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(MENAFN) Venezuela’s Central Bank said that annual inflation rate dropped to 26 percent in January, compared with 27.6 percent at the end of 2011, reported AP. The bank added that last month’s …

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Venezuela’s annual inflation down to 26% in Jan

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$27b for euro-hit nations

by on January 26, 2012

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(MENAFN – Khaleej Times) The World Bank said on Wednesday that it was making $27 billion available for countries in central and eastern Europe and Central Asia impacted hard by the eurozone …

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$27b for euro-hit nations

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India’s inflation eases to 7.47% in December

January 16, 2012

(MENAFN) India’s inflation marked the lowest pace in two years in December, giving room for the central bank to keep interest rates on hold for a second month, Bloomberg reported. The benchmark …

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Growth figures from UK and the US with focus still on Jackson Hole

August 27, 2011

(MENAFN – ecPulse) It will be a busy and volatile end for the week today dear reader with the anticipation coming to an end with the central bankers’ symposium at Jackson Hole later today. Before we …

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S. Korea, Uzbekistan Sign Economic Agreements

August 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) South Korea and Uzbekistan agreed to jointly explore rare earth resources in the Central Asian nation and signed other economic cooperation agreements Wednesday, a day …

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Updated: Cassidy Turley Bolsters Southeast Presence With Carter …

June 1, 2011

Cassidy Turley announced its intention to acquire the brokerage and property management operations of Atlanta-based commercial real estate services firm Carter, a move that would gain it a significant foothold in the Atlanta and Central … Commercial Real Estate & Multi-Family Loans – Both Debt & Equity – California & Nationwide. Retail – Office – Industrial – Hotels – Multi-Family – Student Housing – Single Tenant SBA Loans . Distressed REO Properties – Whole Loans …

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Lynn Parramore: Conversation with Jeff Madrick, Author of Age of Greed (Part One)

May 31, 2011

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . Roosevelt Institute Senior Fellow Jeff Madrick recently sat down with ND20 Editor Lynn Parramore to discuss his latest book, Age of Greed: The Triumph of Finance and the Decline of America, 1970 to the Present , which hits stands today. If you’re in the New York City area and want to learn more, catch Jeff at Cooper Union on Thursday, June 2nd. Click here for more information on the event. Lynn Parramore : You called your book Age of Greed , tracing the antecedents and activities of a four-decade period starting in the 1970s. Why did you choose greed as the central theme? Why not “Age of Risk” or “Age of Delusion”, for example? Jeff Madrick : I think greed always exists. It rises and falls with the times. But when it’s unchecked by government, which has been happening since the 1970s, it festers on itself. It becomes outsized and it badly distorts the economy. That is to say, self-interest rises to a level of greed that overwhelms the economic invisible hand. When self-interest turns into greed, people start using the power of business to undermine the way markets should work. What happened in this era was that people worked in their self-interest. They didn’t just take more risk. They were not deluded. Many of them took more risks than they should and merely did it because they made a buck. So greed really drove this decade: money and self-interest in the extreme drove very bad decision-making on Wall Street, which in turn, it’s important to emphasize, deeply harmed the American economy. LP : Walter Wriston, a name perhaps unknown to many Americans, gives the title to not one but two chapters of your book? Why is this figure pivotal? JM : My writing career began in the 1970s, so he was a big name to me. I interviewed him several times. Walter Wriston was the pioneer in the effort to deregulate financial markets. He was a talented, very bright man who ran a very powerful bank and had enormous access to the Republicans who took over in 1969 through Richard Nixon’s victory. And he is the one who began unraveling the regulations — the way controlled commercial banks, which took FDIC-insured savings deposits, could invest their money. In fact, as people read the book, they’ll see that he was a free-market ideologue. He really hated the New Deal. His father, a prominent conservative historian who ultimately was president of Brown University, hated the New Deal. Wriston inherited that from him in my view. But he also used it for his company’s own gain. In the 1970s, Wriston really began to whittle down the famous ” Regulation Q “, which controlled the interest rate that could pay savers to attract money. And therefore the banks could get more aggressive about where they lent the money. He also developed an enormous international business. What was remarkable about Wriston — to the detriment of the American economy to a degree but especially to the third world — was that he took the petrodollars of the Arab nations. The Arab nations got a lot of dollars when they tripled, quadrupled and again doubled the price of oil. All of that was paid in dollars to them. They had to do something with those dollars. Wriston leaped in to recycle them by making loans to the third world –especially by developing nations. Especially in South America. Government could just as easily have been handled by the I.M.F., the World Bank, or some ad hoc group of governments to oversee the use of that money, and even to make it equity money, not loan money — investments and productive business. Instead it was lent to countries, and, to some degree, companies that had exported commodities. Wriston heralded how well his loan officers could manage that money and the loans almost all turned bad in the 1980s — so bad that the banks chose to stop lending to countries in trouble, particularly Mexico in 1982. The Fed and the I.M.F. had to rescue, in effect, the American banks. LP : Wriston started his career -and remained for some time — a rather unassuming man who lived in a middle class housing project. But by the end of his career he was living among celebrities and driving fancy sports cars. Does that trajectory reflect a key change in American banking and financial culture? JM : A good friend of mine told me back in the ’70s that financiers never became wildly rich in American history. Take J.P. Morgan, the greatest financier in American history. When he died, Andrew Carnegie said, “I didn’t know he had so little money.” In the 1970s that began to change. Financiers became enormously wealthy. Wriston was the leading edge of that, but he wasn’t the man to make by any means the most money. He wanted to make a bank into a growth company, like Xerox or IBM or Johnson & Johnson, which were the great growth companies. Or later, Microsoft, Apple. But should banks have been growth companies? In the meantime, he began to travel in a very powerful world and he began to live the good life. I think it was the beginning of that kind of thing, but others took it to excesses that made him look like a piker. LP : That brings me to Ivan Boesky. He’s the first character in the book who really seems to capture the very essence of greed. He’s a bandit with no pretense that he’s working on behalf of anyone else. Was he the beginning of this era’s greed in its purest form? JM : Ivan had no illusions about what he was doing. Now, I don’t know if that’s as un-admirable as it sounds. Because many of the other guys created a pretense to allow them to seek their self-interest–and, in my view, become excessive, even corrupt. Ivan knew he was corrupt. He intended to be corrupt. Where he was stupid is that he really didn’t even try to seriously cover his tracks. LP : Was he an outlier? Did this type of behavior become something others wanted to emulate? JM : He was the leading edge of the culture. Few people were quite as crude as Boesky. They disguised it. They didn’t brag about it that much. But they were very aggressive in their own way and Ivan occasionally talked about that famous line from Adam Smith that greed is healthy. He thought he was emulating Smith. By greed he meant self-interest. But he wasn’t really concerned about those bigger things. He had certain psychological issues, some of which I trace in my book. He needed constant social affirmation. He needed it. In my view, he couldn’t walk into a room anonymously. It just was too much for his shallow and very weak ego. He needed that money and would do anything for it. He was a mobster. He was addicted to money and he would commit financial crimes to get it with no qualms. LP : You outline how the hatred of government intrusion drove many of the early proponents of the free market model. This seems a great irony, given that financiers who hate government need its cooperation — its guarantees, its bailouts — in order to get and stay rich. How do you explain this contradiction? JM : Self-interest means that you will do anything, even utilize government, to make your money and to retain your place in society. There are many examples of people who think that the rules apply to others but not themselves. Wriston was a classic example of this. It wasn’t only the bad bank loans. In 1970 when Penn Central went bankrupt, his bank made the most commercial paper loans to Penn Central. He was scared to death everything was going to fall apart. He called the Fed – I don’t know if he spoke to the Chairman, Arthur Burns, but the Fed opened its window like it did in 2007. This happened many times with Wriston. He talked this game of free competition, but when he needed to be bailed out, he got bailed out. So it’s an extreme hypocrisy — not an unusual characteristic of egotistical, ambitious men and women. There are double standards. LP : Many argue today that government has been captured, or even restructured through the influence of the financial and banking industries. Is this true? If so, how can trust in government – trust in its ability to intervene in crises — be restored? JM : There is no explanation for the deregulation and lack of oversight on the part of Washington except that they were snookered, beholden, or saw where their bread was buttered because of the rise of Wall Street and how much money you could make. Something we have to be cautious about: we’re snookered by a simplistic ideology. The people who adopt ideologies and idealism do so often because it favors themselves and their own pocketbooks. The history of this period is a history of the abdication of government authority. Part of it was the result of this rising ideology in the ’70s. Part of it was because Americans became convinced that big government and some kinds of regulations are problems. A lot of it had to do eventually with the sheer power of business to attract and influence these decision makers. LP : Could government have done anything to stop greed? JM : Greed would have remained checked had government been doing what it should be doing. And that’s a tragedy of the age. One point we have to make clear is that the nation did not start wasting its money and losing its precious resources in 2007, 2008 and 2009. The financial community has been ill-serving the nation since the 1970s. I talked about the bad loans Wriston made. There were also all kinds of bad real estate loans made in that period. In the ’80s the banks and other financial institutions financed the corporate takeovers – that was billions and billions of dollars. The S&L’s made all kinds of bad loans because they were deregulated. In the early ’90s banks and securities firms began using derivatives to make tricky loans to companies like Proctor&Gamble and Orange County. In 1994, when the Fed raised interest rates, those financial structures fell apart and Wall Street almost with it. In the late 1990s, Wall Street financed all kinds of high-tech fantasies. There was bad accounting. Outright lies by financial analysts on Wall Street. You could not keep your job and make your fame on Wall Street unless you lied. Accounting fraud and unaccepted accounting practices were rife throughout American in the late 1990s. LP : So greed is the central problem, but deceit is the handmaiden? JM : When you sell a product — Electrolux vacuum cleaners, Avon hand lotions – it would be naïve to think that there isn’t some kind of exaggeration. But Wall Street became imbued with deceit at very high levels of transactions. The cost to the economy – the misallocation of resources – was huge. In the 1970s there were the bad loans in Central America. In the 1980s, the outrageous investments made by S&Ls with federally insured money. In the 1980s again – huge hostile takeovers financed with tax-deductible dollars that were not ameliorated by government. In the 1990s, the high-technology fantasies — Enron and WorldCom, telecom companies rife with accounting frauds. This amounted to hundreds of billions of dollars of bad investment. Even trillions of dollars. And then, of course, the 2000s – there were the subprime mortgages and other bad mortgages. Trillions, literally. LP : What have these losses meant to America’s economy? JM : This is all a misallocation of resources in America. When Alan Greenspan said his great mea culpa –”I have this model of the economy and it worked for forty years and then it didn’t work” – that is nonsense. It did not work. There was constant misallocation of losses. He would argue, well, we need those losses in order to have the good. But look what happened to the economy during this period. We had twenty-two or twenty-three years of low-productivity growth. When productivity did start to rise, typical workers benefited from it only for a few short years in the late 1990s. Wages over this period of the Age of Greed have stagnated. They’re actually down for men. They’re up for women but only moderately over time, and women still make significantly less than men do with the same qualifications on average. What kind of economy is that? We haven’t invested in transportation, education, health care advances, energy. The list goes on and on. And who knows how much manufacturing innovation we failed to invest in because of what happened on Wall Street. **Stay tuned tomorrow for Part Two of this interview and find out what we need to do to change course.

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce Stage IV Drilling Programme Results From Central Eyre Iron Project

May 30, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce Stage IV Drilling Programme Results From Central Eyre Iron Project

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce Stage IV Drilling Programme Results From Central Eyre Iron Project

May 30, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce Stage IV Drilling Programme Results From Central Eyre Iron Project

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Disclosure Of Secret Fed Lending Raises Eyebrows

May 26, 2011

In the midst of the global financial crisis in 2008, the Federal Reserve lent Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse and Royal Bank of Scotland at least $30 billion each at interest rates as low as 0.01 percent with no public disclosure of the details, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday. The latest revelations about the covert infusions of credit provided by the Fed to some of the world’s largest banks has amplified accusations that the central bank is a power unto itself, operating according to its own devices and in the interest of major financial institutions — and beyond accountability to taxpayers. “It just points out that this was about secrecy to protect banks basically from embarrassment from transparency, which is not supposed to be what the Fed’s about,” said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic Policy and Research, in Washington. “That is the fundamental problem with the Fed,” Baker added. “They’re supposed to be an agency of the government, not an agency of the banks. But reflexively, there they are protecting the banks, again and again and again.” Some experts say that the Fed acted properly to withhold details of the transactions, asserting the broader financial system might well have been spooked had it been known to what degree the central bank was propping up major lenders. “Releasing data closer to the time of the crisis could have had an adverse impact on some firms,” said Ernest Patrikis, a partner at the law firm White & Case and a former chief operating officer of the New York Fed. “There’s a difference between a crisis and a period of time after a crisis, in terms of impact.” That was the Fed’s logic, as it handed out nearly free cash to major banks and other institutions while withholding from public view the names of the recipients, the dollar figures and the terms of the loans. But in recent months, the Fed has been forced by Congress and by a Supreme Court decision — in a case originally filed by Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News — to release the details of its so-called emergency lending programs. The Fed undertook those programs throughout 2008, accelerating its lending that fall in the aftermath of the collapse of the investment banking giant Lehman Brothers. In December, under orders from Congress, the Fed released a trove of documents that name the recipients of $3.3 trillion in aid intended to curb damage from the developing financial crisis. The documents describe a variety of Fed special lending facilities, including one program in which nine firms, five of them foreign, were able to borrow $5 billion for 28 days at the extremely low interest rate of 0.0078 percent, The Huffington Post reported. In late March, the Fed released information about its primary lending facility — the so-called discount window — which had provided ultra-cheap cash during the height of the crisis to a range of firms. During the week in October 2008 when borrowing under the program peaked, foreign banks received more than 70 percent of the $110.7 billion that the Fed lent out, Bloomberg News reported. Arab Banking Corp., a $28 billion lender now majority-owned by Libya’s central bank, got at least $3.2 billion that autumn, The Huffington Post reported . In 2008, Bloomberg News asked for Fed records under the Freedom of Information Act, but the Fed resisted. Revealing the names of borrowers could cause “substantial competitive harm” to those institutions because they could be perceived as weak, the Fed argued in a court filing. “[B]ecause Reserve Banks are the ‘lenders of last resort,’ the fact that an institution is borrowing at the [discount window], if publicly disclosed, can fuel market speculation and rumors that the entity’s liquidity strains stem from a financial problem at the institution that is not publicly known,” reads a May 2009 statement the Fed filed in a New York district court. The case went to the Supreme Court, which rejected an attempt by a banking industry group to block the Fed’s disclosure. So, for the first time since the Fed’s discount window began lending in 1914, the central bank in late March released the identities of its primary facility’s borrowers. The latest details came via an investigation published Thursday by Bloomberg News , which reported that Goldman and other financial institutions borrowed additional tens of billions from the Fed’s primary source of credit. A spokesman for the New York Fed, which administered the emergency lending program, said the Bloomberg article merely added the names of the banks that received the loans to previous public disclosures about the existence of the transactions. “The establishment and execution” of the program “were clearly communicated to the public,” the spokesperson said in an e-mailed statement. “On March 7, 2008, the New York Fed announced through a public statement its intent to conduct these open market operations. Further, the aggregate results of each auction were immediately posted on the New York Fed’s web site.” But the statement the spokesman referenced, written in highly technical language, does not name any recipients and indeed reads like a blanket assertion of lending authority. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has often said the Fed should be a more transparent institution. Last month, the chairman spoke to reporters at the first press conference after a committee meeting in the central bank’s history. “I personally have always been a big believer in providing as much information as you can to help the public understand what you’re doing, to help the markets understand what you’re doing, and to be accountable to the public for what you’re doing,” Bernanke said during the conference. But Christopher Whalen, managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics, pointed to the latest disclosures about the extent of the Fed’s covert operations as a sign that the institution has yet to live up to the standard its chairman has publicly laid out. “People want the information, whether it’s loan-level data or data on a security or on an issuer. Whatever it is, they want it,” Whalen said. “But you still have the Fed, because they’re such a reactionary organization, resisting this.” Chris Kirkham contributed to this report.

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Update On Central Eyre Iron Project 2011 Stage VI Drilling Programme

May 23, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Update On Central Eyre Iron Project 2011 Stage VI Drilling Programme

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Westgold Resources Limited (ASX:WGR) Strong Gold Drilling Results Continue At Central Murchison Project

May 12, 2011

Westgold Resources Limited (ASX:WGR) Strong Gold Drilling Results Continue At Central Murchison Project

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Mobility Veteran to Lead Wavelink Sales in Central Europe

May 11, 2011

SALT LAKE CITY, UT and LONDON–(Marketwire – May 11, 2011) – Wavelink Corporation ( www.wavelink.com ) today announced the appointment of Patrick Molemans as its sales manager for Central Europe. Molemans’ 22 years of experience in mobile applications, auto ID equipment and managed services will be used to help key end users and Wavelink partners, such as device manufacturers, integrators and resellers, strengthen their relationship with Wavelink and maximize the value they receive from its solutions.

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Video: Cunningham Says Bin Laden Being `Off Grid’ Aided Capture: Video

May 3, 2011

May 2 (Bloomberg) — Bryan Cunningham, a partner at Morgan & Cunningham LLC and a former Central Intelligence Agency officer, talks about the role of technology in helping the U.S. find and kill al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. He speaks with Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Federal Reserve’s Actions May Increase Unemployment

April 28, 2011

The Federal Reserve’s purchases of more than $2 trillion in mortgage and U.S. government debt may cause an upswing in unemployment, a top regional Fed official argued Thursday in a new paper that counters the central bank’s position. The forecast by Yi Wen , an assistant vice president and economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, challenges a chorus of pro-purchase research published by the Fed’s Board of Governors in Washington and its regional banks in San Francisco and Boston. The Fed’s $2.3 trillion asset-purchase programs could lead to a 2.2 percent rise in the unemployment rate in the long term, Wen wrote. The economist argued that the increase in bank reserves — a result of the Fed’s buying programs — could lead to an increase in the amount of money flowing through the economy, which in turn would lead to inflation. Over time, that would lead to an increase in joblessness, he reckoned. Some within the Fed — as well as members of Congress, and foreign central bankers and political leaders — have publicly criticized the central bank’s recent initiatives. Detractors say the Fed lacks the tools to withdraw the record stimulus before it causes runaway inflation. Once money is in the system, they argue, it will inevitably lead to rising prices. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has countered that the poor state of the economy and near-record unemployment compels the central bank to be aggressive. The Fed has tripled the size of its balance sheet to further bring down interest rates in an effort to spur borrowing and spending. The San Francisco Fed argued in January that those efforts, known as quantitative easing, will create 3 million jobs by 2012 . The most recent round of purchasing, known as QE2 and scheduled to run through June, will lead to 700,000 new jobs, the researchers, who include San Francisco Fed President John C. Williams , forecast in their paper. Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen endorsed that research in a January speech to economists in Denver. Bernanke said at his Wednesday press conference that the purchasing programs have been successful and that the number of jobs created as a result have been “significant.” The Boston Fed predicted in November that the Fed’s asset purchases would lead to 700,000 new jobs through 2012 . By purchasing U.S. Treasury obligations and mortgage securities from Wall Street firms, the Fed increases the amount of cash at those banks. Banks are parking $1.47 trillion at the Fed beyond what is required by regulators, Fed data from last week showed. Unused, that stashed cash simply collects interest at a rate of 0.25 percent from the Fed. Fed officials, including Yellen, Bernanke and New York Fed President William Dudley, have said the central bank will be able to drain the excess bank reserves before they lead to significant inflation. But if the Fed cannot successfully manage the exit from their record stimulus program, Wen’s forecast could become a reality. An annual increase of 1 percent in the amount of money in the economy would have “almost no impact on unemployment” during the first five years, Wen wrote. But, later, a growing money supply could lead to a rise in the unemployment rate of 1-2.2 percent, Wen argued. A surge of money in the system would lead to higher prices because the value of money would decline. That would in turn lower growth and increase joblessness, he wrote. The unemployment rate stood at 8.8 percent as of last month , according to the Labor Department. It’s decreased by a full percentage point since November. On Wednesday, the Fed forecast unemployment to average 8.4 to 8.7 percent during the last three months of this year , then falling to 7.6 to 7.9 percent during the fourth quarter of 2012.

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Recovery Slows As Inflation Arrives

April 27, 2011

The Federal Reserve said growth will lag this year as the central bank finally acknowledged Wednesday what most Americans have long since realized: “Inflation has picked up.” The Fed’s statement, a customary event at the conclusion of every policy meeting, is the status update traders, bankers, businessmen and policy makers use to gauge the health of the U.S. economy. The Fed’s recognition of rising inflation did not affect its easy-money policy, though. The main interest rate will remain anchored near zero percent. Its asset-purchase program will also continue and run through its scheduled completion in June. It will be another “couple of meetings before action,” Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said during a news conference. There are five more meetings scheduled this year. The Fed’s preferred measure of inflation guides its policy decisions. That index, which is about a full percentage point lower than what consumers experience at the pump or when buying food at the register, strips out volatile prices that are not always representative of the broader price of goods. By the Fed’s measure, inflation is not yet a worry. The recovery is “proceeding at a moderate pace,” the Federal Open Market Committee, the Fed’s main policy making body, said in its statement. Last month, the recovery was simply “on a firmer footing.” The Fed lowered its estimates for growth by about half a percentage point. In January, the central bank forecast U.S. gross domestic product to rise about 3.4 to 3.9 percent in 2011 during the final three months of the year. It now forecasts GDP to increase by about 3.1 to 3.3 percent. Even though growth is expected to be lower, the Fed predicted reduced unemployment compared to its earlier estimate as well — even though the measures typically move in opposite directions. Policy makers are more confident in the strength of the labor market, which they said is finally improving, albeit “gradually.” Last month, the Fed would only say that it appeared to be getting better. The unemployment rate stood at 8.8 percent at the end of March, according to the Labor Department. The central bank forecasts unemployment to average 8.4 to 8.7 percent during the last three months of the year, a slight improvement from January’s forecast of 8.8 to 9.0 percent. But the part of the Fed’s statement that will likely be parsed by traders on Wall Street is the realization that “inflation has picked up in recent months,” which the Fed attributes to rising energy and commodity prices. Most Americans began recognizing this a few months ago. Last month, prices including food and energy rose 2.7 percent on an annual basis, Labor Department data show. Bernanke said the rate is “noticeably higher” than normal. The price of food eaten at home has risen 3.6 percent. Meats, poultry, fish and egg prices are up 7.9 percent. The average price for unleaded gasoline stands at $3.88 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association. A year ago today, fuel cost $2.86 per gallon. It’s risen 36 percent, a development Bernanke acknowledged is causing pain for working families. Prices have increased so much so fast that it’s eating into incomes and purchasing power. Hourly earnings are up only 1.7 percent over the past year, according to the Labor Department. But, when factoring inflation, wages are down 1 percent . That statistic is part of the reason why the Fed has been so aggressive in keeping interest rates as low as possible, a policy it reaffirmed Wednesday. Low interest rates spur borrowing, which should lead to spending, investing and, theoretically, hiring and higher wages. The Fed will keep the main interest rate anchored at 0 percent and will continue its asset-purchase program through completion in June, it said. The central bank has about $2.7 trillion in Treasuries and mortgage-linked securities. Another reason behind the Fed’s continued aggressiveness in the face of rising consumer prices — firms like Nike and Wal-Mart say they’re passing on commodity price increases to customers — is the central bank’s preference for an alternative measure of inflation. The Fed looks at so-called core inflation , a measure that strips out food and energy prices, when gauging the inflation rate that will guide its policy decisions. By that measure, prices are up only 0.9 percent in the year ending in February, according to the Commerce Department. The Fed aims to maintain the rate at about 2 percent. “Measures of underlying inflation are still subdued,” the Fed said Wednesday. The inflationary effect of higher commodity prices will be “transitory.” But the central bank’s inflation forecasts surged. In January, the Fed estimated that prices will rise at an annual rate of 1.3 to 1.7 percent during the final three months of the year. It now projects prices to rise 2.1 to 2.8 percent, about a full percentage point higher. Bernanke faces a dilemma, reckoned Bernard Baumohl, chief economist of the Economic Outlook Group. “There is no greater curse on Fed policymakers than the combination of a slowing economy and accelerating inflation, especially when both are largely the result of events taking place outside the U.S.,” Baumohl wrote in a note to clients. “In this instance, it is the robust demand for food and fuel coming form fast-growing emerging countries and the geopolitical turmoil that has spread across the oil-rich regions of North Africa and the Middle East. And neither of these foreign dynamics show signs of de-escalating.”

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‘America Wants To Work’: Organizing The Unemployed

April 26, 2011

The community organizing affiliate of the AFL-CIO is coordinating with state labor groups to hold monthly meetings of the unemployed in five U.S. cities, in hopes of connecting the jobless with helpful resources and involving them in local politics. Hundreds of jobless Working America members (and non-members) have attended meetings in Portland, Ore.; Albuquerque, N.M.; Denver, Colo.; Pittsburgh, Pa. and Minneapolis, Minn., officials said. The meetings, which began in February, are part of a campaign called “America Wants to Work,” aimed at helping struggling workers at a time when public officials are more focused on slashing spending on social programs and taking away collective bargaining rights. “We just want to help folks,” Chelsey Evans, state director of Working America in New Mexico, told HuffPost. “We’ve had several meetings and we’re coming together to provide services and support to anyone in the community who is unemployed. We’re finding that a lot of people really struggle to navigate through this extremely complex system, whether it’s unemployment, rental assistance, utility assistance, job counseling.” Evans said that of Working America’s 98,000 members in New Mexico, some 11,000 are unemployed. Working America is launching the New Mexico Wants to Work campaign in collaboration with the New Mexico Federation of Labor, the United Way of Central New Mexico, and the Central New Mexico Central Labor Council. Susan See, laid off early in 2009 from her job doing advertising and administrative work for a local newspaper in Albuquerque, said the New Mexico Wants to Work monthly meetings have been a big help. She’s doing some freelance photography while her search for full-time work grinds on, seemingly endlessly. “It helps a lot just to have a support network, just to know that I’m not alone,” said See, 41. “It starts to feel after a while, ‘What am I doing wrong? Is it my age, is it because I’ve been out of work so long?’ And then you start hearing that from other people, that they’re having the same issues.” Bob Tackett, executive secretary-treasurer of the Northwest Oregon Labor Council, said about 70 people showed up at the first Oregon Wants to Work meeting in February, and that turnout’s diminished slightly at subsequent meetings, which Tackett said has been disappointing. At the second gathering of the jobless, Tackett said, “I got one of the managers from the unemployment office to be there and answer some of their questions. I thought boy, this is good stuff.” Working America member Teresa Berlin of Portland said she’s been at every meeting. “It’s kind of like a support system as a well as a political activist thing,” she said. Berlin, 37, said she lost her job as a server at a restaurant in 2007. She’s been scraping by with part-time work as a cab driver, unemployment insurance, and rental income since then. “I rent out all the rooms in my house to pay the mortgage,” she said. “I have five roommates.” Berlin said she’s networked with other unemployed folks, some of whom seem to be struggling more than she is. “There’s a lot of people that are really depressed, that feel isolated,” she said. “One woman had been putting out resumes for a year and hadn’t got one single interview. I’m really blessed compared to a lot of people.” The America Wants to Work campaign is reminiscent of Working America’s effort last year to mobilize its unemployed members ahead of the midterm elections in November. Among the group’s 3 million members, half a million are jobless, according to a spokeswoman.

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Florida Workforce Agency Ends Program That Gave Superhero Capes To Jobless

April 20, 2011

A workforce agency in central Florida has ended a campaign to give superhero capes to the unemployed. Since its launch last week, the “Cape-A-Bility Challenge” faced intense media skepticism and an investigation from the statewide Agency for Workforce Innovation , which apparently considered the program a bit too innovative. In a Wednesday press release, Workforce Central Florida announced that it has “listened to the public” and will withdraw it’s “admittedly out-of-the-box creative campaign.” “Even though it seemed to offend some, it was the farthest thing from our intention which was to introduce our programs and services to job seekers and employers who need them,” the release said. “The decision was made today by our board leadership team in concern that the campaign may have been a little too out-of-the-box and missed the mark with such a broad audience.” The Associated Press reported that the job center spent more than $14,000 on 6,000 red capes as part of the campaign, which encouraged the unemployed to vanquish “Dr. Evil Unemployment,” a cartoon villain brandishing a pink slip. Cynthia Lorenzo, director of the state’s unemployment agency, reportedly called the spending “insensitive and wasteful.” The campaign included several photos, a comic strip, and a video on the central Florida agency’s website. The agency said the program had not been all bad news: “Fortunately, we’ve achieved some success in the short week-and-a-half the campaign has run, including new job postings online, new job candidates registered for services and an increase in usage of our website,” the release said. Dr. Evil Unemployment remains at large: The unemployment rate in Florida stands at 11.1 percent, according to Labor Department data released Tuesday. Here’s a picture of the supervillain facing off with a Florida worker: HuffPost readers: Did you, or did someone you know, participate in the Cape-A-Bility Challenge? PLEASE tell us about it — email arthur@huffingtonpost.com .

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Medpace Strengthens Its Clinical Management Operations in Europe With the Addition of Dieter Seitz-Tutter, Ph.D., MS

April 19, 2011

CINCINNATI, OH–(Marketwire – April 19, 2011) – Medpace, Inc. today announced the addition of Dieter Seitz-Tutter as Vice President, Europe with responsibility for leading Medpace clinical operations across Western, Central, and Eastern Europe. The addition of Dr. Seitz-Tutter, along with existing clinical and support teams across the European regions, will allow Medpace to expand operations and to position the service offerings of the Medpace family of companies.

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Rising Prices in Focus with Inflation Data, Central Bank Decision Ahead

April 8, 2011

Rising Prices in Focus with Inflation Data, Central Bank Decision Ahead

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Rising Prices in Focus with Inflation Data, Central Bank Decision Ahead

April 8, 2011

Rising Prices in Focus with Inflation Data, Central Bank Decision Ahead

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Alcatel-Lucent Leases 120,000 SF; Keeps 600 Jobs in OH

April 6, 2011

Alcatel-Lucent inked a nearly 120,000-square-foot lease at the Atrium II, a two-tower office property in Dublin, OH. The communications technology company will move approximately 600 employees to the central Ohio development starting next month. The firm currently houses its local information technology and testing operations at 6200 E. Broad St., a 1.39 million-square-foot industrial facility in Columbus. The state was at risk of losing hundreds…

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Update On Prefeasibility Study Of Central Eyre Iron Project

April 5, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Update On Prefeasibility Study Of Central Eyre Iron Project

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The Central banks’ decisions awaits the Asian region

April 3, 2011

The Central banks’ decisions awaits the Asian region

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Yen Intervention Resolves Immediate Crisis, But Japan’s Economy Still Threatened

March 18, 2011

The yen eased off its all-time high Friday as the world’s major central banks lent their support, but Japan’s economic troubles are far from over, experts say. Intervention by the Group of Seven industrial countries has curbed the recent spike in Japan’s currency, and it has, for the moment, shielded the nation against what could have been a devastating blow to trade, economists say. Still, fundamental challenges remain: last Friday’s 9.0-magnitude earthquake has crippled Japan’s economy through the coming months, economists say, as factories, roads and ports lie in ruins. Currency intervention did, however, prevent a bad situation from growing worse, according to analysts. “This is exactly what Japan needed,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist for the financial analysis firm IHS Global Insight. “If the yen had continued to rise, the contraction might have been even bigger.” The yen hit its highest value since World War II Thursday, raising fresh concerns about Japan’s economic prospects. Investors contributed to the yen’s rise by buying the currency, expecting an expensive rebuilding process in Japan, experts said. The likely thinking behind such trades was that Japanese institutions would convert foreign assets into yen to pay for damage claims and construction expenses, a process that would strengthen the currency. In anticipation, investors piled into yen, helping drive up its value. That development posed a serious threat to Japan’s economy . Already, with factories and infrastructure destroyed, trade disruptions had prompted economists to downgrade their forecasts for the nation’s output over the coming months. With the yen strengthening, prospects seemed even worse: The goods that Japan did manage to export would be more expensive and thus less attractive to foreign buyers. Toyota , for instance, estimated that each one-yen gain that Japan’s currency makes against the dollar tears about 30 billion yen from the company’s earnings, according to Bloomberg News. Amid concerns that these trade disruptions could affect economies worldwide, international powers took action. For the first time in over a decade, leaders from the G7 nations joined together to intervene in currency markets Friday, buying dollars and selling yen in an effort to tame the yen’s rise. Immediately, investors responded. Stock markets cut recent losses, and the yen fell from its high level, hitting its lowest value against the dollar since 2008. “It’s certainly what they needed to do. We were seeing a slow economic train wreck starting to develop, with the yen appreciating as it was,” said Scott Anderson, a senior economist at Wells Fargo. “The only economic engine Japan has right now — they’re like an airplane with its last engine running — is its exports.” But it’s unclear how lasting the relief will be, economists say. The last time such a coordinated effort took place was in 2000, when central banks attempted to stop the newly created euro from falling in value. The effects, back then, were temporary. The euro ticked upward after the intervention began in late September, but then fell through much of October. After a rise late in the year, it fell again in January 2001, beginning a sustained rise only in 2002. Such interventions can change investor sentiment, but they don’t necessarily have the ability to change fundamentals, said Mark McCormick, a currency strategist at the financial services firm Brown Brothers Harriman. Central banks don’t wield nearly as much money as the foreign exchange market, he noted. “They can’t overpower the market. They don’t have the ammunition to do so,” McCormick said. “But if they’re stealthy and they do it in an intelligent way, they can out-craft the market.” In this case, that may be what’s needed. The yen’s rise wasn’t being driven by fundamental changes, experts say. Rather, investors were anticipating developments that hadn’t yet occurred. In order for the effects of the central banks’ actions to last, investors will likely have to believe that any rise in the yen stemming from the reconstruction process will be offset by monetary stimulus. In essence, if the intervention is widely perceived to be working, then it will be working. But even if the central bank intervention succeeds, challenges for Japan’s economy will remain. Leading economists maintain a bleak outlook for Japan’s next several months. This week, Wells Fargo cut its forecast for Japan’s second quarter economic output, now predicting the economy will slip into recession until the second half of the year. That view still holds, Anderson said. Similarly, Friday’s currency intervention didn’t prompt Moody’s Analytics to change its anemic forecast. The prediction of 1 percent growth for 2011, down from the pre-earthquake forecast of 1.4 percent, still stands, according to Gus Faucher, director of macroeconomics for Moody’s Analytics. That outlook includes a recession that doesn’t let up until the second half of the year. The currency intervention, moreover, “may turn out to be a wash,” said Bernard Baumohl, chief economist of the Economic Outlook Group. “In the short run, the intervention has been a success, but a lot of Japanese companies are going to have to repatriate foreign investments,” Baumohl said. “There’s so much that’s unprecedented about this, it’s hard to figure out where, ultimately, the currency is going to go.”

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Central Bancorp, Inc. Appoints Gerald T. Mulligan to Board of Directors

March 18, 2011

SOMERVILLE, MA–(Marketwire – March 18, 2011) – Central Bancorp, Inc. ( NASDAQ : CEBK ) (the “Company”), the parent company of Central Co-operative Bank (the “Bank”), today announced that Gerald T. Mulligan has been appointed as a member of the Board of Directors of the Company and the Bank.

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Volatility for the yen as markets expect a delay in the central bank intervention

March 17, 2011

Volatility for the yen as markets expect a delay in the central bank intervention

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Federal Reserve Plans To Hold Steady Despite Volatile International Climate

March 15, 2011

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve maintained its ultra-loose monetary policy on Tuesday, saying the economy was gaining traction while flagging potential inflation risks from costlier energy and food. The widely expected decision comes on a day of steep selling on stock markets around the world as investors assessed the devastating toll of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, and fretted over the possibility of a broader nuclear crisis. The heightened uncertainty reinforced the case for a steady-as-she-goes policy decision from the Fed, which markedly upgraded its view of the U.S. recovery and labor market. In a unanimous decision, the Fed vowed to continue its $600 billion government bond-buying program as scheduled, and reiterated a pledge to keep interest rates at very low levels for an extended period. “The economic recovery is on a firmer footing, and overall conditions in the labor market appear to be improving gradually,” the central bank said in a statement. That was a much rosier assessment than it gave at the conclusion of its last meeting, in January, when it said that the recovery was still too weak to significantly bring down unemployment. The Fed dedicated an unusually large portion of its statement to inflation concerns surrounding a recent spike in energy and food prices, which it said would most likely prove transitory. “Long-term inflation expectations have remained stable, and measures of underlying inflation have been subdued,” the Fed said, suggesting that it was in no rush to raise interest rates. The statement made no direct mention of Japan. The worst earthquake on record for the world’s third- largest economy could have substantial ripple effects on the global recovery — as evidenced by a sharp pullback in global equity prices, with Japanese stocks down over 10 percent on Tuesday alone. Even before the tragedy, U.S. central bankers faced confusing signals. Despite high unemployment, rising energy costs appear to be nudging up the price expectations of U.S. consumers, the first inklings of an inflationary psychology the Fed would like avoid. Fed officials managed that tension by beefing up their assessment of economic conditions while emphasizing just how far the central bank remains from its targets for both inflation and employment. PROMISE AND PAIN Since the Fed’s last meeting in January, the U.S. economy has continued to show signs of promise. The U.S. unemployment rate has fallen rapidly, down to 8.9 percent in February from 9.8 percent in November. Still, the pace of hiring suggests further progress will be painfully slow for the 8-million-plus Americans who lost their jobs during the economic slump of 2007-2009. At the same time, higher gasoline costs have created fresh concerns for consumers, with a big hit to confidence this month raising concerns about whether a recent spurt in consumer spending can be sustained. The U.S. economy expanded at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the fourth quarter, a respectable performance but a faster pace will likely be needed to make a further appreciable dent in unemployment. Some economists thought growth could approach 4 percent this quarter, but have pared back projections, in part because of an unexpected widening in the U.S. trade deficit. The Fed effectively chopped overnight interest rates down to zero in December 2008 and then turned to buying mortgage and Treasury debt to keep long-term borrowing costs low. In all, it has committed to buying $2.3 trillion in debt. The asset purchases have proven controversial, with domestic critics arguing the Fed is courting future inflation while officials in emerging markets have accused the central bank of trying to boost U.S. exports by devaluing the dollar. With the economy strengthening, officials are also likely to have had a vigorous debate on how best to eventually tighten policy, but analysts will have to wait until Fed speakers take to the podium again to get a fuller flavor of the discussions. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Central Eyre Iron Project Progress Update

March 10, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Central Eyre Iron Project Progress Update

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MCM "Solutions for Better Health" Announces New VP of Sales for Central Region

March 9, 2011

CHICAGO, IL–(Marketwire – March 9, 2011) – MCM ” Solutions for Better Health, ” a national leader in providing population health and wellness management services , is pleased to announce the addition of Lindsay DeYoung as Vice President of Sales for the Central Region. 

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European Central Bank Decision to Set Tone for Remainder of the Day

March 3, 2011

European Central Bank Decision to Set Tone for Remainder of the Day

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Canada CPI Shows Inflation is Still under Control, While Markets Focus on Central Bankers G20 Meeting

February 18, 2011

Canada CPI Shows Inflation is Still under Control, While Markets Focus on Central Bankers G20 Meeting

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Canada CPI Shows Inflation is Still under Control, While Markets Focus on Central Bankers G20 Meeting

February 18, 2011

Canada CPI Shows Inflation is Still under Control, While Markets Focus on Central Bankers G20 Meeting

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CVPS Names Larry Reilly to Be Next President

February 17, 2011

RUTLAND, VT–(Marketwire – February 17, 2011) – Larry Reilly, former president of distribution companies at New England Electric System and executive vice president at National Grid, will be the next president and chief executive officer of Central Vermont Public Service ( NYSE : CV ).

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Fed Ups Forecast For 2011 GDP Growth

February 16, 2011

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials were confident that the economy was on firmer footing at their January meeting, leading a few officials to wonder whether the central bank could scale back its $600 billion bond-purchase plan, according to a summary of the meeting released Wednesday. “A few members noted that additional data pointing to a sufficiently strong recovery could make it appropriate to consider reducing the pace or overall size of the purchase program,” the minutes said. Others on the Fed’s interest rate setting Open Market Committee said they didn’t think the outlook would change in any material way before the program is set to expire at the end of June. The Fed hiked its forecast for economic growth in 2011 to a range of 3.4%-3.9% from its earlier estimate of 3.0% to 3.6% Copyright

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Obama Budget Proposal

February 14, 2011

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama, less than two months after signing tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans into law, is poised to propose a budget to congress that attacks programs that assist the working poor, help the needy heat their homes, expand access to graduate-level education and undermine that type of community-based organizations that gave the president his start in Chicago. Obama is expected to propose cutting deficits by roughly a trillion dollars over the next decade — or roughly $100 billion each year — by squeezing social programs. A deal struck to extend the Bush tax cuts for just two years, meanwhile, increased the deficit by $858 billion dollars. More than $500 billion of that bargain constituted tax cuts, with billions more funding business tax breaks and a reduction in the estate tax. Roughly $56 billion went to reauthorize emergency unemployment benefits. The president’s budget is expected to mostly target “non-defense discretionary spending,” which makes up less than one-quarter of the overall budget, making balancing the budget with such cuts mathematically impossible. Indeed, the driver of the deficit is tax cuts. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that as a result of the tax cut deal, the projected deficit in Obama’s budget will reach a record level of $1.6 trillion this year, though even that number, relative to GDP, is far lower than many other governments around the world, according to data compiled by the Central Intelligence Agency. And the figure is well below the levels of the 1940s, a time of economic prosperity. “President Barack Obama’s 2012 budget proposal projects this year’s deficit will reach $1.6 trillion, the largest on record, as December’s tax-cut deal begins to reduce federal revenues, a senior Democrat said Sunday,” the Journal reported Sunday evening. (The deficit is only a record if it is neither adjusted for inflation nor considered relative to the size of GDP.) A closer look at surveys suggests that when people say they are concerned about the deficit, they are actually worried about the economy. The president’s official budget proposal will be released Monday morning and we’ll update with breaking news and reactions throughout the day.

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce 1.2 Billion Tonne Mineral Resource At The Central Eyre Iron Project

February 8, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce 1.2 Billion Tonne Mineral Resource At The Central Eyre Iron Project

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Russia’s Central bank inflation forecast under 7%

February 6, 2011

Russia’s Central bank inflation forecast under 7%

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Apple Pushed To Reveal CEO Succession Plan

February 3, 2011

WASHINGTON — Proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services is backing a shareholders proposal that would require Apple Inc. to divulge its succession plans. The proposal was submitted to Apple by the Central Laborers’ Pension Fund in August. The fund owns nearly 11,500 shares, about a thousandth of 1 percent of the shares outstanding. The proposal is on the agenda for the shareholders meeting on Feb. 23. Word of ISS’s backing on Thursday comes two weeks after Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced he was taking his third medical leave since founding the company in 1976. Apple’s board recommends voting against the plan, saying it already has a succession plan in place, and that to reveal who it was considering for advancement could prompt rivals to poach its executives and cause others to leave.

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Fed Officially Abandons Plan To Gut Predatory Lending Rule

February 1, 2011

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve Board of Governors confirmed Tuesday that it will not proceed with plans to gut a principal federal remedy for predatory lending. As HuffPost reported last week , the central bank had already quietly made that clear to legal experts and fair-lending advocates, who had opposed the rule change. Principal regulatory authority on the issue will now shift to the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which is not expected to revive the earlier Fed proposal. “The Board has determined that proceeding with the 2009 and 2010 proposals would not be in the public interest,” the Fed said in a press release. “Accordingly, the Board does not expect to finalize the August 2009 and September 2010 proposals prior to the July 2011 date for transfer of rulemaking authority to the CFPB.” The Fed is officially backing down from its proposal to eliminate rescission, a critical component of consumer-protection law that strips banks of the right to make money on illegal loans. Under current law, if a borrower wins a rescission case in court, the bank loses the right to foreclose on the home and forfeits all income from the loan’s fees and interest. Borrowers are still required to repay the original amount the bank extended to them under the loan, but since banks cannot foreclose on the property, that amount can be repaid over time without the borrower facing pressure from a bank that sold them a predatory loan. Under the controversial Fed proposal, however, the borrower would have been required to pay off the full principal balance before the bank lost its right to foreclose. Since most victims of predatory lending do not have hundreds of thousands of dollars lying around to hand over to a bank at a moment’s notice, the new rule would have severely limited the protections offered by rescission. Even if a judge found a bank guilty of predatory lending, the bank would still be able to foreclose on the wronged borrower. Consumer advocates met with Fed staffers three times before the release of last year’s proposal , urging the central bank not to pursue the plan. Once the prospective rule was announced, several concerned citizens posted colorful, critical comments on the Fed’s website. The CFPB had been the arbiter of choice for consumer advocates, given that the new bureau is not expected to alter the existing rescission framework.

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Israel’s house price bubble inflates further

January 27, 2011

Despite tighter lending policies and repeated warnings from the Central Bank, house prices continue to rise in Israel at double-digit rates.

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Australian Consumer Prices increases within the Central banks limits

January 25, 2011

Australian Consumer Prices increases within the Central banks limits

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Israel’s house price bubble inflates further

January 24, 2011

Despite tighter lending policies and repeated warnings from the Central Bank

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PRIVATE SPY: Ex-C.I.A. Agent Runs Own Operation

January 23, 2011

WASHINGTON — Duane R. Clarridge parted company with the Central Intelligence Agency more than two decades ago, but from poolside at his home near San Diego, he still runs a network of spies.

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Fed: Economy Expanded ‘Moderately’ In Late 2010

January 12, 2011

WASHINGTON (By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa) – The U.S. economy strengthened as the year drew to a close, according to a report from the Federal Reserve on Wednesday that cited rising employment levels across the country. The Fed’s Beige Book report, based on anecdotal reports collected from the business contacts of the central bank’s regional branches, painted an increasingly bright, if cautious, picture. While real estate markets, at the heart of the deepest recession in generations, remained predictably weak, manufacturing contacts sounded more upbeat. The Fed reported better conditions across all 12 of its districts, though banking and financial services showed results that varied by region. “Economic activity continued to expand moderately from November through December,” the central bank said in a statement. The findings were consistent with a recent pick-up in U.S. economic data that has prompted some economists to beef up their forecasts for growth in the first half of 2011. The U.S. economy grew 2.6 percent in the third quarter, a level considered too meek to put a significant dent in the nation’s 9.4 percent jobless rate. Against that backdrop, the Fed announced in November it would buy an additional $600 billion in bonds over an eight month period in order to support the recovery by keeping long-term borrowing costs low. Market interest rates have risen sharply since then despite the purchases, though policymakers have argued they might have risen even further without Fed action. The improvement in conditions in the Beige Book report strengthens the case, made both by some top Fed officials and outside economists, that the latest round of bond-buying might not be necessary. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, however, has argued that the economy is running so far beneath its full potential that it continues to need help from the monetary authorities. The central bank has cited both weak employment conditions and very low inflation readings to justify its actions. Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Processed Murphy South ‘Discovery Traverse’ Results For Central Eyre Iron Project

January 10, 2011

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Processed Murphy South ‘Discovery Traverse’ Results For Central Eyre Iron Project

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Federal Reserve Leaves QE2 Untouched

January 5, 2011

Policymakers at the US Federal Reserve voted at their last meeting to maintain plans for the central banks second round of quantitative easing despite improving economic data according to Bloomberg

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Video: Reinhart Says Fed Bond Purchases May Exceed $600 Billion

December 27, 2010

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) — Vincent Reinhart, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, and Charles Calomiris, a professor at Columbia Business School, talk about the outlook for Federal Reserve monetary policy in 2011. Reinhart, a former chief monetary-policy strategist at the Fed, says the central bank may expand its purchases of U.S. Treasuries, or quantitative easing, beyond its $600 billion target. Reinhart and Calomiris talk with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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New Voters May Sway Fed Actions

December 27, 2010

WASHINGTON — As the Federal Reserve debates whether to scale back, continue or expand its $600 billion effort to nurse the economic recovery, four men will have a newly prominent role in influencing the central bank’s path.

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