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(MENAFN – Arab News) Stocks posted their biggest jump in nearly two weeks on Tuesday. Investors picked up cheaply priced stocks after fears that the US would slip into a recession pounded the …

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Stocks jump; Dow notches best gain in two weeks

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June 3 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cory Johnson discusses Eric Lefkofsky, chairman and co-founder of Groupon Inc. Groupon, the biggest provider of online daily-deal coupons, said yesterday that it plans to raise $750 million in an IPO, the most yet for a U.S. social media company. Johnson speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bloomberg’s Johnson Discusses Groupon’s Eric Lefkofsky

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US Payrolls Surge As Service Activity Rises

June 1, 2011

Private employers in the US added far more jobs to payrolls in that last month of 2010 than expected sending privatesector employment up by the biggest amount record according to Rueters

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Industrial and Office Delinquency Rates Increase in Latest Trepp …

June 1, 2011

Although small, the decline is actually the biggest rate drop for U.S. commercial real estate loans in CMBS in about two years, setting aside October 2010 when the Extended Stay Hotels loan was resolved. …

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Revenues Down At Biggest Investment Banks, Report Finds

May 17, 2011

Revenues at the world’s biggest investment banks fell 5 percent to $52 billion in the first quarter of 2011, hit by Middle Eastern unrest, natural disasters, volatile commodities and economic uncertainty, a consultancy said in a report on the industry. The survey of the world’s top 10 banks by London consultancy Coalition attributed much of the decline from a year earlier to an 11 percent slump in revenues from fixed income, the biggest contributor to the banks’ earnings. However, fixed income had ‘held up well’ given the macro challenges, the report said. The asset class was the dominant driver of revenues over the last four years and contributed $31 billion in the first three months of 2011. “Performance was impacted by political turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa, natural disasters in Asia, rising inflation and commodities prices, as well as ongoing concerns in Euro periphery countries. Unsurprisingly, therefore, fixed income was the weakest asset class,” the report said. Credit saw the biggest fall in its contribution to total fixed income revenue, down 4 percentage points to 20 percent. Emerging markets-related revenues in fixed income were 2 percentage points lower than a year ago at 15 percent, following over-valuation and soaring inflation concerns, the report said. The ‘origination’ business, which includes fees from mergers and acquisitions and debt and equity capital markets business, saw revenues of $10 billion in the quarter, one billion more than last year. M&A contributed an extra percentage point making up 26 percent of revenues, benefiting from ‘ongoing confidence in the global recovery.’ Debt capital markets remained the ‘primary driver’ with 47 percent of origination revenues due to ‘strong volumes’ of high yield issuance, particularly in the Americas. Equity capital markets were down 1 percentage point from a year earlier, at 27 percent. Coalition, an independent research firm for the investment banking industry, tracks Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAC.N), Barclays (BARC.L), Citi (C.N), Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX), Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), Goldman Sachs (GS.N), JP Morgan (JPM.N), Morgan Stanley (MS.N), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L) and UBS (UBSN.VX). (Reporting by Cecilia Valente, Editing by Chris Vellacott and Jane Merriman) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Andrew Winston: Consumers Never Liked to Pay More for Green to Begin With

May 16, 2011

A week ago, the New York Times breathlessly declared in a cover story that during the recession, ” As Consumers Cut Spending, ‘Green’ Products Lose Allure. ” It’s a nice headline and makes it sound like the green product and business movement is in trouble. But the story, while interesting, doesn’t really change the reality for business. First, consumers never liked to pay more for green and, second, consumer pressure is not the biggest force driving the greening of business. Here’s the story. The Times piece focuses on the rise and (sort of) fall of Clorox Green Works cleaning products. Launched with much fanfare in 2008, Green Works quickly became the biggest player in the niche green cleaning space, hitting $100 million in sales before falling to $60 million in the recession (which is still a very respectable number in this market space). The Times crows that “As recession gripped the country, the consumer’s love affair with green products, from recycled toilet paper to organic foods to hybrid cars, faded like a bad infatuation.” So green products are on their way out, right? Not quite. First, as the next sentence points out, “sales at farmers’ markets and Prius sales are humming along now” (fyi, Prius sales jumped 70% in February as oil prices rose). So two of the three categories the Times uses to make its point are actually growing, not fading. Second, at the end of the article, a fascinating chart shows the “green share” of household products holding steady at about 2 percent over the last few years. The conventional brands like Clorox have flattened out — even as Clorox sales dipped, the total number of entrants has continued to grow. The niche brands, such as Method and Seventh Generation, have continued to nibble away at market share and actually grew during the recession. To the extent that the premium-priced green products named by the Times have taken a hit, consumers’ disdain isn’t news: Recession or not, mass consumers never loved paying extra for green. Asking people to pay more for green is usually doomed. Green has always been most effective as the “3rd button” (as my co-author and I called it in our book Green to Gold ) to press in marketing pitches, after price and quality. The Prius is the premium-priced exception that does not disprove the rule. It’s is a special case, since the purchase confers a range of emotional and value-laden benefits that household products just don’t have (critics call the pride of ownership smugness — and, yes, I own one). Therefore, in the trenches of consumer product development, the real story is the pursuit of more sustainable products that, as P&G execs say, create “no tradeoffs” for customers. Why ask people to pay more? As more companies present green products at no additional cost, Wal-Mart and others will be happy to give them more shelf space, because what’s really happening with consumers is subtler than a supposedly fading infatuation with green. As the Times story indicates, there is no rise in the percentage of “true green” consumers who will pay more for sustainable products. But there is a serious rise in the number of so-called “conflicted” or “conscious” consumers , which has been building for years. These buyers, who are quickly becoming the majority of consumers, not a niche segment, want it all. They demand more sustainable products at the same or lower price. The last sentence of the Times article actually captures this phenomenon: “Sarah Pooler, 55, said she did not normally buy green products but would pick them up if they were on sale… ‘Bottom line, if it’s green and it’s a good deal, I’ll buy it’, said Ms. Pooler. And so the race is still on to provide green products at the same price and quality. But exactly because Ms. Pooler and millions of other buyers are still waiting for that price equality, I would argue that what is and has been driving the greening of business is not consumer pressure but a mix macro-level forces and operational sustainability success stories, the countless examples of reduced packaging, lowered toxicity, and condensed versions of products(in detergents for example) that save shelf space and tons of energy in shipping and storage. At the macro level, the greening of products and companies is accelerating because the sustainability drivers are only getting stronger . Rising resource prices, ever-increasing transparency demands about what’s in every product, and continuing pressure up the supply chain from business customers are just a few of the big forces. Does anyone in the consumer product space seriously think Wal-Mart (and other retailers) will stop demanding sustainability-driven operational and product changes just because of the recession? On the contrary, the need to lower costs in the face of rising commodity prices is making eco-efficiency even more economic. So even if consumers develop fickle infatuations with certain products, the business world is clearly developing a deep, abiding love of — or at least growing respect for — the power of sustainability. This post first appeared at Harvard Business Online .

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Bryce Covert: Gas Prices up, Wages Down, Americans Caught in the Middle

May 11, 2011

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . When picturing people who are so far into debt they can’t get on top of their bills, many likely see images of flat screen TVs, Escalades, and giant, unnecessary houses. But the sad truth is that one of the biggest reasons Americans carry $796.5 billion in revolving debt is that wages have stagnated while the cost of necessities rose. That’s particularly true now, at the end of a decade where wages actually dropped, 13.7 million people are unemployed, and prices are through the roof. Gas prices are soaring . The average price is up 80 cents per gallon since January, up to $3.96 . With Americans consuming about 140 gallons per year, that’s an extra $112 billion over the course of 2011 that consumers will have to shell out at the pump. So is rent. It is too damn high . A new study came out recently that showed the level of renters spending more than half of their income on rent is the highest in half a century. That’s not just low-income people, either. “About 26 percent of renters — or 10.1 million people — spent more than half their pre-tax household income on rent and utilities in 2009,” the Washington Post reported. Under ideal circumstances, renters aren’t supposed to spend more than 30% of their income on housing. Not to mention buying food. Restaurants are now considering raising prices due to rising commodity costs. Prices for purchased meals and beverages rose almost 2% between March 2010 and March 2011, the biggest increase since November 2009. And health care is still unaffordable for too many of us. Last year, four in 10 Americans struggled to pay their medical bills and 40% had to forgo needed care due to high costs. What do Americans do when we can’t afford the necessities? What we’ve learned to do over the past 30 years as our wages stagnated: use credit cards to plug the gaping holes. Only this time it’s worse, because wages have actually shrunk over the past decade, with the median family’s earnings falling from $52,388 a year in 2000 to $47,127 in 2010. We still have 9% unemployment. And 27% of Americans had no personal savings as of February this year, up from 22% 18 months before that. Meanwhile, access to credit is flowing less quickly than it was before the recession — and when it does flow, it comes with overpriced fees and interest. While banks are getting back into lending to riskier, lower-income consumers, it’s a slow trickle. Most card mailings are targeting the wealthy, with only 17% going to borrowers with dinged credit scores — compared to 39% in 2007. And the cards those consumers are offered come with higher fees and interest rates . The NYTimes reports, for example, “Capital One… is offering low-end cards that carry interest rates of 18 percent or higher and annual fees of up to $50.” The ability to cover up our income inequality and wage stagnation with easy credit is coming to end. So now what are workers supposed to do when they can’t afford life’s basics?

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Video: Englund Says U.S. Payrolls Report `Defied’ Market Fears

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics LLC, talks about April payrolls data released today by the Labor Department and outlook for the economic recovery. Payrolls expanded by 244,000 last month, the biggest gain since May 2010, after a revised 221,000 increase the prior month. The jobless rate climbed to 9 percent, the first increase since November, a separate survey of households showed. Englund speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Richard Grasso, former chairman and chief executive officer of the New York Stock Exchange, also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Englund Says U.S. Payrolls Report `Defied’ Market Fears

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics LLC, talks about April payrolls data released today by the Labor Department and outlook for the economic recovery. Payrolls expanded by 244,000 last month, the biggest gain since May 2010, after a revised 221,000 increase the prior month. The jobless rate climbed to 9 percent, the first increase since November, a separate survey of households showed. Englund speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Richard Grasso, former chairman and chief executive officer of the New York Stock Exchange, also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Solis Says Worker Training Critical to Job Growth

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis talks about the April U.S. jobs report released today and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010, the Labor Department said. The jobless rate climbed to 9 percent. Solis speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Richard Grasso, former chairman and chief executive officer of the New York Stock Exchange, also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Solis Says Worker Training Critical to Job Growth

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis talks about the April U.S. jobs report released today and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010, the Labor Department said. The jobless rate climbed to 9 percent. Solis speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Richard Grasso, former chairman and chief executive officer of the New York Stock Exchange, also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Solis Says Worker Training Critical to Job Growth

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis talks about the April U.S. jobs report released today and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010, the Labor Department said. The jobless rate climbed to 9 percent. Solis speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Richard Grasso, former chairman and chief executive officer of the New York Stock Exchange, also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Rosenberg Says April Jobs Data Shows `Squeeze’ in Wages

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates, talks about the April U.S. jobs report and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010. Rosenberg speaks with Betty Liu, Michael McKee and Peter Cook on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Ralph Schlosstein, president and chief economist at Evercore Partners Inc., also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Rosenberg Says April Jobs Data Shows `Squeeze’ in Wages

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates, talks about the April U.S. jobs report and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010. Rosenberg speaks with Betty Liu, Michael McKee and Peter Cook on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Ralph Schlosstein, president and chief economist at Evercore Partners Inc., also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Rosenberg Says April Jobs Data Shows `Squeeze’ in Wages

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates, talks about the April U.S. jobs report and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010. Rosenberg speaks with Betty Liu, Michael McKee and Peter Cook on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Ralph Schlosstein, president and chief economist at Evercore Partners Inc., also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Rosenberg Says April Jobs Data Shows `Squeeze’ in Wages

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates, talks about the April U.S. jobs report and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls increased by 244,000 workers last month, the biggest gain since May 2010. Rosenberg speaks with Betty Liu, Michael McKee and Peter Cook on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” Ralph Schlosstein, president and chief economist at Evercore Partners Inc., also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lennox Expects Commodity Prices Won’t Fall Significantly

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — David Lennox, an analyst at Fat Prophets in Sydney, talks about the outlook for commodity prices.¶ Oil traded near the lowest in almost two months in New York and headed for the biggest weekly drop in a year as a surprise increase in U.S. jobless claims added to signs of slower growth in the world’s largest crude consumer. Lennox speaks with John Dawson on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Auto Sales Soar As Consumers Flock To Small Cars

May 3, 2011

April car sales kept going strong, fueled by strong consumer demand for small cars and growing consumer confidence. General Motors’ sales spiked 26%, taking back its spot at the biggest auto seller after losing the role in March to Ford. And Ford’s sales were up 10%.

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China’s Facebook Copycat Attracts Investors Despite Big Risks

May 1, 2011

* Renren to raise about $690 mln in IPO next Tuesday * IPO would value company at $5 bln vs Facebook’s $70 bln * Censorship, patents, accounting among Renren concerns By Melanie Lee and Clare Baldwin SHANGHAI/NEW YORK, April 29 (Reuters) – When Chinese social networking site Renren goes public next week, investors will likely ignore big risks the company faces, and be lured instead by a combination of the words “China” and “social networking.” Hot Chinese tech companies like Internet search engine Baidu Inc (BIDU.O) and online video site Youku.com (YOKU.N) have risen triple-digit percentages since their IPOs, whetting investors’ appetites for such offerings. And this is in a sector that is hot in the U.S. Facebook, the biggest social network company in the world, has a market value of somewhere around $70 billion, based on a share sale currently being contemplated, making it worth more than companies such as Boeing Co.[ID:nN27185713] The demand for Renren shares was clear on Friday when the company raised the expected price range of its IPO by 30 percent to $12 to $14 per share. “Appetite to invest in China right now is so strong that some investors are willing to ignore factors that they wouldn’t in other markets,” said Mark Natkin, managing director of Marbridge Consulting, a Beijing-based company that advises investors on China’s Internet and telecommunications sectors. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Renren revised filing shows slower growth [ID:nN28228501] Insider on Renren valuation link.reuters.com/zyk39r Breakingviews column on Renren [ID:nLDE73H0EF] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> Renren’s IPO filings do raise a handful of very serious questions. For one thing, Renren doesn’t really seem sure how many users it has. According to its April 27 revised IPO filing, the Chinese Facebook clone’s monthly unique log-in user base grew by only 5 million, or 19 percent, in the first quarter of 2011 — not the 7 million, or 29 percent, it reported in its first filing only 12 days earlier.[ID:nN28228501] Some investors and analysts brush off such red flags — after all China is the biggest Internet market in the world and it is growing rapidly. They justify their cavalier attitude by saying that figures reported by Chinese companies should be used for directional information and not as perfect quantitative measurements. Others say the opaque information is a big problem. “If you can’t validate the numbers or the company proves it doesn’t have a good handle on the numbers, then you’ve got to be concerned,” said Gary Rieschel, founder of Qiming Venture Partners, which is an investor in Renren rival Kaixin001. Another possible risk for investors is the broad government oversight that Renren, and other companies operating in China, face. Chinese authorities keep extremely close tabs on Internet companies, arguing that this is necessary to maintain social harmony. This led to a big bust up between Google Inc. (GOOG.O) and the Chinese government last year that ended with Google curtailing its operations in the country. Renren says in the risk factors section of its IPO prospectus that this means a prohibition against posting content that, among other things, “impairs the national dignity of China” or is “superstitious.” The prospectus doesn’t mention the recent Middle Eastern uprisings, which led to a crackdown on the use of certain words on the Internet in China, but it does say Renren may not post content that is “socially destabilizing.” If Renren fails to comply, the company says that its websites could be shut down. Clearly that could put it out of business. Whether a social network page posting is objectionable is determined by the Chinese authorities. Renren is also required to monitor advertisements on its websites, some of which are subject to special government review before they are posted. Renren must even guard against providing services that may lead to its users finding themselves in “emotionally charged situations.” MATERIAL WEAKNESS The company also said in its filings that while it hasn’t conducted a comprehensive review, it found a “material weakness” and a “significant deficiency” in its internal financial controls: Renren doesn’t have enough people with knowledge of U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. It also lacks a formal policy for investing surplus cash and managing its treasury functions. That’s not unusual for Chinese IPO companies. Neither is the fact that 87 percent of Renren’s leased floor area did not have the proper title documents. But it all paints a picture of a company that is far from risk free. Still, it isn’t difficult to find people who will give it the benefit of the doubt. “Given the investors it has who have board seats and who work closely with it, you would expect any major issues to have turned up by now,” said Nick Einhorn, an analyst at Connecticut-based IPO research and investment house Renaissance Capital. Renren’s investors include private equity firm General Atlantic and venture capital firm DCM. LAWSUIT Renren may also face some heat over intellectual property questions. When social networking website Kaixin001.com started taking off, Renren founder and CEO Joseph Chen launched a matching site with a similar color scheme and layout under the name Kaixin.com. Kaixin001.com won a lawsuit that ultimately resulted in Chen changing the name of another of his social networking sites to Renren, and merging Kaixin.com into Renren. Sources have told Reuters that Kaixin001 is also planning a U.S. IPO. Renren in its IPO filings also said that its social networking platform may be subject to patent infringement claims, and mentions Facebook as one of the potential claimants. Still, while Renren has posted losses in each of the past two years, it could still be a dream growth stock. Its net revenue grew more than fivefold to $76.54 million in 2010 from $13.78 million in 2008. But there will be some who, after reading the prospectus, may wonder whether the risks outweigh the rewards. (Reporting by Clare Baldwin in New York and Melanie Lee in Shanghai, additional reporting by Alina Selyukh and Richard Lee in New York. Editing by Dan Wilchins, Martin Howell) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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Robert Reich: The Wageless Recovery

April 26, 2011

This week’s biggest economic show occurs tomorrow (Wednesday) when Fed chair Ben Bernanke steps in front of the cameras for the Fed’s first-ever news conference. The question on everyone’s mind: Will the Fed signal it’s now more worried about inflation than recession? Much of Wall Street thinks inflation is now the biggest threat to the U.S. economy. As has been the case in the past, the Street is dead wrong. The biggest threat is falling into another recession. The most significant economic news from the first quarter of 2011 is the decline in real wages. That’s unusual in a recovery, to say the least. But it’s easily explained this time around. In order to keep the jobs they have, millions of Americans are accepting shrinking paychecks. If they’ve been fired, the only way they can land a new job is to accept even smaller ones. The wage squeeze is putting most households in a double bind. Before the recession, they’d been able to pay the bills because they had two paychecks. Now, they’re likely to have one-and-a half, or just one, and it’s shrinking. Add to this the continuing decline in the value of the biggest asset most people own – their homes — and what do you get? Consumers who won’t and can’t buy enough to keep the economy going. That spells recession. Why doesn’t Wall Street get it? For one thing, because lenders always worry more about inflation than borrowers — and, in general, the wealthier members of a society tend to lend their money to people who are poorer than they are. But Wall Street’s inflation fears are also being stoked by several specifics. First are price upswings in food and energy. The Street doesn’t seem to understand that when most peoples’ wages are dropping, additional dollars they spend on groceries and at the gas pump means fewer dollars they have left to spend in the rest of the economy. Rather than cause inflation, this is likely to lead to more job losses. The Street is also worried that the Fed’s easy money policies are pushing the dollar down and thereby fueling inflation – as everything we buy abroad becomes more expensive. But if wages are stuck in the mud and everything we buy abroad costs more, Americans have even fewer dollars to spend. This also spells recession, not inflation. Finally, the Street worries that if Democrats and Republicans fail to agree to a plan to cut the budget deficit, the credit-worthiness of the United States as a whole will be in jeopardy – causing interest rates to rocket and inflation to explode. Standard & Poors, the erstwhile credit-rating agency, has already sounded the alarm. The Street has it backwards. Over the long term, the deficit does have to be tackled. But not now. When job growth remains tepid, when wages are dropping, and when the value of most households’ major asset is declining, government has to step in to maintain overall demand. This is the worst possible time to cut public spending or reduce the money supply. The biggest irony is that the Street is doing wonderfully well right now, in contrast to most Americans. Corporate profits for the first quarter of the year are way up. That’s largely because corporate payrolls are down. Payrolls are down because big companies have been shifting much of their work abroad where business is booming. The Commerce Department recently reported that over the last decade American multinationals (essentially all large American corporations) eliminated 2.9 million American jobs while adding 2.4 million abroad. What the Commerce Department didn’t say is the pace is picking up. In 2000, 30 percent of GE’s business was overseas and 46 percent of its employees; now 60 percent of its business is outside the U.S., as are 54 percent of its employees. Over the past five years, Oracle added twice as many workers overseas as in the US; 63 percent of its employees now work abroad. Corporations are simultaneously finding ways to cut the pay of their remaining U.S. workers — not just threatening job losses if they don’t agree to the cuts, but also automating the work or sending it to non-union states. (The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page, an unremittingly reliable barometer of Street thought, argued earlier this week that such states offer workers the freedom to choose whether to join a union — in reality, the freedom to lose even more bargaining power and be forced to accept even lower wages.) America’s jobless recovery is becoming a wageless recovery. That puts the odds of another recession greater than the risk of inflation. Wall Street and its representatives in Washington don’t understand — or don’t want to. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

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Video: U.S. Stocks Gain on Earnings, Gold Touches $1,500

April 19, 2011

April 19 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cali Carlin reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. Stocks rebounded from the biggest drop in a month after companies from Johnson & Johnson to Burberry Group Plc. reported results that beat analyst estimates. Gold futures touched $1,500 an ounce for the first time as the dollar weakened. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Stocks Slump as S&P Cuts U.S. Long-Term Credit Outlook

April 18, 2011

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cali Carlin reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks slumped, sending benchmark indexes to their biggest declines in a month, after Standard & Poor’s Ratings Service cut the nation’s long-term credit outlook to negative. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Synthes Says It’s In Talks With J&J on Possible Merger

April 18, 2011

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Synthes Inc. said it’s in talks about a possible takeover by Johnson & Johnson, potentially the biggest deal in J&J’s 125-year history as it seeks to recover from pulling more than 50 products off the market since the start of 2010. Dominic Chu reports on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Bank Regulators Take Light-Touch Approach

April 14, 2011

The nation’s 14 largest mortgage firms must compensate wronged homeowners after federal bank regulators determined the companies broke federal and state laws by improperly foreclosing on an incalculable number of distressed borrowers. The agencies announced such penalties Wednesday, the first in what is likely to be a series of enforcement actions targeting the country’s biggest banks and costing them billions. Lenders like Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial systematically broke rules and took shortcuts when foreclosing on homeowners last year, the regulators said. Their three-month review launched after documents and videos of so-called robo-signers — people who signed thousands of foreclosure documents a day without reading them or knowing what was in them — surfaced, leading the biggest banks to halt home seizures. Bank examiners found the firms employed practices that “failed to conform to state legal requirements.” In other words, they broke the law. The banks must stop such practices and fix the way they process home loans, according to agreements they signed Wednesday with the Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision. The Fed said the review uncovered a “pattern of misconduct and negligence” in the way mortgage servicers processed home repossessions, which represent “significant and pervasive compliance failures.” All three agencies deemed the practices to be “unsafe and unsound,” an industry label that essentially means the actions threaten the viability of the institutions and the banking system. But the agencies don’t even know the full scope of the problem, they admitted in a joint report outlining their findings. They did not fully review whether borrowers were assessed improper fees, as critics have widely alleged, nor did they investigate mortgage servicing issues outside of the foreclosure process. Last November, Fed Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin said servicing flaws were “part of a deeper, systemic problem.” Additionally, the agencies only examined a “relatively small number of files from among the volumes of foreclosures processed by the servicers,” the regulators said in their report. By comparison, more than 2.8 million homes received a foreclosure filing in 2009, and nearly 2.9 million residences got one last year, according to RealtyTrac, a California-based data provider. “Therefore, the reviews could not provide a reliable estimate of the number of foreclosures that should not have proceeded,” the agencies said in their report. The banks were forced to hire independent auditors to review “certain residential mortgage loan foreclosure actions.” In other words, regulators did not demand they review every foreclosure. “There is evidence that some level of wrongful foreclosures has occurred,” the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said in a statement, adding that Wednesday’s agreements with the banks “do not purport to fully identify and remedy past errors in mortgage-servicing operations of large institutions” and that “much work remains.” Fines are “appropriate” and will be assessed, the Fed said in a statement. The OCC chief also told reporters that fines are coming. An amount was not announced. Yet while the agencies outlined goals for the firms, it’s up to the banks to determine what specific actions they need to take, and how to implement the new procedures. With the exception of a few items — like forcing the lenders to establish a single point of contact for each borrower — the regulators essentially asked the banks to follow existing rules and laws. Meanwhile, attorneys general from all 50 states, state bank supervisors, and other federal agencies continue to pursue their own probe of the biggest mortgage companies. Attorneys General Beau Biden of Delaware and Tom Miller of Iowa both said in statements that the OCC’s actions would not impact the state probe. Representatives from 10 state attorneys general offices, along with officials from the Justice Department and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, met with banks again on Wednesday, part of a two-day meeting that marks the second time they’ve discussed the ongoing investigation with bank representatives, Associate U.S. Attorney General Tom Perrelli said on a conference call with reporters. “We have substantial ability to assess fines and penalties, as do the state AGs,” said Helen Kanovsky, HUD’s general counsel and top legal adviser to HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. HUD and the state officials have abilities to set fines that go “well beyond what the federal banking regulators can do” or what the “banking regulators ever set out to do,” she added. At this point, state officials are only focusing on the top five firms — Bank of America, JPMorgan, Wells, Citi and Ally. The states’ audit of Ally, the fifth-largest mortgage handler in the country, was the “most in-depth analysis and investigation of any of the servicers that has been done or will be done,” Miller said in an interview. State regulators will use their findings from Ally as part of the settlement negotiations with the other large mortgage firms, Miller said, as practices were likely the same across the biggest firms — a point underscored by Wednesday’s announcement. Federal regulators publicly praised the three banking agencies for their work, yet were quick to note that the consent orders with the targeted firms mark simply the first step of a process designed to fix the “pervasive” problems that plague the industry, punish the banks for wrongdoing and compensate homeowners for their losses. Privately, officials described the action as confirmation of a strategy long pursued by the OCC, a light-touch approach the agency hopes will force the hand of other regulators to quickly settle, rather than pursue in-depth investigations or levy costly penalties on the banks. Officials are pursuing as much as $30 billion in penalties against the five biggest mortgage firms. Some attorneys general want a thorough review of borrowers’ loan files in order to be able to confidently survey the damage wreaked by faulty bank practices. The nation’s five largest mortgage firms have saved more than $20 billion since the housing crisis began in 2007 by taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans, according to a confidential presentation prepared for state attorneys general by the nascent consumer bureau inside the Treasury Department and obtained by The Huffington Post . The report, prepared by the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, suggests that amount should be used as a starting point in settlement discussions with the targeted firms. Many more billions would likely have to be levied as penalties in order to discourage the firms from taking a similar approach in the future and to compensate homeowners for bank abuses, including reducing distressed borrowers’ loan balances. The OCC rejects that approach. Republicans in Congress say such a penalty could hurt banks’ capital levels and stifle their ability to lend. But a Wednesday report by the International Monetary Fund dismisses such concerns. If Bank of America, JPMorgan, Citi and Wells reduced housing debt on first mortgages by 15 percent for borrowers expected to be at risk of foreclosure over the next year and a half and then lowered loan balances by 30 percent for seriously-delinquent borrowers and those in foreclosure through 2015, they’d face little consequence, the IMF said. “Our stress tests highlight the capital strength of U.S. banks,” it said in its report, noting the lenders’ ability to manage “even under a severe shock.” The IMF’s estimates are based on a widespread principal reduction program that would impact millions of homeowners, far beyond what’s currently under discussion in the foreclosure abuse probe. State regulators and some federal agencies similarly believe that a principal reduction program would not impede banks’ ability to lend or maintain a healthy balance sheet. Of the public statements issued by the nation’s four banking regulators, those of the OCC and OTS were the tamest, according to a review. The OCC said the enforcement actions are “comprehensive” and will “fix the problems” it found. The Fed said they found a “pattern of misconduct and negligence.” The FDIC said the review was “limited” and discussed the need for a “thorough regulatory review” so agencies could identify the extent of the problem. Neither termed the enforcement actions “comprehensive,” nor did they claim the consent orders would fix what’s broken in an industry with “structural problems,” which is how Raskin described mortgage servicing. Both the Fed and the FDIC mentioned the state regulators and federal agencies working with them. The FDIC specifically said the consent orders should not impede or preempt the state action. The OCC and OTS, which are merging as part of last year’s financial reform law, did not make any such statements.

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USD Graphic Rewind: Dollar Index is the Biggest Loser

April 8, 2011

USD Graphic Rewind: Dollar Index is the Biggest Loser

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Massive Hack Targets Customers From Citigroup, Walgreens, TiVo, Capitol One, HSN, College Board

April 4, 2011

(Reuters) – The names and e-mails of customers of Citigroup Inc and other large U.S. companies, as well as College Board students, were exposed in a massive and growing data breach after a computer hacker penetrated online marketer Epsilon. In what could be one of the biggest such breaches in U.S. history, a diverse swath of companies that did business with Epsilon stepped forward over the weekend to warn customers some of their electronic information could have been exposed. Drugstore Walgreens, video recorder TiVo Inc, credit card lender Capital One Financial Corp and teleshopping company HSN Inc all added their names to a list of targets that also includes some of the nation’s largest banks. The names and electronic contacts of some students affiliated with the U.S.-based College Board — which represents some 5,900 colleges, universities and schools — were also potentially compromised. No personal financial information such as credit cards or social security numbers appeared to be exposed, according to the company statements and e-mails to customers. Epsilon, an online marketing unit of Alliance Data Systems Corp, said on Friday that a person outside the company hacked into some of its clients’ customer files. The vendor sends more than 40 billion e-mail ads and offers annually, usually to people who register for a company’s website or who give their e-mail addresses while shopping. “We learned from our e-mail provider, Epsilon, that limited information about you was accessed by an unauthorized individual or individuals,” HSN, also an e-commerce operator, said in an e-mail to customers on Sunday. “This information included your name and e-mail address and did not include any financial or other sensitive information. We felt it was important to notify you of this incident as soon as possible.” Citigroup customer names and some credit card customers’ e-mail addresses — but no account information — were part of the data breach, the third-largest U.S. bank said on Saturday. The College Board, which administers the SAT admissions tests, on Saturday warned students about the breach and asked them to be cautious about receiving “links or attachments from unknown third parties,” according to two e-mails reviewed by Reuters. The not-for-profit organization is in contact with more than 7 million students, according to its website. It did not immediately return calls for comment. PROBING FOR ANSWERS Law enforcement authorities are investigating the breach, though it was unclear on Sunday how many customers or students had been exposed. Epsilon is also looking into what went wrong. “While we are cooperating with authorities and doing a thorough investigation, we cannot say anything else,” said Epsilon spokeswoman Jessica Simon. “We can’t confirm any impacted or non-impacted clients, or provide a list (of companies) at this point in time.” Capital One, which also runs a bank, and Walgreens, the largest U.S. drugstore, said the Epsilon hacker accessed its customer e-mail addresses, but no personally identifiable information. TiVo, a maker of digital video recorders, said the information that was obtained was limited to e-mail addresses and clients’ first names. The incident comes three years after hackers penetrated Heartland Payment Systems, a credit and debit card processor, in one of the biggest identity-theft cases in U.S. history. In that case, notorious hacker Albert Gonzalez led a ring that stole more than 40 million payment card numbers, and was later sentenced to 20 years in prison. On Friday, JPMorgan Chase & Co, the second-largest U.S. bank, and Kroger Co, the biggest U.S. supermarket operator, said that some customers were exposed as part of the Epsilon data breach. Citigroup announced that it had been affected on Saturday evening. Spokesman Sean Kevelighan said the bank started informing its customers of the breach on Friday through a link on its website. Some of Epsilon’s other clients include Verizon Communications Inc, Blackstone Group LP’s Hilton Hotels, Kraft Foods Inc, and AstraZeneca. (Reporting by Jonathan Spicer and Maria Aspan, editing by Maureen Bavdek, Diane Craft and Gunna Dickson) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: U.S. Stocks Fall, S&P 500 Trims Best 1Q Since 1998

March 31, 2011

March 31 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks fell, trimming the biggest first-quarter rally for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since 1998, as a Federal Reserve official said interest rates may need to rise and concern about Europe’s debt crisis grew. Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Inside One Of Goldman Sachs’ Most Profitable Divisions

March 28, 2011

For Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Special Situations Group, disasters can be a source of some of the biggest profits. Now the secretive investing operation faces its own potential calamity.

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Inder Sidhu: When Wrong Makes Right: The Upside of Failure

March 25, 2011

If you haven’t achieved the success you thought you would by now, blame failure — or, rather, the lack of it. Confused? Don’t be. The surprising truth about success is this: it often is the byproduct of repeated failures. Take NBA legend Michael Jordan, widely regarded as the best basketball player of his generation. Most fans only remember Jordan as the unstoppable force that powered the Chicago Bulls to six NBA titles. But Jordan himself remembers his many setbacks. In a famous commercial for Nike, the five-time MVP recalls the field goals he missed — 12,345 to be exact — the dozens of winning shots that came up short and the hundreds of games he lost. ” I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed ,” he says. Then there’s entrepreneur James Dyson, whom I have profiled before . In 2007, the vacuum magnate told Fast Company Magazine that failure is a primary ingredient in success: “If you want to discover something that other people haven’t, you need to do things the wrong way. Initiate a failure by doing something that’s very silly, unthinkable, naughty, dangerous. Watching why that fails can take you on a completely different path.” Throughout history, many famous people have discovered the road to success was paved with temporary setbacks. Albert Einstein did. So did Ronald Reagan, Sam Walton and The Beatles. When these individuals experienced disappointment, they gained new insights and became stronger afterwards. As I like to tell my children, “Fail early, fail often, but don’t fail twice for the same reason.” Loosely translated, it means this: Challenge the norm but recognize quickly when and why an idea does not work; liberally apply insights gleaned from previous setbacks; and never forget the lessons of the past. This advice isn’t new or unique to Silicon Valley, but it’s not followed as widely as it should be. In fact, some experts believe safeguards put in place to prop up banks and other organizations are actually hurting institutions by mitigating their failures. As a result, they don’t learn from their setbacks what they should. In an article penned for HBR.org this month, author and researcher Umair Haque concludes , “America just might be terminally deficient in terms of one of the fundamental drivers of 21st century competitiveness: what I call economies of failure.” How did this happen? This month’s Harvard Business Review examines why. In particular, the magazine explores why so many leaders fear what editors call the new “F-word” of business. Some managers, for example, are loathe to disappoint their colleagues or upset their investors. Others fear retribution if they try something and fail. Unless they are negligent or downright foolish, they shouldn’t. Instead of penalties, they would do better to think in terms of missed learning opportunities. Take Dyson, who famously made 5,127 prototypes of his namesake upright vacuum before getting it right. Each time he erred, he reminded himself that he was learning how not to make a better device. Innovative leaders from other fields often say the same. At the Game Developers Conference 2011 held this month in San Francisco, several leading innovators shared a stage to discuss what they learned from their biggest blunders — and what others could glean as well. PopCap senior game designer George Fan, creator of ” Plants vs. Zombies ,” told the audience that he learned to keep things simple after producing one of his biggest failures, ” Cat-Mouse Foosball .” After realizing the error of his ways, Fan thought about quitting the game business , which is ironic given that learning from mistakes is the point of many video games. But Fan persevered, crediting his overly complicated disappointment for helping him produce hits later. Today, smart organizations are also thinking long and hard about their failures. They are warming to the idea that innovating is as much about shortfalls as it about breakthroughs. To that end, they’re developing processes for analyzing their mistakes and institutionalizing the learnings that come from them. To get to these understandings, they ask tough questions: Was our vision wrong, or our strategy or execution? Instead of denials and excuses, they examine their assumptions, biases and methods. Every time they make a mistake, they endeavor to discover why. Then they make necessary course corrections. If you are bold and willing, you can do the same. Inder Sidhu is the Senior Vice President of Strategy & Planning for Worldwide Operations at Cisco , and the author of Doing Both: How Cisco Captures Today’s Profits and Drives Tomorrow’s Growth . Author proceeds from sales of Doing Both go to charity. Follow Inder on Twitter at @indersidhu .

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Video: Kedrosky Sees Groupon as a Short-Selling Opportunity

March 18, 2011

March 17 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg News contributor Paul Kedrosky talks about the outlook for Groupon Inc., owner of the biggest coupon website. Groupon has held talks with banks about an initial public offering that would value the company at as much as $25 billion, according to two people with knowledge of the discussions. Kedrosky talks with Cory Johnson and Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Matt Kepnes: How to Save Money for Your Next Trip

March 6, 2011

Most people never make the leap into extended travel because they don’t think they can afford it. They envision needing tens of thousands of dollars to travel well — a daunting number to save for most. I remember when I began saving for my first trip around the world. I got a rough estimate of how much money I thought I needed and thought, “Woah. How will I ever save that much?” If you also fall into that same category of thought, here are some tips for saving money for your trip around the world: Eat In! Eating out is easily a big expense for almost everyone. Instead of having $10 lunches and $20 dinners, brown bag it to work and cook dinner at night. Even if you still go out once a week, a person can survive on groceries for around $60 per week. That’s a lot less than eating out every meal. This is the biggest D’uh! Tip, and while it may be inconvenient to cook all the time, the truth is that if you really want to supercharge your savings, changing your eating habits is the best way to do it. Cut the Coffee . Love your Starbucks? Well, Starbucks doesn’t love you or your bank account. Your daily cup of coffee averages out to $150 per month ($5 for a coffee). That’s enough money to travel around Southeast Asia for a week! If you drink more than one cup of coffee a day just think of quickly it all adds up. Give up coffee, switch to tea, or brew your own java. Coffee is the little thing that quietly drains your bank account without you ever noticing. Drink Less . Alcohol is expensive. Heck, even on the road, the biggest money suck is usually a night out. It may not be appealing to spend nights inside and not out with your friends, but spending a hundred dollars or more a week will really add up. Try to cut down on your evenings out. Have friends over, see a movie, watch TV, create a travel blog, or read a book. It’s not exciting but the goal is worth the sacrifice. And if you aren’t a big “going out” person, you’re already half way there! Lose the Car . Cars cost a lot of money. If you can, get rid of yours. You ‘re probably spending hundreds of dollars each month on gas and insurance. That money can be used while abroad and it’s not like you are going to need your car when you’re backpacking India. Learn to love the bus, ride the subway, or walk. It might not be feasible to get rid of your car completely, but you can certainly cut down on the amount of driving that you do. Not having a car may be inconvenient or make your commute longer, but it will save you lots of money. Plus, walking is good exercise after all. Move Out! Get rid of that apartment or bring in some roommates. Lowering your housing costs will allow you to see huge gains in your savings. If you can, try to move in with mom and dad. Then you’ll have no housing costs! It may kill your social life but, hey, a social life costs money anyways and you’re trying to save. If moving in with the folks isn’t an option, bring in a roommate instead. Turn your living room into a spare room and have a housemate! If you’re spending hundreds per month on rent, cutting that in half or reducing it to zero will give you the biggest whole number jump in your bank account. Switch Your Bank! This is more a tip for the road but it still helps. Get a bank account at Bank of America and use their ATM partners to avoid ATM fees when you travel . Get HSBC and use their worldwide ATMs and avoid fees. Get a Capital One account and never pay fees. Fees just drain money out of your bank account. Moreover, in Schwab Bank has no ATM fees at all. As you can see, there are many ways to avoid bank fees! Get a New Credit Card . Get a travel credit card that gives you free money, free rooms, or free flights. It’s less money you’ll have to spend later on. Travel credit cards usually give you huge sign up bonuses and they provide easy ways to rack up frequent flier miles, which can give you free flights or get you into business class. I received over 100,000 miles last year from credit card bonuses. Get a High Yield Savings Account . Now that your savings is going up, make it work for you. Don’t leave it in a savings account where you get .5% a month. Even though interest rates are low, you can still get 2% with some accounts. Get an online money market and actually make some money. It won’t be a lot but a little free money is better than no free money. For online banks, I like Emigrant Direct. Capital One and Discover bank also offer good rates. Keep the Change. One thing that really helped me save money quickly when I was saving for my trip was putting my change aside. At the end of every day, I put my change into a giant container. By the end of the year, my change had accumulated into over $500 USD. That’s a lot of change. I knew a friend who used to do it with dollar bills and had over $1,000. Everyday we “bleed” money. Stopping that bleeding can get us a lot of savings that we can use for travel. While most of these tips might have you living like a hermit, the real way to save money is to not spend it. You’ll want to have some excitement in your life while you’re home, but the trick is to find the cheap alternative. Moreover, you should always make your money work for you. When I was home, I invested my savings, I used high interest savings accounts, cash back cards; whatever it took because every extra dollar was more money on the road. At the end of the day, the more you save, the longer you can be on the road. Matthew Kepnes has been traveling around the world for the past 4.5 years. He runs the award winning budget travel site, Nomadic Matt’s Travel Site . For more information, you can visit his Facebook page or sign up for his RSS feed .

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Video: U.S. Stocks Decline, Crude Oil Advances to 29-Month High

March 4, 2011

March 4 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks declined, erasing almost half of the biggest daily gain in three months, amid investor concern that the surge in crude oil price to a 29-month high will curtail the expansion in the world’s biggest economy. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Robert Reich: The Real News on Jobs

March 4, 2011

Are we making progress on the jobs front? The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports 192,000 new jobs in February (220,000 new jobs in the private sector and a drop in government employment), and a drop in the overall unemployment rate from 9 to 8.9 percent. We’re heading in the right direction but far too slowly to make a real dent in unemployment. To get the unemployment rate down to 6 percent by 2014 we’d need over 300,000 new jobs a month, every month, between now and then. Overall, the number of unemployed Americans — 13.7 million — is about the same as it was last month. The number working part time who’d rather be working full time — 8.3 million — is also about the same. But to get to the most important trend you have to dig under the job numbers and look at what kind of new jobs are being created. That’s where the big problem lies. The National Employment Law Project did just that. Its new data brief shows that most of the new jobs created since February 2010 (about 1.26 million) pay significantly lower wages than the jobs lost (8.4 million) between January 2008 and February 2010. While the biggest losses were higher-wage jobs paying an average of $19.05 to $31.40 an hour, the biggest gains have been lower-wage jobs paying an average of $9.03 to $12.91 an hour. In other words, the big news isn’t jobs. It’s wages. For several years now, conservative economists have blamed high unemployment on the purported fact that many Americans have priced themselves out of the global/high-tech jobs market. So if we want more jobs, they say, we’ll need to take pay and benefit cuts. And that’s exactly what Americans have been doing. Employers have demanded wage and benefit concessions from their unionized workers and often got them. Detroit is creating auto jobs again — but new hires are getting about half the pay that auto workers were getting before. Airline workers are taking home 30 to 50 percent less than they did years ago. And so on. Conservatives say it’s not enough. That’s why unions have to be busted — and why some governors are seeking to abolish laws requiring workers to become dues-paying union members in order to get certain jobs. Hence, the fights brewing in the Midwest. Meanwhile, millions of non-union workers have accepted cuts in pay and benefits just to keep their jobs. Health benefits have been slashed, pension contributions from employers dramatically cut, wages dropped or “frozen.” Millions of private-sector workers have been fired and then re-hired as contract workers to do almost exactly what they were doing before, but without any benefits or job security. The current attack on public-sector workers should be seen in this light. The charge is they now take home more generous pay and benefit packages than private-sector workers. It’s not true on the wage side if you control for level of education, but it wasn’t even true on the benefits side until private-sector benefits fell off a cliff. Meanwhile, across America, public-sector workers have been “furloughed,” which is a nice word for not collecting any pay for weeks at a time. At this rate, the unemployment rate will continue to decline. But so will the pay and benefits of most Americans. Conservative economists have it wrong. The underlying problem isn’t that so many Americans have priced themselves out of the global/high-tech labor market. It’s that they’re getting a smaller and smaller share of the pie. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

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Video: Stocks Advance as Consumer Confidence Exceeds Forecasts

February 25, 2011

Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, preventing the biggest weekly drop in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since August, as confidence among American consumers beat forecasts and climbed to the highest level in three years. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Morgan Says Mey Icki Gives Diageo a Platform in Turkey

February 21, 2011

Feb. 21 (Bloomberg) — Andrew Morgan, European President of Diageo Plc, discusses the agreement to buy Mey Icki, the biggest Turkish distiller, for an enterprise value of 3.3 billion Turkish lira ($2.1 billion) to pick up the biggest maker of local drink Raki. He talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Kinder Morgan Raises $2.9 Billion in LBO-Backed IPO

February 11, 2011

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cristina Alesci discusses Kinder Morgan Inc., the energy-pipeline company whose owners include the Carlyle Group and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., raising $2.9 billion in the biggest private equity-backed U.S. initial public offering. Alesci, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop,” also discusses the outlook for leveraged buyouts. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: U.S. Stocks Plunge on Egyptian Protests, Oil Rises

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. Stocks worldwide plunged the most since November, crude oil posted the biggest jump since 2009 and the dollar rose versus the euro after protesters posed the biggest challenge to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Gnehm Says `Years of Frustration’ Driving Egypt Protests

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Edward Gnehm, former U.S. ambassador to Jordan, and John Brynjolfsson, chief investment officer at Armored Wolf LLC, talk about the protests in Egypt. Egyptian protesters clashed with police throughout the country and into the night, defying a curfew and setting fire to some buildings, in the biggest challenge to President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Gnehm and Brynjolfsson speak with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This is an excerpt from the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Elmasry Expects Egypt `Turmoil’ Until Mubarak Ousted

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Mohammed Elmasry, a professor emeritus at the University of Waterloo in Canada, talks from Cairo about the demonstrations in that city. Protesters demonstrated throughout Egypt, with clashes erupting in central Cairo, in the biggest challenge to President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Elmasry talks with Lisa Murphy on Bloomberg Television’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Kerry Urges Egypt to Respect the Democratic Process

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senator John Kerry, a Massachusetts Democrat, talks with Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, about the unrest in Egypt. Protesters demonstrated throughout Egypt with clashes erupting in central Cairo, in the biggest challenge to President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Herrmann Says U.S. Economy Poised for Growth in 2011

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — John Herrmann, senior fixed-income strategist at State Street Global Markets, discusses the report on U.S. fourth-quarter gross domestic product and the outlook for the economy. The U.S. economy accelerated in the fourth quarter of 2010, driven by the biggest gain in consumer spending in more than four years and rising exports. Herrmann speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: U.S. Economy Grew 3.2 Percent in Fourth Quarter of 2010

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. gross domestic product climbed at a 3.2 percent annual pace from October through December, falling short of the 3.5 percent median forecast of 85 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and restrained by the biggest drag from inventories in two decades. Betty Liu reports on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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FOREX: Dollar’s Biggest Rally in Two Weeks Does Little to Confirm a Bullish Reversal

January 21, 2011

FOREX: Dollar’s Biggest Rally in Two Weeks Does Little to Confirm a Bullish Reversal

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Key Japanese Companies To Exhibit The Biggest Construction Equipment Expo in Australia

January 20, 2011

Key Japanese Companies To Exhibit The Biggest Construction Equipment Expo in Australia

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Analyst: Credit Card Problems As Low As We’ve Ever Seen In December

January 18, 2011

NEW YORK — Fewer credit card accounts slipped into default in December than in any other month of 2010, and signs point to further improvement ahead. All six of the biggest card issuers Tuesday posted their lowest rates for charge-offs, or accounts written off as uncollectible. Citibank, which has had some of the highest charge-off rates over the past two years, posted the biggest decline. It wrote off 8.34 percent of its card balances in December, down from 9.4 percent in November and well below the high of 11.55 percent posted in March. Discover, Chase and Capital One also reported substantial declines. While the rates of balances companies wrote off declined consistently throughout the year, they remain high by historical standards. “There are some good improvements,” said Mike Dean, a managing director with Fitch Ratings. Fitch’s charge-off index, which tracks the industry, remains near record levels, he said. “We’ve seen some better numbers there, but nothing to say, ‘Wow!’” Dean said he expects charge-off rates to continue improving, but noted that the defaults are “highly correlated” to the unemployment rate. With the jobless rate is forecast to remain high throughout the year, it is difficult to predict when charge-offs will return to normal levels, said Jeff Hibbs, an analyst with Moody’s Investors Service. Industry wide, the charge-off rate peaked in the second quarter of last year at 10.37 percent of balances, according to the latest data from the Federal Reserve. In the two years prior to the recession, it averaged 3.82 percent, Fed records show. Credit card debt has been dropping the last two years, reflecting a combination of factors, including individuals paying down balances and credit card companies cutting the amount of available credit and writing off what they can’t collect. The elimination of many card users who could not pay their bills from the pool of borrowers through charge-offs is one reason for the lower charge-off rates. Hibbs said that the customers who have been able to keep paying their bills despite the downturn and the spike in unemployment have proven they are trustworthy borrowers. “Those left have exhibited a great deal of resilience to this stress,” Hibbs said. “They withstood the depths of the last three years.” Card companies have tightened lending standards, so people who lost access to credit during the recession have not been able to get new cards. Fed data shows that in November, total revolving debt held by U.S. consumers – which is mostly credit cards – fell to $796.5 billion. That’s about 18.5 percent below the record high reached in the third quarter of 2008, and the lowest point since September 2004. Credit reporting agency TransUnion has estimated as many as 8 million former credit card users no longer have cards, either by choice or because their banks cut their credit lines. Reflecting the strong positions that remaining credit card borrowers are in, December rates for payments late by 30 days or more also reached annual lows for all six top card issuers. That figure, also known as the delinquency rate, is considered a precursor for future defaults. “The numbers this month are as low as we have ever seen them,” Hibbs said. “That’s a strong indicator that charge-offs will continue to move steadily lower.” All issuers are participating in the industry-wide improvement, he added, noting that the first part of the year is typically the best for credit card payments, because consumers frequently use tax returns to catch up on overdue bills.

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Dollar Fully Retraces its Opening Gains for the Year with its Biggest Weekly Drop in 4 Months

January 15, 2011

Dollar Fully Retraces its Opening Gains for the Year with its Biggest Weekly Drop in 4 Months

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FOREX: Dollar Extends its Biggest Rally in a Month with the Help of Strong Data and Confused Risk Trends

January 6, 2011

FOREX: Dollar Extends its Biggest Rally in a Month with the Help of Strong Data and Confused Risk Trends

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US Holiday Retail Sales Surge

January 3, 2011

Holiday shoppers in the US increased purchases at retail stores in the latest week to post the biggest gain in samestore sales of the shopping season according to Bloomberg

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Illinois May Borrow 15B

January 1, 2011

Illinois Governor Pat Quinn is looking to borrow 15 billion to pay overdue bills and balance the biggest budget deficit in the states history

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Nicole Lapin: States of Pain: Bankruptcy Bandage?

December 31, 2010

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

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