for Merkel’s new willingness to embrace such bolder steps, Sarkozy dropped a French call for a tax on banks to help fund a second Greek bailout. The leaders were also set to promise a “Marshall Plan” of European public investment to help revive the Greek economy, in a deep recession due to draconian EU/IMF-imposed austerity. MARKETS IMPRESSED The euro and European stocks, which had fallen on talk of a selective default, rallied sharply on news of the draft conclusions. The Stoxx European banking index was up 4.5 percent and the insurance index 3.4 percent. The risk premium investors demand to hold peripheral euro zone government bonds rather than benchmark German Bunds fell to two-week lows as expectations of a bolder-than-expected Brussels deal took hold. “It really shows in the 11th hour leadership from the euro zone leaders,” said Niels From, chief analyst at Nordea. But JP Morgan economist David Mackie was more cautious, saying: “The key question is whether the measures in the package aimed at limiting contagion will work. If they don’t, more socialization (of euro zone debt) will be forthcoming.” The 115 billion euro second Greek rescue package would involve both more official funding from the euro zone rescue fund and the IMF and a contribution by private sector bondholders, as well as Greek privatization revenues. Senior bankers were present in the corridors of the summit but not at the table, officials said. They included Baudouin Prot of BNP Paribas, the foreign bank with the biggest exposure to Greek debt, and Deutsche Bank chief executive Josef Ackermann, chairman of the International Institute of Finance, which drafted proposals for private sector involvement. Top Greek bankers were also present. The IIF proposed a “voluntary” exchange of Greek debt maturing until the end of 2019 for 30-year paper and forecast a 90 percent take-up rate. Euro zone and banking sources said the resulting net contribution of 17 billion euros would mean a write-down of about 20 percent on the value of banks’ Greek bond holdings. The new bailout would supplement a 110 billion euro ($156 billion) rescue plan for Greece launched in May last year. Worried about the impact on financial markets and wary of angering their own taxpayers, euro zone governments have struggled for weeks to agree on major aspects of the plan, especially a contribution by private sector investors. New IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde also attended the summit. The global lender has urged euro zone leaders to put more money into their 440 billion euro European Financial Stability Facility. The proposed expansion of the EFSF’s role would have to be endorsed by national parliaments, but diplomats said critical lawmakers in Germany, the Netherlands and Finland were likely to back it since the private sector was sharing the burden. Even so, Thursday’s summit is very unlikely to mark a complete resolution of the crisis, as Merkel herself acknowledged earlier this week. A second bailout may simply keep Greece afloat for a number of months before a tougher decision has to be made on writing off more of its debt. Many economists believe the only way out of the euro zone’s debt crisis in the long run may be closer integration of national fiscal policies — for example, a joint euro zone guarantee for countries’ bonds, or issuance of a joint euro zone bond to finance all countries. (Additional reporting by Emmanuel Jarry in Paris, Philipp Halstrick and Andreas Framke in Frankfurt, Gernot Heller and Andreas Rinke in Berlin, Emilia Sithole-Matarise in London; writing by Paul Taylor, editing by Janet McBride/Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Goldman Sachs Wins Dismissal Of Lawsuit Alleging It Misled Investors

July 21, 2011

NEW YORK (Jonathan Stempel) – Goldman Sachs Group Inc won the dismissal of a lawsuit accusing it of causing an investor to become insolvent by fraudulently misleading it about risky debt it expected would tumble in value. In a decision made public on Thursday, U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones in Manhattan said the plaintiff, Basis Yield Alpha Fund, failed to sufficiently show that its investment in the Timberwolf 2007-1 collateralized debt obligation was a “domestic” transaction, entitling it to sue in a U.S. court. She nonetheless gave the Cayman Islands-based fund 30 days to file a new complaint to recover its $56 million loss. Basis had accused Goldman of securities fraud and common law fraud. Bruce Grace, a lawyer for the plaintiff, did not immediately return a call seeking comment. Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally declined to comment. Timberwolf was among the securities cited in a scathing U.S. Senate panel report in April that faulted Goldman (GS.N), Deutsche Bank AG (DBKGn.DE) and others for hawking debt they expected to perform poorly. That report said Goldman kept marketing Timberwolf even after Thomas Montag, a top executive who now runs investment banking at Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), told a colleague in an email that Timberwolf was “one shitty deal” [ID:nN14231964] — a phrase quoted in Basis’ complaint and Jones’ opinion. ABACUS Timberwolf had been marketed in the spring of 2007 as a $1 billion investment-grade product, and Basis that June bought $100 million of “triple-A” and “double-A” rated securities at 81 cents on the dollar. But Basis said it did not know there was then an “increased urgency” at Goldman to sell the securities, reflected in the “ginormous” credits it offered sales staff, because the bank feared CDOs would plunge in value. Losses quickly mounted, and Basis began liquidating just two months after its investment. Jones dismissed Basis’ lawsuit after concluding the fund did not allege that “any purchase of sale” took place in the United States, as required under a 2010 U.S. Supreme Court decision. This was so, she said, even though some of Goldman’s alleged fraudulent statements were made in New York. The judge is also overseeing a separate fraud lawsuit by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission against Goldman Vice President Fabrice Tourre over his role in the sale of a CDO tied to subprime mortgages, Abacus 2007-AC1. Goldman had been a defendant in that case, but last July agreed to pay $550 million to settle with the SEC, without admitting wrongdoing. The case is Basis Yield Alpha Fund (Master) v. Goldman Sachs Group Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 10-04537. (Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Lisa Von Ahn) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Country Moving Toward ‘Rentership Society’: Is The American Dream In Trouble?

July 21, 2011

Home ownership, long a central pillar of the American dream, seems increasingly unattainable for growing numbers of households. Yet old views died hard, and nine out of 10 Americans still consider home ownership “ an important part of the American dream ,” according to a June poll by The New York Times /CBS News. Indeed, there are signs of slight improvement in the housing market. In June, work started on 629,000 new houses, a five-month high that beat economists’ expectations saw an uptick in construction in every region in the country. But that doesn’t necessarily indicate the housing market is in recovery — because, as real estate analyst Mike Larson recently told The Washington Post , “[p]eople who don’t have jobs don’t buy houses.” And many, many people don’t have jobs. Unemployment rose to 9.2 percent in June, a figure that would actually be higher than 11 percent if there were still as many people actively looking for work as there were at the start of the recession, according to the Wall Street Journal . Among those who have jobs, wages are falling and many people can only find part-time work rather than full-time. The grim employment situation is reflected in home ownership statistics. On Wednesday, Morgan Stanley released a report showing that if delinquent borrowers are excluded, the U.S. home ownership rate is only 59.7 percent, which would be an all-time low. Leaving in the country’s roughly 7.5 million delinquent borrowers, home ownership is at 66.4 percent. Morgan Stanley housing strategist Oliver Chang told Bloomberg that given runaway foreclosures and tight credit for borrowers, America is moving “away from being an ownership society” — President George W. Bush’s vision of a country with high home ownership — and “towards becoming a rentership society.” Those unexpectedly high June housing starts might actually bear out Chang’s prediction. As recently pointed out by the WSJ , construction of single-family homes grew by 9.4 percent in June — but construction of multi-family homes with at least two units increased three times as much, by 30.4 percent. In other words, there were a lot more apartments than houses. A report from the investment management company PIMCO recently offered a number of reasons why housing demand is likely to stay depressed. A 20 percent down payment on a mortgage is becoming standard, the PIMCO report notes. For someone making $48,000 a year, it would take 16 years to save enough for that size of downpayment on a median-priced home. Meanwhile, college graduates are entering the workforce with high debt and low wages — the average salary for recent grads was $27,000 in 2010, down from $30,000 in 2007, PIMCO notes. These factors in combination “could serve to limit college graduate home purchasing power for the foreseeable future.” And current homeowners are more likely to save for retirement than try to make ambitious changes to their living situation. For retiring Americans, the PIMCO report predicts “one home instead of two, rent rather than own, smaller place rather than large.” A Reuters survey of economists found widespread skepticism at the idea that June’s housing starts indicated a substantive market recovery. Indeed, the National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday that existing home sales were down 0.8 percent in June , to a relatively anemic rate of 4.77 million. That’s 9 percent less than the rates a year ago, The Washington Post points out.

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Jesse Kornbluth: No Wall Street Guys Go To Jail? Jerry Byrne Did. And Wrote A Book.

July 21, 2011

I was really flattered when Jerry Byrne asked me to write the script for a program of book awards. He’s a very impressive guy, with a bio that just won’t quit. CEO of Stagebill , publisher of Variety , a stint with Norman Lear — you get the idea. The program went well, and we moved on to a wave-and-a-smile-at-lunch at Michael’s, the New York restaurant where media folk go to see and be seen. But we hadn’t spoken for a few years when I got an email from him on my Head Butler account suggesting that we meet at a bar on the Upper East Side. I showed up on time. No sign of Jerry Byrne. Which seemed odd, because he had served as Marine in Vietnam. He had been decorated. He still carried himself with an impressive military crispness. No way would he be late. And then a guy at the bar waved me over. “Jerry Byrne,” he said, as he shook my hand. One letter different made all the difference. This man was certainly successful — he did something on Wall Street — and, like his namesake, cared about books. He’d written to me because he liked Head Butler and wanted to hang out with me. I don’t hang out. Still, we saw one another from time to time. One afternoon, he came up to our apartment to introduce us to his girlfriend, and she too was attractive and pleasant. Then I heard he was going away. And then I learned why: Gerard Francis Byrne (CRD #1032847, Registered Representative, Short Hills, New Jersey) was barred from association with any NASD member in any capacity. The sanction was based on findings that Byrne obtained a wrongful extension of credit in violation of Section 7(f) of the Exchange Act and Regulation X promulgated thereunder. The findings stated that Byrne failed to post trades made in his personal margin account to the clearing firm, which caused his member firm’s books and records to be inaccurate. (NASD Case #20050008469-01) Recently, Jerry translated that for me: While working for a small boutique broker-dealer, I had an alcoholic binge. In after hours trading one night, while all alone on the desk, I went “all in” on a stock that was falling sharply due to bad news. Well, I tried to catch the proverbial falling knife; sadly, the stock kept going lower and lower. And lower. I covered up the losses for a day or two, only to be eventually found out. The loss was substantial (approximately $245,000) and I was unable to pay. To this day, even though my sentence is behind me, I still have restitution to pay, and one day I will do just that. Jerry Byrne is the rare Wall Streeter who has gone to jail, and gone there for a crime that involved less money than Lloyd Blankfein’s chopper bill. While there, he kept a diary. He has edited it — and self-published it. As a book , it needs an editor and a proofreader. As a document, “My Road Home: A 13 month journey from Wall Street to behind the walls of a NY State Prison” is fascinating: intimate, unsparing, and a very good reason to keep your nose clean. It should be required reading for anyone on Wall Street who is allowed to play with money. Considering all the Wall Street criminality that will never be punished, Byrne’s sentence may strike you as harsh: two-and-a-third to seven years. “Four hundred thousand it cost my family in legal fees to get a result I probably would have received if I had pled guilty at my arraignment,” he notes as he is sentenced. But he has no time to think about that — he is cuffed and led to a cell with twenty other prisoners, none of them Anglo-Saxon. Food. A cheese sandwich, and the cheese “is a color I have never seen before.” The room smells of body odor, and it’s just 11 AM. You can be appalled. He can’t. He resolves: “Forget everything you were used to.” But he doesn’t. Having trouble using his new PIN number to dial a pay phone, he accepts help from a kindly prisoner — who promptly steals the number. Shame overwhelms him: for his parents, his five siblings, his two teenaged sons. Time to go to Downstate, three hours north. This means shackles. And, when he gets there, confinement to his cell for 23 hours each day. Three showers a week, three minutes per shower. And then it’s on to Mohawk, his home for… well, that’s the question, isn’t it? He does what he can. Reads a book a day. Minds his own business. Seasons pass. He ignores the inane conversations: “Who is richer? Beyonce or Eddie Murphy?” He’s not even surprised when his first parole application is denied. Byrne writes vividly about his fellow prisoners. Some are decent, many not. And woe be to the sex offenders — at night, they are humiliated and tortured for their crimes. It’s all out in the open; you can’t really turn away. In the end, he’s out in 13 months. Relieved. Repented. On a TV drama written by David Mamet, a soldier is asked, “Do you believe people can change?” “No,” he replies. “But I’ve seen it happen.” That’s the real story of this book. [cross-posted from HeadButler.com ]

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Apple May Be World’s Biggest Company In Six Months

July 21, 2011

Apple Inc is within sight of catching up with Exxon Mobil as the most valuable company in the world. Based on Apple’s growth trajectory, and a number of catalysts in the pipeline — from a possible new iPhone this fall to expansions in China — investors and analysts say Apple could unseat Exxon in the next six months, or latest by the middle of next year.

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CompareNetworks, Inc. Hires Brian Cowley as CEO

July 21, 2011

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA–(Marketwire – Jul 21, 2011) – CompareNetworks, Inc. a global online B2B media company, announced today they’ve hired Brian Cowley as CEO.

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The World’s Third Largest Economy Is On the Forward Track 

July 21, 2011

The World’s Third Largest Economy Is On the Forward Track 

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Japanese Yen Weaker as Exports Data Show Recovery Promise

July 21, 2011

Japanese Yen Weaker as Exports Data Show Recovery Promise

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VIDEO: Citigroup (NYSE:C) Director and Head of Mining & Metals Research Marc Liinamaa Speaks With Frontier Securities at Mongolia: Capital Raising and Investment Conference

July 21, 2011

VIDEO: Citigroup (NYSE:C) Director and Head of Mining & Metals Research Marc Liinamaa Speaks With Frontier Securities at Mongolia: Capital Raising and Investment Conference

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Asian Activities Report for July 21, 2011: Zenith Minerals (ASX:ZNC) Increase Exploration Target for Mount Alexander Magnetite Iron Project

July 21, 2011

Asian Activities Report for July 21, 2011: Zenith Minerals (ASX:ZNC) Increase Exploration Target for Mount Alexander Magnetite Iron Project

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Australian Bauxite Limited (ASX:ABZ) CEO Ian Levy Interview with Sky News

July 21, 2011

Australian Bauxite Limited (ASX:ABZ) CEO Ian Levy Interview with Sky News

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American Airlines orders new Boeing, Airbus planes

July 21, 2011

American Airlines orders new Boeing, Airbus planes

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Turkey grows nervous over economy

July 21, 2011

Turkey grows nervous over economy

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VIDEO: JP Morgan (NYSE:JPM) Managing Director Asia Pacific Head of Depositary Receipts Group Kenneth Tse Speaks With Frontier Securities at Mongolia: Capital Raising and Investment Conference

July 21, 2011

VIDEO: JP Morgan (NYSE:JPM) Managing Director Asia Pacific Head of Depositary Receipts Group Kenneth Tse Speaks With Frontier Securities at Mongolia: Capital Raising and Investment Conference

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VIDEO: Global Mining Capital Corp. President Keith Spence Speaks With Frontier Securities at Mongolia: Capital Raising and Investment Conference

July 21, 2011

VIDEO: Global Mining Capital Corp. President Keith Spence Speaks With Frontier Securities at Mongolia: Capital Raising and Investment Conference

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Volatility Expected to Pick Up in Highly Anticipated Thursday Trade

July 21, 2011

Volatility Expected to Pick Up in Highly Anticipated Thursday Trade

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US Dollar Support Break Suspect Absent Confirmation From S&P 500

July 21, 2011

US Dollar Support Break Suspect Absent Confirmation From S&P 500

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Traders Unsure of Dollar Safe Haven Status Under Deficit Focus

July 21, 2011

Traders Unsure of Dollar Safe Haven Status Under Deficit Focus

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Swiss Roche 2011′s EPS to grow 10%

July 21, 2011

Swiss Roche 2011′s EPS to grow 10%

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US Intel forecasts Q3 sales to go up

July 21, 2011

US Intel forecasts Q3 sales to go up

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France’s Publicis Q2 sales up 2.7%

July 21, 2011

France’s Publicis Q2 sales up 2.7%

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EMC Second-Quarter Earnings Rise 28%

July 21, 2011

EMC Second-Quarter Earnings Rise 28%

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S Korea to spend USD3.7b on Olympic train project

July 21, 2011

S Korea to spend USD3.7b on Olympic train project

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US Express Scripts to acquire Medco for USD29b

July 21, 2011

US Express Scripts to acquire Medco for USD29b

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BillMyParents Appoints Evan Jones as Vice President of Marketing

July 21, 2011

Next Phase of Multi-Million Dollar Marketing Push Launching in Coming Weeks

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Tekelec Announces Departure of Susie Kim Riley, CMO

July 21, 2011

MORRISVILLE, NC–(Marketwire – Jul 21, 2011) – Tekelec ( NASDAQ : TKLC ), the mobile broadband solutions company, today announced that Susie Kim Riley, chief marketing officer, will leave the company effective July 30. She will serve in a consulting role to the company through November 2011. Ms. Riley, a serial entrepreneur, arrived at Tekelec via its acquisition of Camiant in 2010.

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Akzo Nobel net profit at USD381m in Q2

July 21, 2011

Akzo Nobel net profit at USD381m in Q2

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Indian Wipro Q1 net income at USD299m, expects low growth

July 21, 2011

Indian Wipro Q1 net income at USD299m, expects low growth

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American Express Q2 profit up 27%

July 21, 2011

American Express Q2 profit up 27%

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S Korea’s Hynix Q2 profit down 34%

July 21, 2011

S Korea’s Hynix Q2 profit down 34%

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EBay Q2 net income down to USD283.4m

July 21, 2011

EBay Q2 net income down to USD283.4m

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Japan’s exports improves in June

July 21, 2011

Japan’s exports improves in June

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China should allow Yuan to rise: IMF

July 21, 2011

China should allow Yuan to rise: IMF

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Cnooc saves Opti Canada from bankruptcy

July 21, 2011

Cnooc saves Opti Canada from bankruptcy

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Local Official Calls Romney’s Case Against Obama ‘Unfair And Misleading’

July 21, 2011

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Wednesday chose a row of vacant storefronts at North Hollywood’s Valley Plaza mall as the backdrop for an address in which he criticized President Obama’s handling of the nation’s economy.

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A Year After Dodd-Frank, Too Big To Fail Remains Bigger Problem Than Ever

July 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — A year after Congress passed a landmark law intended to tame the excesses that produced the financial crisis, some experts contend that a crucial vulnerability remains: The largest financial institutions are still so enormous that their failure could again bring the financial system to the brink of disaster. The passage of the Dodd-Frank law has sowed a perception of safety that has spawned a dangerous complacency, they add. “The next crisis will happen sooner rather than later,” said Anat Admati, a professor of finance and economics at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. “We’re not safer and there’s still a lot of systemic risks in large banks and in the financial sector overall.” A central aim of the law, known as the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, was to undercut the assumption that some institutions are so big that their potential failure could again force the government to rescue them, rather than allow their troubles to trigger another crisis. The very perception that the government stands ready to rescue the largest banks tends to be construed by the markets as a government insurance policy — one that encourages the executives at such institutions to take bigger risks. But on the first anniversary of the act’s passage, the nation’s largest banks boast larger holdings than ever. Their political clout is on the rise, say experts, and the government regulators who are supposed to be looking out for the next wave of reckless speculation are starved of cash. Meanwhile, stalwart banking industry allies in Congress are seeking to crimp the authority of the regulators on multiple fronts. In short, assert some experts, the problem posed by institutions seen as Too Big To Fail is itself bigger than ever. “The structural problems are worse,” said Simon Johnson, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. “Their size, incentives — none of that has changed.” Obama administration officials maintain that the new law has contributed to greater stability in the financial system and rolled back the problem of Too Big To Fail institutions by limiting the circumstances in which the government can mount a rescue. “It’s one of these things that I think in the end people might not believe until they actually see one fail and have the government not step in,” a senior Treasury Department official said last week. “But there is no authority as a matter of law for the government to commit taxpayer money in that circumstance.” Others argue that the financial system is today safer than before for the simple reason that the people working within it have gained valuable lessons. “So much has been learned about risk management, securitization and the rest,” said Ernest Patrikis, a former general counsel at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and now a partner at the law firm White & Case. “We’re safer because of the experience.” But the consequences of a potential collapse of a major American lender have grown, if for no other reason than the dollar values at stake are larger. The assets held by the five largest American banks — Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs — grew 3 percent last year compared to the year prior, according to their most recent quarterly filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. They held $8.7 trillion in assets as of June 30, compared to $8.4 trillion the same time last year. “The fact is everyone views the top six banks as too big to fail,” said Admati, a member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s Systemic Resolution Advisory Committee, referring to a group that also includes Morgan Stanley. Collectively, those institutions hold close to two-thirds of the entire U.S. banking industry’s assets, Federal Reserve data show. Johnson, also a member of the FDIC’s systemic committee, argues that once boom times inevitably return, these same institutions can take the same kind of risks without fear of failure: If trouble emerges, they can count on the government bailing them out again, given the alternative — another full-blown crisis. The Obama administration has emphasized the need to limit the vulnerability to banks that are so big that their demise would have broad repercussions. During a discussion of the economy and financial reform last year, Obama’s former top economic adviser, Lawrence H. Summers, said Too Big To Fail was “in many ways the central challenge here.” “When institutions are too big to fail, they gain a competitive advantage from the sense of government support,” Summers explained. “And that gives them an unfair competitive advantage. They are then able to take risks without market discipline, and when they take those risks, then they fail. And if they’re too big to fail, taxpayers are on the hook and the rest of the economy suffers, as we’ve seen.” The distorting power of this dynamic can be huge, say experts. If creditors believe that large banks are essentially immune to normal market forces and they cannot lose money by lending to them, then they are apt to charge the banks less for their cash. If banks can borrow money on cheaper terms by dint of the perception that they can count on Uncle Sam as their guarantor, then they are more likely to take risks that would otherwise be imprudent, magnifying the risks to the system. Money has been flowing to the largest banks on discount terms that appear to reflect the market’s assumption that the taxpayer stands ready to protect them against collapse, say experts. In 2009, this funding advantage amounted to $250 billion for 28 of the largest banks in the world, according to Andrew Haldane, the executive director for financial stability at the Bank of England. In June 2009, the five largest U.S. banks paid creditors on average about 3.6 percent less on their long-term debt than they would have had they not been perceived to be too big to fail, according to Thomas Hoenig, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. When banks can acquire money cheaply, they tend to distribute it more freely — on risky loans, but also on out-sized pay packages for their employees, say experts. This enables them to lure the best and brightest minds to high finance, depriving goods-producing industries of innovative workers. A team of economists affiliated with the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland determined last year that the pay of banking and finance executives was more associated with the size of the financial institution than its operating efficiency. “This kind of pay structure might have encouraged managers to grow the sizes of the financial institutions they work for at the expense of the returns on the capital invested,” the team concluded in their study. “These distortions must be addressed,” Admati said. The Treasury official emphasized that regulators are today substantially disinclined against rescuing major financial institutions, which limits the risks being taken by such lenders. Though officials acknowledge that taxpayer funds could be used as a stopgap measure as the government supervises the orderly unwinding of troubled institutions, the new law enables federal authorities to recoup those funds from surviving firms. Experts question whether that scenario would really play out. “Surviving institutions are likely to be stressed themselves in the event of a crisis,” Thomas F. Cooley, an economics professor at the New York University Stern School of Business, said during a panel discussion on the financial reform law last month. And the fact that companies may be forced to pay up after the fact “may encourage them to take additional risk,” he said. Whatever the merits of the Dodd-Frank act, some question whether it will ever be sufficiently implemented. The 848-page piece of legislation set out roughly 400 rules governing home mortgages and consumer credit, as well as the trading of the exotic financial instruments known as derivatives. Not least, it laid out fresh restrictions on how and when government can use taxpayer funds to rescue a teetering bank. The law was designed to make it exceedingly difficult for regulators to resort to bailouts going forward, but the market has yet to show signs that it believes that message: Major credit rating agencies continue to certify the debts of major banks as rock-solid, in part because of the assumption that they enjoy implicit government support. But a year after its passage, only 38 of its roughly 400 new rules have been finalized, according to a July 1 review conducted by law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell. Nearly as many deadlines for new rules have been missed. Some experts say this reflects considerable efforts by banking industry allies to hamstring the regulators as they seek to follow through. Republicans in Congress are determined to either repeal the law, trim portions of it, or — if all else fails — starve regulators of much-needed cash, say observers. “Dodd Frank has tried to equip regulators with more tools, but there’s so much push back from the financial industry that what emerges in the implementation of those regulations remains to be seen,” said Raghuram Rajan, an economist and finance professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, and a former chief economist at the IMF. “There’s still a question as to whether regulators will implement rules in the spirit of the legislation.” Goldman Sachs executives have held at least 83 meetings with five of the federal agencies regulating the financial system since Dodd-Frank went into effect, according to the Sunlight Foundation, a Washington-based transparency advocacy group. JPMorgan Chase representatives have met with the agencies at least 73 times. Federal regulators have met with Morgan Stanley executives at least 58 times, while Bank of America executives have held 55 meetings. The new rules are “already being gamed to death,” Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Hoenig said last month. The lobbying campaign appears to be producing gains. Earlier this year, federal bank regulators allowed some of the largest banks to resume paying dividends to their investors, even though new rules governing bank capital had yet to be finalized. This was “the most outrageous thing regulators did,” Admati said in an email. “There is NO justification for it that I heard from anyone who knows anything about this.” The banks say they have plenty of capital, and that they will meet regulators’ targets through retaining a portion of their future profits. Admati say such assurances are not enough, and she pointedly dismisses the notion that the awful experience of the last financial crisis provides comfort against a repeat. Banks continue to rely on borrowed money, she noted, with debt financing about 90 percent of their assets, according to the FDIC. Five years ago, equity funded about 10.4 percent of the banking system’s assets, FDIC data show — a figure that experts now generally see as woefully inadequate. In the wake of the worst crisis since the Great Depression, that’s risen to just 11.3 percent, according to data as of March 31. “We’re missing the big picture when it comes to systemic risk,” Admati said. * * * * * Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 1-917-267-2335.

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Dems Plan To Exploit GOP Bid To Gut CFPB

July 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — Surprised Democrats think Republicans are giving them a gift for the first birth Thursday of the new consumer financial watchdog: a chance to remind Americans how much they hate bankers and love the agency that is supposed to keep them in check. House Republicans will bring to the floor a measure billed as improving transparency and oversight of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, but which the White House said Wednesday would “expose American consumers and the nation’s economy to the same risks that led to the 2008 financial crisis.” House Democrats are salivating over the day’s expected debates because GOP leaders agreed to allow votes on 11 separate amendments — many of them by Democrats. And while the Democrats expect to lose the floor fight, there’s little to no chance the Senate will pass the measure there. In the meantime, Democrats will cast the GOP as protectors of the people who wrecked the economy, and the enemy of extremely popular efforts to restrain Wall Street. In fact, one senior aide couldn’t believe the House leaders were giving them the chance, suggesting it’s happening because members beholden to the Tea Party are determined to have the unpopular fight. “I think they’re not just drinking the Tea, they’re smoking it over there,” the aide said. Among the 11 amendments are several that attempt to stop the bill from turning the agency into a less powerful commission and from making it easier for other regulators to overturn CFPB rules. The architect and creator of the agency, Elizabeth Warren, was passed over to head the new watchdog agency in favor of former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray, but Warren was given a Biblical sendoff by Democrats in House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi’s office Wednesday. “We had Genesis. Now we’re going to have Exodus, but it’s going to be followed by Numbers,” said Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.).

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Debt Ceiling Standoff Is Hurting Consumer Confidence, Goldman Economist Says

July 21, 2011

Washington is struggling to reach a deal on the debt ceiling , and American consumer confidence is slipping. Do these facts have anything to do with each other? Andrew Tilton, an economist at Goldman Sachs, thinks so. In a note published Tuesday, Tilton wrote that a recent drop in the Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index — a closely watched consumer confidence report — could be related to the ongoing debt ceiling gridlock. The Michigan index fell in July from 71.5 points to 63.8 points — a two-year low, Reuters noted. The drop took many by surprise — the index was expected to rise slightly in July, according to economists polled by Bloomberg News . Nor is Michigan the only polling body to find waning consumer confidence this summer. In June, a Gallup poll found that confidence was at a near-low point for the year after dropping nine points in the early part of the month. Around the same time, the Conference Board, which publishes the monthly Consumer Confidence Index, another major survey of consumer sentiment, measured a 3.2 point decline in consumer confidence for June . Tilton, the Goldman economist, wrote that the consumer confidence plunge happened around the same time as “an explosion of media coverage” of the debt ceiling standoff in June and July. For him, the coincidence is suggestive. “While it’s certainly possible that the drop in confidence reflects other factors… the extent, timing, and composition suggests that the uncertainty surrounding the debt ceiling is probably a contributing factor,” Tilton wrote. He’s not the first to suggest a relationship between flagging confidence and the debt ceiling negotiations. Last Friday, Bank of America economist Joshua Dennerlein also attributed the drop in the Reuters/University of Michigan index to the debt debate, as noted by the Associated Press . And Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies & Co., made a similar statement to Reuters . Yet numerous polls this summer have shown that Americans are more concerned with the health of the economy and the sluggish job market than with anything related to the federal budget deficit. A Gallup poll published this week found that the deficit came in third , behind the economy and unemployment, on a list of Americans’ greatest worries. A CBS/ New York Times poll in late June found that 53 percent of respondents were most concerned about the economy and jobs , compared with only 7 percent who were most concerned about the deficit. Of course, consumers don’t make their choices in a vacuum. Holly Wade, a senior policy analyst at the National Federation of Independent Businesses, and one of the producers of the monthly Small Business Economic Trends survey, told The Huffington Post that “political climate” is the second-most cited concern for small business owners. “Their first and foremost concern is a stable economy,” Wade said. “Then they can look forward to see how business conditions can go from there. Without some stability in D.C., everything continues to be up in the air.” Wade said that she believes the debt ceiling standoff “contributes to the problem” of falling confidence. But she noted that consumer sentiment among small business owners had already started to decline around February or March, well before the “explosion of media coverage” that Tilton’s report cites. Ken Goldstein, an economist at the Conference Board, dismissed the idea that debt ceiling anxieties are to blame for faltering confidence. Goldstein told The Huffington Post that for the average American, the debt ceiling debate “is both too esoteric and takes time away from figuring out who’s going to be on next week’s ‘Survivor.’” The recent drop in consumer confidence probably has more to do with the ailing jobs market — as demonstrated in June’s underwhelming employment report — than “the kabuki in D.C.,” Goldstein said. “After a lousy May, we only got 18,000 jobs in June,” he told The Huffington Post. “I suspect that trumps everything else that happens.” As of Wednesday, President Obama had signaled that he was willing to consider a short-term extension to the debt limit , but that Congress needed to agree on a way forward on a long-term solution. The bipartisan coalition of senators known as Gang of Six spent the day making the case for their $3.7 trillion deficit reduction plan on the Hill, Politico reported.

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Unions Smack Obama On Debt Talks, Walmart

July 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Obama’s rocky relationship with unions took a few more lumps Wednesday as labor groups pounded both a deficit-cutting proposal he embraced as well as the White House’s praise of Walmart . AFL-CIO boss Richard Trumka started by hammering the Gang of Six proposal released Tuesday that would cut the deficit by $3.7 trillion over 10 years, in part by limiting popular middle class deductions for home mortgages, health insurance and retirement savings — a plan Obama hailed Tuesday. “Both parties keep telling us that deficit reduction requires ‘tough choices’ and ‘shared sacrifice’ and ‘taking on sacred cows,’” Trumka said. “But then we keep seeing bipartisan support for plans like the so-called ‘Gang of Six’ that cut Social Security benefits, kill jobs, give tax incentives for corporations to export good jobs overseas, tax health benefits, and lower tax rates for billionaires and corporations.” “There’s no shared sacrifice here,” he added. “The only sacred cows being gored are working people, the middle class, seniors and the poor.” Then the unions hit the White House with a triple-barreled shot for holding a major event with Walmart — a company that was once a villain for Obama when he ran for office. In this case, First Lady Michelle Obama praised the retailer for joining in her efforts to combat childhood obesity by opening hundreds of stores in “food deserts” — neighborhoods that lack outlets that sell decent food or the basic ingredients for healthy eating. “If parents can’t buy the food they need to prepare those meals, if their only options for groceries are in the corner gas station or the local minimart, then all that is just talk,” Obama said. She added praise for Walmart’s executives and others for taking the plunge. “They didn’t do this just as executives who care about their company’s bottom lines — and I’ve met these people,” Obama said. “They did it as parents and as grandparents who care about the health of our kids. They did it as leaders who care about our country’s future.” But that did not outweigh what the unions see as Walmart’s terrible labor record. The AFL-CIO, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union and the SEIU all slammed Walmart’s inclusion. “It’s vital that leaders like First Lady Michelle Obama continue to shine a light on this crisis and that we recognize responsible retailers like Safeway,” said SEIU President Mary Kay Henry. “But we cannot ignore the reality that Walmart is America’s chief corporate poverty creator,” she added. “Walmart should not be celebrated for false contributions to our communities and glitzy public relations campaigns.” In a joint statement, Trumka and UFCW President Joseph Hansen piled on. “Today’s White House event, which highlights Walmart’s expansion in urban areas, undercuts the message of the need for good jobs that can rebuild our middle class,” they said. “When Walmart opens in a community, it regularly displaces existing jobs with poverty-level jobs.” Walmart has strongly denied such allegations, and contends it boosts local communities . Unions are a vital part of the Democratic organizing and campaign structure, and Obama’s National Labor Relations Board has taken steps recently that improve unions’ ability to organize . But Wednesday’s labor unrest suggests the White House’s relationship with some of its most important allies will remain strained at times heading into the 2012 election. White House spokespeople ignored a request for comment.

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Wells Fargo Illegally Pushed Thousands Of Borrowers Into Subprime Mortgages, Falsified Loan Documents, Federal Reserve Says

July 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — Perhaps more than 10,000 Wells Fargo borrowers were inappropriately steered into more expensive subprime mortgages or had their loan documents falsified by bank personnel, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday . The bank, the largest U.S. mortgage lender, agreed to pay $85 million to settle civil charges. On Tuesday, the company announced that it turned a $3.9 billion profit last quarter. It’s made $7.7 billion in profit thus far this year. The fine is the largest the Fed has ever imposed in a consumer case, the central bank said. It’s also the first formal enforcement action taken by a federal bank regulator against allegations that banks steered borrowers into high-cost, subprime loans, it added. Wells Fargo did not admit wrongdoing. The fraudulent activity took place over four years from early 2004 to the autumn of 2008, according to the Fed . The bank must compensate borrowers for losses, some of whom could receive more than $20,000. At least 3,700 borrowers will be compensated, the Fed estimated. Wells Fargo has to review a subset of borrowers who took out subprime loans to determine whether they were illegally steered into more expensive mortgages. The case is another blow to the bank’s once-pristine reputation. It’s widely touted as the cleanest mortgage lender of the biggest U.S. banks, even though the company has faced multiple lawsuits alleging it pushed black borrowers toward predatory loans; misled investors about the risks of mortgage-backed securities it sold; and employed so-called “robo-signers,” the agents that lenders employed to process foreclosure filings en masse without examining the underlying paperwork. Last year, as the robo-signing fiasco forced its competitors to make embarrassing admissions or halt home seizures, Wells Fargo resisted, arguing that its procedures were sound. Depositions in lawsuits later revealed that its employees also acted as robo-signers. Confidential audits by the the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s inspector general accuse the bank of defrauding taxpayers in their handling of foreclosures on homes purchased with government-backed loans, The Huffington Post reported in May. Federal investigators concluded that senior managers at Wells Fargo, the fourth-largest U.S. bank by assets, broke civil laws. As part of their investigation, auditors interviewed a pair of South Carolina public notaries who improperly signed off on foreclosure filings for Wells, sources briefed on the findings told HuffPost. Wednesday’s settlement with the Fed also includes allegations of fraud. In a multi-year investigation, regulators found that Wells Fargo employees altered or falsified borrowers’ loan documents, inflating their incomes in order to qualify them for loans. The bank’s internal accountability measures were inadequate to detect and prevent such abuses, the Fed said, at least the second time this year the Fed found Wells Fargo lacking adequate safeguards to prevent abuse and wrongdoing. Wells Fargo’s employees were likely driven to such lengths in order to meet company goals. The unit responsible for the bulk of the wrongdoing, Wells Fargo Financial, drove its employees to originate a minimum amount of loans or risk losing their jobs, the Fed said. Employees were also expected to hit loan targets in order to receive bonuses. That unit has since been disbanded. Sixteen former employees have been barred from working in the banking industry, the Fed said. Investigators also found that borrowers were pushed into more expensive mortgages in part because Wells Fargo employees could boost their bonuses if they hit subprime targets. Borrowers who otherwise would have qualified for lower-interest mortgages weren’t told so, nor were they told that it was “generally more advantageous for the salesperson to sell a nonprime, rather than a prime, loan,” the Fed said. Such practices broke federal consumer protection rules, as well as numerous state laws governing fraud and unfair or deceptive practices, the Fed said. The Fed’s investigation primarily involved mortgage loans originated in Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and New Mexico. The Fed declined to say what led to the investigation, or provide any details on the actual probe itself. In addition to compensating harmed borrowers, the Fed also instructed Wells Fargo to pay homeowners whose homes were seized as a result of the bank’s wrongdoing the modest sum of $7,000. Perhaps thousands of borrowers were forced to make higher mortgage payments than they otherwise would have made thanks to the bank’s actions. “The alleged actions committed by a relatively small group of team members are not what we stand for at Wells Fargo,” John Stumpf, the bank’s chief executive and chairman, said in a statement . The bank has already voluntarily compensated 600 customers, the statement said. Fewer than 4 percent of the about 300,000 mortgage loans made by the lender during the period under review are eligible for restitution, the company estimated. ***** Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 1-917-267-2335.

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Charles H. Green: Who’s Poor Rupert Murdoch to Trust?

July 21, 2011

Rupert Murdoch claimed in his July 19 British Parliament Committee appearance that people he “trusted” were responsible for the News of the World phone hacking scandal . Murdoch: This is the most humble day of my life… we have broken our trust with our readers… Q: Do you accept you are ultimately responsible for this whole fiasco? Murdoch: No. Q: Have you considered resigning? Murdoch: No. Because people I trusted let me down… and I am the best person to clean this up. Can you say “cognitive disconnect”? Few people in the world can simultaneously believe that a) Murdoch was not responsible for the hacking fiasco, b) he was done in by those whom he trusted, and c) that he nonetheless remains the best person to clean things up. I sincerely doubt that Murdoch himself believes all three of those propositions. And so we have yet another trust-destroying scandal, the principals posturing and spinning, and the public left asking, where is Sherlock Holmes when we need him, to ask why there was no barking dog at the scene of the crime? Gregory (Scotland Yard detective): Is there any other point to which you would wish to draw my attention? Holmes: To the curious incident of the dog in the night-time. Gregory: The dog did nothing in the night-time. Holmes: That was the curious incident. –”Silver Blaze, The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes,” by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle And the answer is that, just like in the Holmes story, the watchdogs were very familiar with the crook whodunit. The News Corp hacking scandal has three points in common with most systemic failures of trust — think Enron , Watergate and the recent financial crisis : “Leaders” who have a tendency to blame and an inability to confront Corporate cultures based on secrecy and rules, not on virtues and values The compromise of a social institution key to social trust Bad Corporate Cultures The best way to spot an untrustworthy corporate culture is to look at how it tries to be trustworthy. If it relies on secrecy and threats, well, enough said. But in addition, a culture that relies on laws, procedures, processes, rules and compliance — and little else — is in trouble. Trustworthiness and ethical behavior are viewed in such cultures as just another set of rules to be gamed. There’s a very thin line between “keep your nose clean” and “just don’t get caught,” and that line has a way of breaking down. A corporate culture that fosters trust, by contrast, is almost certainly one that relies on virtues and values and that preaches them all the time. How does News Corp stack up? Listen to this description from Andrew Ross Sorkin’s “Dealbook: column : “This is a board that qualifies for an ‘F’ in every category,” Nell Minow, a member of the board of GovernanceMetrics International and founder of the Corporate Library, a governance firm, said without any hesitation. “It is the ultimate crony board.” Transparency? Values? I don’t think so. Which brings us to the third trait: a threat to societal institutions of trust. Compromised Social Institutions Watergate is, of course, the gold standard of corruption, the poster child for scandals. How does the News Corp scandal measure up? Surprisingly well. That is, bad. Watergate compromised the U.S. Justice Department, the White House, a major political party and, ultimately, a president. But there was sort of a hero in that story: the press. In the Murdoch case, the press is itself on trial. And so is Scotland Yard . Right there, the players are bigger than in Watergate. When the cops and the press are in cahoots, you have muscle backing up politics. The rule of law is at stake. Think I’m kidding? Think about your perception of this case to date — even from media other than News Corp. I’ll bet your image is loaded with thrown pies, hacked phones and trophy wives. Speculation in the U.S. media is focused on whether it will turn out that 9/11 victims’ phones were hacked. Meanwhile, did you know that News Corp’s News America Marketing subsidiary has paid out $655 million dollars to settle charges of corporate espionage and anticompetitive behavior — in the U.S.? Do you think Rupert Murdoch didn’t know about more than a half-billion dollars paid out that way? Did you know that News America was led by Paul V. Carlucci, who, according to Forbes, used to show the sales staff the scene in “The Untouchables” in which Al Capone beats a man to death with a baseball bat ? Mr. Emmel testified that Mr. Carlucci was clear about the guiding corporate philosophy. According to Mr. Emmel’s testimony, Mr. Carlucci said that if there were employees uncomfortable with the company’s philosophy — “bed-wetting liberals in particular was the description he used,” Mr. Emmel testified — then he could arrange to have those employees “outplaced from the company.” You might wonder what became of Mr. Carlucci? Rupert Murdoch appointed him head of The New York Post , calling him “without peer in the consumer advertising and marketing industry.” You know The New York Post : they’re the Murdoch paper that branded a New York hotel maid a hooker on the front page. The story was hugely helpful to one Dominique Strauss-Kahn but has not been verified by any other newspaper to date. But I digress. The problem is that the press wields enormous power, even in allegedly educated and refined countries. So do the police. And when Scotland Yard’s leadership and even Downing Street appear compromised by an evil corporate culture like News Corp’s, there are serious implications for society’s ability to trust anyone. Who’s poor Murdoch to trust? That’s what Rupert Murdoch would have you ask. And if you can believe the nerve of his News Corp empire and its culture, check this clip from Fox News . Syndicated columnist Cal Thomas explains the phenomenon as “piling on,” adding that “the left has been itching to get after News Corp for years.” Just another witch hunt, going after poor Mr. Murdoch. Makes you wonder if he paid the guy with the pie . For the rest of us, keep your ears open. Emulate Sherlock Holmes. Look for the barking dog, and when you don’t hear one, cry bloody murder, because someone has to.

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Obama Threatens To Veto GOP Bill Aimed At Weakening Controversial New Agency

July 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — The White House on Wednesday threatened to veto a House Republican bill that would curb the powers of the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, reviving last year’s pitched partisan battle over President Barack Obama’s overhaul of the rules governing financial markets. The veto threat came a day before the House was to vote on the GOP legislation – a debate to be held on the very day that the bureau officially opens. The agency was created by the financial overhaul measure, which Obama signed into law a year ago Thursday as a response to the 2008 financial crisis. While the legislation is expected to clear the Republican-run House, it has little chance of even being considered by the Democratic-led Senate, making both the bill and the veto threat symbolic gestures. The bureau is supposed to protect consumers from abuses involving mortgages, credit cards and other financial instruments. It’s been embraced by Democrats but opposed by many Republicans who say it threatens to stifle financial companies. The GOP bill being debated this week would replace the bureau’s director with a five-member bipartisan commission. It would delay the planned transfer of powers to the bureau from other agencies until a Senate-confirmed chair of the commission was in place, and make it easier for other federal financial regulators to block the bureau from issuing regulations. The Republican measure “simply promotes greater accountability and transparency” at the bureau, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., said in a written statement. “The American people want accountability at every massive government bureaucracy.” In its written statement on the GOP legislation, the White House said the bill “would expose American consumers and the nation’s economy to the same risks that led to the 2008 financial crisis.” The statement said that Obama’s senior advisers would recommend that he veto the legislation and any other that poses similar threats. All 47 Republican senators have promised to block confirmation of anyone to head the bureau unless Obama agrees to change it, including replacing the director with a bipartisan commission. That would leave Senate Democrats seven votes short of the 60 votes they would need to confirm a director. Presidential adviser Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard law professor and longtime consumer activist, has led the administration’s start-up of the agency. Facing sharp GOP opposition to her becoming its director, Obama this week nominated Richard Cordray, the former Ohio attorney general who has been the bureau’s enforcement chief, to become director.

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Robert Teitelman: Fortune’s On-again, Off-again Bubble

July 20, 2011

Fortune has discovered there might be a tech bubble. No, revise that. Fortune has, a little late , declared a tech bubble upon us, at least on its cover, which shouts in big, bold type: “Tech Bubble 2.0.” But once inside the magazine, you’re met with a headline, ” Don’t Call It the Next Tech Bubble — Yet ,” which suggests, well, more uncertainty than the cover declares. In fact, the Fortune story by David Kaplan takes a tortuous path up the mountain of bubbledom, then down into the valley of maybe not. Yes, Silicon Valley is hot, venture capital is flying around, social media companies are going public at high valuations, and — Fortune has a fixation here — already expensive real estate has gotten ridiculous. And, oh yeah, there’s some very expensive balsamic vinegar on sale in the Valley. But is it a bubble or is simply some euphoria over a subset of tech stocks that may — or may not — prove to be justified? Let’s clear a little underbrush. A bubble may be difficult to detect and deflate, but its definition isn’t really in doubt. A bubble occurs when the price of an asset loses any connection to underlying value; it’s increasingly driven by its own momentum. Now, of course, this definition is full of peril, mostly involving that underlying value, which particularly when it comes to tech stocks is a potentiality that exists somewhere out there in the misty future, exposed to all kinds of factors that could justify a price that seems high today, or confirm that some fool paid too much. So it’s hard to tell. This definition is necessary but not sufficient to corner the elusive bubble. Because — and this is often lost in enthusiasm for bubble stories — a bubble is not just an overvalued stock, or even an inflated asset class. A bubble is large and contagious. It must have scale; it must spread. Some stocks are always overvalued — some dramatically. But a sector, say biotech in the ’80s, that sent a lot of companies public without a prayer of success, was not a bubble in the systemic sense, because when reality gobsmacked investors, biotech stocks fell, while the rest of the economy forged merrily forward. Kaplan offers his own attempt to get a feel for this elephant in a dark room. After he enumerates all the conspicuous consumption in the Valley, he admits that the tech crowd itself isn’t sure what’s happening. “Reasonable folks can disagree about the prospects for boom and bust. But their reckoning is about psychology more than economics.” Kaplan then searches for psychological signs, which really means a sort of off-the-shelf sociology. “A sure sign [get that "sure"] of budding bubbliness is the rush to find alternative metaphors.” Not to interrupt, but alternative to what? “Read the blogs, attend the tech conferences, sit at Starbucks for an hour in Sunnyvale some afternoon [but not in, say, Palo Alto?] — you’ll hear most of them. There’s a wave — ride its crest, but don’t get inundated! There’s froth and ferment. There’s a rush and gush. Our favorite, from a well-known investor: ‘The cuckoos have come out of the clock!’” They do love their metaphors in the Valley. But obviously, that’s not quite rigorous enough, for Kaplan then turns to the well-worn cliché of greed and fear. Fear is a hedge. Immediately after the suggestive cuckoo comment, Kaplan argues, “For there to be a bubble, the wisdom goes, greed must overcome fear. And for the moment fear still rules, which means the memory of 2000 lives. Metaphorically [ah, metaphors again], we may be in 1995 or 1996. After all, LinkedIn is not Pets.com.” True. And 1995 is not 2011 either. Kaplan’s conclusion: This is a bubble, but not quite yet. This is a nascent bubble. This is a bubble that may not be a bubble. ” ‘I think it’s a wanna-bubble,’” Kaplan quotes “longtime Valley observer Paul Saffo,” who continues: ” ‘Investors are desperate for something — anything — with a prospect of returns, and there is a lot of hot money looking for a home.’” One can sympathize with Kaplan. The scene, not to say the future, is difficult to read, particularly if you’re trying to interpret psychological signs. And Kaplan obviously didn’t write the cover line. Fortune ‘s bubble story tells you more about Fortune and its relation to the tech economy and its readers than anything else. Fortune knows that tech, euphoria, optimism, winners sell. And for all the handwringing, bubbles are associated with good times, particularly when they’re incipient. Moreover, Fortune is not alone in embracing Silicon Valley as the very model of the American economy, except perhaps for that tendency to bubbledom; this partly explains why there are so many bubble stories out there. In a depressing economy, in a gloomy world, the Valley looks like the best way to provide readers with a dose of blast-from-the-past hope. Kaplan can’t quite close the deal with his bubble diagnosis, but all to the good: That means the Valley may actually be healthy. Folks there (as if denizens of the Valley were the only problem in the dot-com bubble) remember. It’s a small thing, but Kaplan’s story will someday allow Fortune to declare victory no matter what happens. Of course there’s the matter of the bait-and-switch between the cover and the story. This is, alas, too common in magazines these days. An even more egregious case appears in the increasingly downmarket Money, one of Fortune ‘s stablemates at Time Inc., which also tangles with a big macroeconomic story. On its most recent cover, Money offers up: “Why Housing Will Rebound.” ( Fortune predicted a housing rebound a few months ago as well.) That sounds exciting, no? Alas, the cover line refers to a single page of graphics that are both simplistic and generally useless. In fact, one set of charts argues the “sucker” case and the other that “housing is a steal.” Like Fortune , Money can’t decide. This is supposed to help homeowners figure out the housing markets? No, Money just wants you to impulsively buy the magazine for the coverline. This is an old trick, beloved of newspapers and magazines. In the great scheme of things, it’s a minor, if tawdry tactic; newsstands are full of it. Still, the Murdoch scandal does sensitize one to broader issues besides hacking, blagging and bribery that go under the banner of tabloidization. First, what’s the social compact with your readers and how is it violated? Second, how simplistically can the world be described until it resembles no world that we recognize? Fortune and Money are not News of the World , Time Inc. is not News Corp., and silly bait-and-switches are not phone hacking. But newsstand-driven circulation does tend to erode loyalty to readers. And commercial pressures drive even operations with such distinguished histories to treat readers just a little shabbily to sell a few more copies. Besides, what does it really matter in the end? Nobody can really predict the damn future anyway.

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