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Hedge Funds May Skirt Direct Fed Security

December 20, 2010

WASHINGTON (By Rachelle Younglai and Dave Clarke) – The Federal Reserve does not believe any one hedge fund can topple the financial system and therefore the private pools of capital may escape direct supervision by the central bank, an industry source familiar with the Fed’s position said. The newly created Financial Stability Oversight Council, which includes the Treasury secretary and 14 U.S. supervisors, including the Fed, are in the early stages of determining which non-bank firms pose a threat to the financial system. Firms labeled as “systemically important” will be subject to rigorous oversight by the Fed but will also have access to the central bank’s emergency lending facilities. The indication that hedge funds might escape this designation is sure to send a huge sigh of relief through the $1.7 trillion industry, which has long avoided the tighter controls imposed on mutual funds, for example. In exchange for looser regulations, hedge fund firms promise to allow only wealthy and sophisticated investors like pension funds and endowments into their portfolios. The Fed’s view will carry considerable weight among the Financial Stability Oversight Council, which was created by the Dodd-Frank legislation to monitor risks to the financial system in the aftermath of the 2007-2009 credit crisis. The source said the Fed does not think any one hedge fund can be “systemically important” but believes that information about the funds’ positions could give the council insight into potential risks. The source requested anonymity while discussing talks held with the Fed. The Fed did not immediately return a call seeking comment. INDUSTRY SAYS NO Already a number of financial industry firms, ranging from insurers to mutual funds, are trying to convince regulators they are do not pose a threat. Mutual funds tend to manage much more money than hedge funds. The world’s biggest mutual fund, Pimco Total Return Fund, managed by Bill Gross, oversees $250 billion. By comparison, John Paulson’s hedge fund firm Paulson & Co, ranked among the world’s largest hedge funds, oversees about $30 billion. The Managed Funds Association, which lobbies for the hedge fund industry, argues that individual funds do not pose a systemic risk. It told regulators that the industry made risk management changes after the 1998 collapse of Long-Term Capital Management roiled financial markets and prompted a bailout by other industry players at the urging of the Clinton administration. “The resulting changes may be one of the reasons that hedge funds were not the focus of the recent global financial crisis,” the group said in a November 5 letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who chairs the Financial Stability Oversight Council. The council, which also includes the heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, is seeking input on what criteria to use to decide which non-bank firms and clearinghouses should be considered “systemically important.” It is unclear when they will start designating firms. NEW RULES FOR HEDGE FUNDS ANYWAY Even if hedge funds are not labeled “systemically important,” they will still face increased supervision and forced to be more transparent because of the Dodd-Frank legislation and recent SEC actions. “They have been able to exploit inefficiencies in the marketplace, by mining information that is not readily known to others,” said Daniel Crowley, a partner at law firm K&L Gates, who represents financial services firms including hedge funds. “Their job will become harder when they have to register. Their trading strategies will become public,” he said. The SEC now has the power to regulate the trillion-dollar industry. Many of the world’s largest hedge funds have already registered with the SEC, agreeing to divulge certain details about how they run their businesses and how much money they oversee. The funds’ activities have also been curtailed with the SEC’s recently adopted short sale rule, which restricts short selling in a company’s stock if the stock falls more than 10 percent. Hedge funds, unlike mutual funds, have long relied on short selling, or betting that a stock price will fall, to make money even in down markets. Under Dodd-Frank, hedge funds, banks and others that deal in the estimated $600 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market will be forced to set aside extra funds to trade the financial instruments. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s plan to limit speculation in energy and metals will also impact certain funds’ activities. (Additional reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss in Boston; Editing by Leslie Adler) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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KBS REIT Acquires Granite Tower in Denver

December 20, 2010

KBS Real Estate Investment Trust II has acquired Granite Tower, a 31-story office tower in Denver’s Central Business District, for $149 million, or $265 per square foot. The acquisition of the 561,691-square-foot Class A tower on 18th Street between Arapahoe and Curtis streets is one of the state’s largest commercial real estate deals of the year. Granite Tower, one of the largest buildings for sale in Denver this year, is at the gateway to the…

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More Central Asian region decisions with the approaching end of the year

December 19, 2010

More Central Asian region decisions with the approaching end of the year

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Video: Paul Says He’ll Emphasize Oversight of Fed, Pursue Audit

December 10, 2010

Dec. 10 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Representative Ron Paul, a Texas Republican who next month will take over as head of the House subcommittee that oversees the Federal Reserve, talks about his priorities and the need to consider “reforms” of the central bank. Paul, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop,” also discusses the outlook for a tax compromise. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Brookfield Closes on Houston Trophy Office for $321.5M

December 10, 2010

Brookfield Properties Corp. (NYSE: BPO) recently closed on another trophy office property, this time the 53-story, 1.15 million-square-foot Heritage Plaza building in the central business district of Houston. Goddard Investment Group LLC, an Atlanta-based…

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Updates On Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme Fortnight to 03 December 2010

December 6, 2010

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Updates On Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme Fortnight to 03 December 2010

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Dollar Pushes Back and Euro Debt Plays a Central Role

December 6, 2010

Dollar Pushes Back and Euro Debt Plays a Central Role

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Video: Issing Says He’s `Strongly Against’ Issuing Euro Bond

December 3, 2010

Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) — Former European Central Bank chief economist Otmar Issing talks about measures to counter the sovereign debt crisis and taxpayer-funded bailouts of debt-laden nations. He speaks from Frankfurt with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Fed Governor Casts Doubt On QE2

December 3, 2010

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — A veteran Federal Reserve official has again expressed doubts that the central bank’s $600 billion bond-buying program will do very much to stimulate the economy. Charles Plosser, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, said at a forum in Rochester on Thursday he expects U.S. economic growth to pick up steam in 2011 but foresees only a gradual decline in the nation’s high unemployment rate. Saying he’s “still somewhat skeptical” about the asset purchases, Plosser urged central bankers to remain poised to stop them if they aren’t having much effect to avoid potentially fueling excessive inflation. The Fed announced Nov. 3 that it would buy government bonds over eight months in hopes of invigorating economic growth and lowering unemployment.

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Video: Ulyukayev Says Russia Seeks Balance in Ruble-Yuan Trade

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Alexei Ulyukayev, first deputy chairman of Russia’s Central Bank, talks about the ruble and yuan and trade with China. He speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Michael Pento: Does the Fed Create Money?

November 23, 2010

Certain deflationists have recently gone on record saying that the increase in the Fed’s balance sheet is meaningless with regard to creating inflation because our central bank can’t print money, it can only create bank reserves. The problem with their view is that it both disregards the definition of money and ignores the process of creating bank reserves. Money is commonly defined as “a medium that can be exchanged for goods and services and is used as a measure of their values on the market, including among its forms a commodity such as gold, an officially issued coin or note, or a deposit in a checking account or other readily liquefiable account.” The Fed creates a “readily liquefiable account” when creating excess bank reserves, so it is also creating money. Since inflation is properly defined as an increase in the money supply, the Fed unquestionably creates both money and inflation when it creates reserves. The deflationists’ error is to suppose that because the amount of currency has not grown, the money supply hasn’t grown. But the Fed never creates currency — all the printing is handled by Treasury; instead, it creates bank deposits which are held at the Fed. In ignoring this “base money,” the deflationists make no distinction between having the Fed’s balance sheet at $800 billion or $3 trillion. Doing so is a huge mistake for both making investment decisions and predicting asset price levels. In short, for deflationists to be correct, they must contend that only money which is currently in circulation can be considered inflationary, i.e. lead to rising prices. Therefore, they must also believe that all increases in demand and time deposits should not be included in the money supply and should not be considered inflationary. This isn’t just wrong, it’s grossly wrong. Not only do the Fed’s monetary additions increase the money supply, but the effect can be vastly multiplied through the fractional reserve system. Also, the process of creating bank reserves always first involves the purchase of an asset by the central bank. The Fed issues electronic credits to banks in exchange for bank assets, including Treasuries. Its purchases drive up the demand for those assets, bringing about rising prices. In fact, Bernanke has clearly stated that the purpose of his “quantitative easing” program is to raise the rate of inflation, which in his mind is too low. What the Fed is accomplishing is a reduction in the purchasing power of the US dollar. It creates inflation by vastly increasing the money supply and thus, lowers the confidence of those holding the greenback. If international confidence in the dollar is shaken, most dollar-based asset prices will increase — with the exception of US debt. Deflationists also ignore the rise in prices that is occurring because of the potential insolvency of the US government. It is not dissimilar to what happened to Enron shares. Once the accounting scandal broke, the purchasing power of Enron shares plummeted. It was not because of an increase in the number of shares outstanding, but because of an epiphany on the part of investors that the company was totally bankrupt. Logically, shares representing a stake in a doomed company lost all of their value. Likewise, aggregate prices will soar if global investors lose confidence in the dollar due to the realization that the US is incapable of servicing its debt. Whatever the deflationists may claim about the money supply, the objective indicators are not looking good for Uncle Sam. The dollar’s decline is abundantly evident when compared to gold, commodity prices, other currencies, real estate, and the list goes on. The national debt now stands at over $13.7 trillion, some 94% of GDP. Either due to an insolvent currency backed by a bankrupt nation or because of the Federal Reserve’s endless money printing, I have no doubt that the deflationists have it completely wrong. Michael Pento is the Senior Economist for Euro Pacific Capital

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme Update Fortnight to 19 November 2010

November 22, 2010

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme Update Fortnight to 19 November 2010

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Video: China Raises Banks’ Reserve Ratios to Limit Inflation

November 19, 2010

Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — China ordered banks to set aside larger reserves for the fifth time this year, draining cash from the financial system to limit inflation and asset-bubble risks in the world’s fastest-growing major economy. The ratio will increase 50 basis points starting Nov. 29, the central bank said on its website today. Bloomberg’s Margaret Conley reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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ING Clarion Sells 2121 K St. for $82.4 Million

November 19, 2010

ING Clarion Partners sold 2121 K St., a 190,628-square-foot office building in the central business district of Washington, DC, to New York City-based TF Cornerstone for $82.44 million or $432.50 per square foot. The trade was made free and clear of existing…

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10 Products And Commodities That Have Hit All-Time Highs

November 18, 2010

Possibly the most critical debate at the moment in the global economy is whether central banks should fight inflation or deflation. On its face, inflation appears to be the lesser of two evils. High unemployment, which plagues North America, Europe, and to some extent Japan, has weakened demand for goods and services out of the market.

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Video: Dodd Challenges Proposal to Strip Fed of Job Mandate: Video

November 16, 2010

Nov. 16 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senator Chris Dodd, a Democrat from Connecticut who leads the Senate Banking Committee, talks with Bloomberg’s Peter Cook about criticism of Federal Reserve monetary policy. Republican lawmakers in the U.S. House and Senate say they want to compel the central bank to focus solely on controlling inflation, upending a congressional mandate that’s shaped monetary policy for more than 30 years. Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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GOP Wants To Strip Fed Of Power To Combat Joblessness

November 16, 2010

WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are pushing to strip the Federal Reserve of its authority to address unemployment, leaving it with the lone responsibility to combat inflation. Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), a key member of the Senate Banking Committee, became on Monday the latest Republican to propose that the central bank stop worrying itself with the jobless crisis. “It is time that we work to clarify the mandate of the Federal Reserve,” Corker said in a statement. “Providing our central bank with a clear and explicit focus on keeping inflation low will serve America better than the broader mandate approach we have today.” Congress, meanwhile, has not made a major attempt to address the unemployment crisis since passing the stimulus in early 2009, leaving the Fed as the policymaker of last resort for the jobless. An emergency extension of unemployment insurance is set to expire if Congress doesn’t act shortly, prematurely costing two million people their benefits by the end of the year. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) has long been an advocate of stripping the Fed of its unemployment authority and will be the incoming House Budget Committee chairman. Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana, a national Republican leader, has similarly called to remove the Fed’s responsibility over unemployment. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) did not reject Corker’s suggestion when asked Monday if he agreed the Fed’s role should be limited to price stability. Asked if Congress should change the Fed’s mandate, McConnell said, “Yeah, that’s just one of many issues we will be working with and thinking about in the coming weeks.” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has taken action recently aimed at lessening unemployment, reasoning that the Fed can increase the money supply without major risk of inflation, though critics question whether the action will be effective. Corker met with Bernanke Monday morning and, he said, probed the chairman about the recent Fed actions. Arthur Delaney contributed reporting

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Video: Blanchflower Calls Letter to Bernanke `Dangerous Politics’

November 15, 2010

Nov. 15 (Bloomberg) — David Blanchflower, an economics professor at Dartmouth College and a former Bank of England policy maker, discusses a letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke criticizing the central bank’s expansion of monetary stimulus. A group including former Republican government officials and economists urged Bernanke in the letter to stop his expansion of monetary easing, saying it risks an inflation surge. Blanchflower speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Salameh Says Lebanon’s Bank Deposit Growth to Exceed 10%

November 10, 2010

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) — Riad Salameh, governor of the Central Bank of Lebanon, talks about the outlook for the country’s banks and the coalition government. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Chevron to exit Central American countries

November 9, 2010

Chevron to exit Central American countries

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Kiwi Dollar Strikes 27-month Peak Versus Greenback ahead of Central Bank Meeting

November 1, 2010

Kiwi Dollar Strikes 27-month Peak Versus Greenback ahead of Central Bank Meeting

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Kiwi Dollar Strikes 27-month Peak Versus Greenback ahead of Central Bank Meeting

November 1, 2010

Kiwi Dollar Strikes 27-month Peak Versus Greenback ahead of Central Bank Meeting

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Europe Ahead: Central bank decision mark the week from the Feds to the BoE and ECB

October 31, 2010

Europe Ahead: Central bank decision mark the week from the Feds to the BoE and ECB

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Video: Al-Maraj Says Bahrain’s Interest Rate `Suitable’ at 0.5%

October 27, 2010

Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) — Bahrain’s Central Bank governor Rasheed al-Maraj talks with Bloomberg’s Francine Lacqua about the outlook for the kingdom’s economy and monetary policy. They spoke yesterday on the sidelines of the World Economic Forrum in Marrakesh, Morroco.

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L. Randall Wray: QE2 Won’t Save Our Sinking Ship

October 18, 2010

Fed Chairman Bernanke is signaling that a second round of quantitative easing will soon begin. In the first round, the Fed’s balance sheet nearly tripled to nearly $2.3 trillion as it bought $1.7 trillion in Treasury securities and mortgage-related securities. Since the Fed appears to want to unwind its position in mortgages, QE2 will probably target federal government debt. During Japan’s long stagnation, Bernanke was famous for arguing that the Bank of Japan could have done far more to fight deflation. Since the BOJ’s overnight interest rate target was effectively at zero, the conventional policy of lowering its interest rate target was not an option. Hence, Bernanke advocated quantitative, rather than price, activity — the BOJ would purchase assets from banks, driving up their excess reserves, until they would finally make loans to stimulate spending that would reverse the trend of prices. So when he had the opportunity, he put theory into practice in the US, driving short-term interest rates effectively to zero and filling bank balance sheets with excess reserves by purchasing their assets. So far, the impact has not been significantly different than Japan’s experience. Indeed, Bernanke has been publicly warning of the dangers of a Japanese-style deflation, as US inflation has dropped nearly to zero, well below the Fed’s informal target of two percent. And so we are now set for round two of QE — more of the same old, same old. In truth, the Fed has done only two helpful things. First, during the liquidity crisis of 2007 and 2008, it lent reserves to financial institutions that faced a liquidity crisis. To be sure, it took the Fed far too long to figure out that in a liquidity crisis you must lend to any financial institution, and you should not look too closely at the quality of assets submitted as collateral. The Fed’s bumbling made the liquidity crisis far worse than it should have been. But eventually we got through that phase. We then moved on to the insolvency phase, as everyone discovered that banks were, and still are, holding assets whose value is far below the value of their liabilities. A flimsy ” stress test ” was concocted, designed to ensure that all institutions would pass. The government then injected a bit of capital into some of them and proclaimed the problem resolved. Next, banks cooked their books and showed healthy profits so that they could buy out Uncle Sam. More importantly, they wanted to party like it was 1999 so they could pay record bonuses to top management. However, purchasing toxic assets from banks did help them — the second useful thing done by the Fed. The problem is that the Fed did not and cannot buy enough of the waste to make banks healthy. There is simply too much of it. When the crisis hit, the US debt to GDP ratio was 500%, and that has hardly come down. A lot of the debt was bad even before the recession, but far more of it is bad now that we have lost 10 million jobs and half of homeowners are either underwater in their mortgages or soon will be. And there are tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives deals. To resolve the insolvency crisis would require that the Fed buy tens of trillions of dollars worth of questionable assets — QE2 would have to be orders of magnitude larger than QE1. Putting a number on it is nothing but a guess, but it could be at least $20 trillion. The Fed can certainly “afford” to buy up all the bad assets and take on any counterparty risk from the derivatives that might be triggered. As Bernanke has testified, the Fed buys assets by crediting bank accounts, through a simple keystroke, and there is no way the Fed can run out of keystrokes. But it is politically constrained in a number of ways. First, there is no chance that inflation hawks would stomach Fed actions on that scale. They still believe that bank reserves generate loans that inevitably create inflation. Bernanke carefully tries to navigate these waters by agreeing with the hawks that in the long run, Fed creation of too many reserves would be inflationary, but argues that in current circumstances the greater danger is deflation. Still, he reassures markets that reserves creation is temporary, and that the Fed will “exit its accommodative policies at the appropriate time”. Yet, if the Fed buys junk assets that will never have any value, it will not be able to sell these back to markets later — so there is no way to remove the reserves it created when it buys trash. Second, the Fed generally makes a profit on its operations and turns excess profit on equity over to the Treasury. Buying toxic assets will lead to losses, something Congress will not stomach. So the Fed is between the inflation rock and the hard place of losses. It cannot solve financial institutions’ solvency problem without buying on a politically impossible scale. This should come as no surprise. It has always been the central bank’s role to deal with liquidity problems, and the Treasury’s role to deal with insolvency problems. The difference is that US Treasury spending is directly controlled by Congress and accounted for in the federal budget. Bailouts by Treasury — such as the rescue of the US auto industry — inevitably generate a public debate. By contrast, bailouts by the Fed take place behind closed doors, and usually only come to light after the fact. Still, Congress and the public are fed up with the Fed and will tolerate such shenanigans no longer. That leaves the Treasury as the only chance for action, but President Obama claims it has already “run out of money”. This is pure nonsense since Treasury also spends using “keystrokes”, but it is a widely accepted myth. So the Fed is left with the only option available to a central bank that has already pushed short-term interest rates to zero: buy longer maturity treasury bonds in order to push longer rates toward zero. It certainly can do this. It could, for example, buy all 10 year Treasuries, bidding up their prices until their yields fall to zero. Historically, 30 year fixed rate mortgages have tracked 10 year bonds fairly closely, so such an action could conceivably lower mortgage rates. But they are already below 4%, so it is not clear what could be gained. Dropping rates still further is not likely to bring forth any buyers except hedge funds that have been buying foreclosed homes. The ” foreclosuregate ” scandal has at least temporarily killed that demand. Other potential buyers are waiting for house prices to fall further, or for a real economic recovery to begin — one with job creation and rising wages. In short, the problem in real estate markets is not that mortgage rates are too high, but rather that prospects for real estate and job markets are too poor. The Fed is in a Catch 22: Interest rate policy will not spur borrowing until economic recovery is underway, but recovery will not begin until spending picks up. Only jobs and income will stimulate spending, but the Fed cannot do anything in those areas. The Fed believes that it might spur bank lending by lowering returns on safe, liquid assets like Treasuries. If banks cannot generate sufficient returns by holding these assets, then they might have no choice to take greater risks. But it takes two to tango — banks need good and willing borrowers in order to make loans. Recent data indicate that banks are instead trying to increase revenues through “churning” — trading existing assets, which generates no new spending — and by increasing fees and penalties. Conventional wisdom is that it costs banks up to 400 basis points (four percentage points) to operate the payments system that relies on checking deposits and credit cards. If Treasuries are paying less than half that, and mortgages are below that, the only way that banks can turn a profit is by charging customers for their deposits, debits, and charges. That is why they have been busy jacking up their charges . Yet if Elizabeth Warren is effective, she is going to make it harder for banks to gouge customers. No matter how mad at banks we might be, we have got to leave them with a way to return to profitability that does not rely on speculative bubbles, pump-and-dump schemes, and accounting fraud. Pushing returns on relatively safe assets toward zero is not the answer. Pumping banks full of reserves that pay very low interest will not help, either. What Bernanke might understand, but most in the mainstream media do not, is that banks do not and cannot lend reserves. Reserves are just an entry on the Fed’s balance sheet — a liability of the Fed and an asset of banks. Rather, banks make loans by accepting the IOU of the borrower and issuing a demand deposit. Only financial institutions have access to the Fed’s balance sheet, so it is literally impossible for a bank to lend out reserves. So anyone who thinks that pumping banks full of reserves while driving interest rates toward zero is a way to encourage lending simply does not understand banking. (This also means, of course, that whether banks have $100 billion or $100 trillion of reserves has no implications for prospective inflation.) Note that if we really wanted to use our central bank to resolve this economic crisis, it would be far better to have it directly buy houses and create jobs for the unemployed. But it makes far more sense to use our fiscal authorities for that. QE2 does not represent a solution to our current quagmire. No, this Titanic is still headed underwater. The sooner that the Obama administration recognizes that what we need is jobs, more jobs, and mortgage relief, the sooner we can get this ship afloat. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . Sign up for weekly ND20 highlights, mind-blowing stats, event alerts, and reading/film/music recs.

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Lima boom continues. House price rises of 8% expected in 2010

October 14, 2010

The Peruvian housing market has emerged from the global crisis quickly, as has the economy. In July 2010, GDP was up 9.05% from the same period last year, according to the Central Reserve Bank of Peru (BCRP).

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Diverging Central Bank Policy Rhetoric Has Helped to Keep the Euro Well Bid

October 13, 2010

Diverging Central Bank Policy Rhetoric Has Helped to Keep the Euro Well Bid

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Updates On Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme

October 12, 2010

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Updates On Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Updates On Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme

October 12, 2010

Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Updates On Central Eyre Iron Project 2010 Drilling Programme

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Increasing home loans in Australia could pursue the central bank to raise interest rates

October 11, 2010

Increasing home loans in Australia could pursue the central bank to raise interest rates

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Chamber Of Commerce Hosting Event With Foreign Bank Members Today

October 8, 2010

Tomorrow, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce plans to hold a reception for the Bahrain Banks Association, a trade group for banks operating in the Kingdom of Bahrain. The Bahrain Minister of Finance, Central Bank, and Bahrain Ambassador will be attending, and the event listing invites “banks and investment firms” to attend.

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NuPathe Appoints Michael Marino as General Counsel

October 7, 2010

CONSHOHOCKEN, PA–(Marketwire – October 7, 2010) –  NuPathe Inc. ( NASDAQ : PATH ), a specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the development and commercialization of branded therapeutics for diseases of the central nervous system, including neurological and psychiatric disorders, today announces the appointment of Michael Marino as Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary.

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Video: Feroli Says Fed Still Has `Some Tools Left’ for Economy: Video

September 17, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., discusses the outlook for Federal Reserve monetary policy. Feroli, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop,” says the Fed still has “some tools left” to help the economy and expects the central bank to expand its balance sheet by year end. He also discusses tax policy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Oster Says RBA May Resume Rate Increases in November: Video

September 13, 2010

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) — Alan Oster, chief economist at National Australia Bank Ltd., talks about the outlook for the Reserve Bank of Australia monetary policy and the nation’s economy. Australian business confidence jumped in August to the highest level in four months, suggesting the economy is avoiding fallout from weaker global growth and increasing the central bank’s scope to resume rate increases. Oster talks from Melbourne with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Harte-Hanks Trillium Software Appoints Eric Ecker as Vice President Central Europe

September 7, 2010

BILLERICA, MA–(Marketwire – September 7, 2010) –   Trillium Software ® , a business of Harte-Hanks, Inc. ( NYSE : HHS ), and a leading enabler of Total Data Quality solutions, announced today the appointment of Eric Ecker as vice president, Central Europe for Trillium Software. Mr. Ecker will be responsible for leading business development, identifying revenue opportunities and generating continued company growth in Germany and throughout central Europe. 

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Donald Kohn: Fed Should Consider More Stimulus

September 5, 2010

The former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, who retired last week after 40 years at the central bank, says that the economy is in “a slow slog out of a very deep hole,” and that the Fed should consider additional stimulus unless the recovery shows signs of “decent progress.” The departure of the official, Donald L. Kohn, who as the Fed’s No. 2 official played a pivotal role in its handling of the financial crisis, is something of an end of an era. A staff economist who worked his way up through the ranks, Mr. Kohn was one of the last direct links to Paul A. Volcker and Alan Greenspan, the chairmen who defined the modern Fed.

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Video: Bloomberg’s Zumbrun Discusses Bernanke’s Performance: Video

September 2, 2010

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Joshua Zumbrun talks with Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about Ben S. Bernanke, who has emerged as the most powerful Federal Reserve chairman after President Barack Obama signed into law a bill overhauling financial regulation that gave the central bank new regulatory heft. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Heller Says Fed Policy Alone Can’t Revive U.S. Economy: Video

August 31, 2010

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Former Federal Reserve Governor Robert Heller talks with Bloomberg’s Melissa Long and Michael McKee about minutes of the Federal Reserve’s Aug. 10 meeting. Some Fed officials were concerned their decision to maintain their balance sheet would send an unintended signal the central bank is ready to resume large-scale asset purchases, the minutes show. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Heller Says Fed Policy Alone Can’t Revive U.S. Economy: Video

August 31, 2010

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Former Federal Reserve Governor Robert Heller talks with Bloomberg’s Melissa Long and Michael McKee about minutes of the Federal Reserve’s Aug. 10 meeting. Some Fed officials were concerned their decision to maintain their balance sheet would send an unintended signal the central bank is ready to resume large-scale asset purchases, the minutes show. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lombard’s Bhandari Says Indian Inflation `Major Threat’

August 31, 2010

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Maya Bhandari, a senior economist at Lombard Street Research, talks about the expansion of the Indian economy and the threat of inflation. India’s economy grew at the fastest pace in 2 1/2 years, increasing pressure on the central bank to extend the most aggressive round of monetary-policy tightening in Asia. Bhandari speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Bernanke Tries To Manage Expectations Of Fed Role

August 29, 2010

Federal Reserve officials and economists appear increasingly united in their view that the partisan gridlock on fiscal policy in Washington has clouded the prospects for a faster and stronger recovery. The Fed chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, who has assiduously avoided taking sides in fiscal debates, said on Friday that the central bank stood ready to use a variety of tools to forestall deflation, a broad decline in prices. But he made it clear that the Fed could not simply conjure up a recovery by manipulating interest rates and the money supply.

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Elizabeth Cordry: Why Fashion Seemingly Snubs the Internet: A Defensive

August 24, 2010

It is a truth universally acknowledged that the fashion industry has been notoriously slow to catch on to digital media. The few brands that have taken tentative steps towards using the internet to its full advantage, such as Burberry and Chanel, are being lauded as progressive, but when compared to other industries fashion is still woefully behind. From journalism and retail, to the back-end of wholesale buying, the fashion industry has on the whole squeaked along in the same way that it has for many years. Many observers blame this state of affairs on the industry’s concern for maintaining exclusivity; other say the internet simply is too ugly, not “on-brand” for high-end companies. These arguments have merits, but I believe they slow the process rather than stall it. It is possible that there is also a deeper structural issue in the industry that explains much of the trepidation. The fashion industry is one of the few creative industries that has never had to rely on technology to distribute its product. The film industry has navigated the transition from VCRs to DVDs to video downloads from a number of different devices. The music industry has transitioned from records to cassettes to CDs to music downloads. They have also long understood the value of creating content in a different medium, with Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” awakening the industry to the power of video. The fashion industry, on the other hand, has not transitioned in the same way. Clothes are still sold primarily in stores, where customers can have tangible access to the fabrics and fits. Perhaps more significantly, fashion still photography and the print editorial have long been the central medium for fashion journalism. All this adds up to an industry-wide lack of experience with, and knowledge of, technological developments. There is an argument to be made that it is this knowledge gap that is the most significant factor in slowing the transition to the online medium. Certainly the argument against selling clothes online is a strong one. It is hard to see how to fully communicate the value of a garment you can’t touch or try on. Moreover, clothes often just don’t look as good on a screen as they do on a body. However, what you lose in an up-close, physical, view of the dress and a luxurious store environment, you gain in the ability to communicate context, design inspiration, manufacturing background and the quality of the product. People who make this argument are forgetting that print magazines have been inspiring purchases since they were born, a sure sign that you don’t always need to see it on a hanger. The astounding success of Net-a-Porter also does a lot to disprove this theory. Print editorial seems to be the medium that is more at fault for their lack of internet adventures, although the defense here is strong too. The argument that editorial photographs do not translate as well on screen is true — they just don’t. But there seems to have been surprisingly little progress made in the realm of editorial video. All you need to see is the first ten minutes of “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” to understand the power of film in selling a look. What the challenge seems to be here is not the production, but the method of distribution. Fashion on TV has become associated with cheesy reality programming, such as “The Rachel Zoe Project,” “Project Runway” and “The Hills.” And the internet is, well, intimidating. This comes back to the central argument: industry leaders, having never had to dip their manicured toes into anything digital before, are struggling with a lack of experience. They are having a hard time understanding the power of the internet, let alone figuring out how to overcome the many challenges it provides. For there are many. Brands that have a very clear identity and idea of how to communicate themselves in traditional media are having to reinvent their message online. There is no room for error in branding, and they are going to get it right. The problem of the categorical ugliness of most of the internet is compounded by its new association with off-price sale sites like Gilt Groupe, and for the fact that when one thinks of online fashion journalism, one’s mind turns to 13 year old bloggers rather than to established industry authorities. But as the opportunity cost of staying offline has grown, these problems have turned from barriers of entry to challenges to overcome, and will in no way block future growth of the fashion industry online. The industry is made of the kind of people who can brand the be-jesus out of a PVC handbag. They’ll figure out the short-term issues with translating their brand online. Thus there is an argument to be made that the industry is not fearful, nor snobbish, nor ignorant. They simply lack the experience, and are aware of the fact. The fashion industry is simply biding their time, educating themselves, and planning with rigorous accuracy their branding attack. Elizabeth Cordry works in retail and online development at Rag & Bone in New York. She is the author of the blog www.fashionconnected.com , focusing on the fashion industry’s transition to the online world.

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El-Erian: Federal Reserve Can’t Do Much More To Improve Economy

August 10, 2010

Despite all the anticipation over today’s Federal Reserve meeting, there’s little else the central bank can do now to help the economy recover, Pimco’s co-CEO Mohamed El-Erian told CNBC.

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Video: Pan Says India Interest Rate Increases Will Be Gradual: Video

July 26, 2010

July 27 (Bloomberg) — Indranil Pan, chief economist at Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd., talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Barton about the outlook for Reserve Bank of India monetary policy. India needs tighter monetary policy to cool inflation, the central bank said, signaling the possibility of an interest-rate increase today. Pan, speaking from Mumbai, also discusses the government’s decision to allow state-run refiners to raise gasoline and diesel costs in a bid to cut its subsidies bill. (Source: Bloomberg)

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DK Matai: Mystery of BIS Gold Swaps

July 7, 2010

Central banks have started using their gold reserves to raise cash — a record USD 14bn worth — from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the central bankers’ bank based in Basel, Switzerland. BIS co-ordinates financial co-operation amongst its 57 member countries, that include most of the G20. The BIS, took 346 tonnes of gold — a record volume of gold reserves — in exchange for foreign currency in “swap operations” in the financial year ending March 31st, according to a note in its latest annual report. The increase in the use of gold swaps is particularly surprising because central banks have rarely used them for decades, and as a result, the amount of gold at the BIS has remained stable for years. These are the first major BIS gold swaps since the 1970s. Based on the latest data, BIS would be executing the biggest gold swaps in history in 2010. In a gold swap, one counterparty, in this case a bank, sells its gold to the other, in this case BIS, with an agreement to buy it back at a later date. In return the bank get the money and pays some interest to the BIS. The BIS has the ability to serve as a glorified global “pawn shop” for central bankers. Gold Bars For Cash Timing Such gold swaps in 2009 were “nil”, the BIS annual report states. According to monthly data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the gold swaps have surged since January, when the Greek debt crisis erupted with cascading effects across the Eurozone and world equity markets. Such swaps might yet place the entire gold-buying spree among central banks in 2009 in a very different light. What was the motivation in buying the gold in the first place? 1. Gold is a very effective means of raising cash; 2. Gold has been trading at record levels; and 3. Cash was — and is still — needed by central banks. A gold swap with the BIS allows a bank to raise the cash and buy the bullion back later, presumably after the prices decline. This is probably not the best timing for such news, given that the World Gold Council has just sent out a massive report arguing in favour of central bank purchases of gold. What if they all get the same idea of pawning their gold? Wouldn’t that distort the global gold market significantly? Signs of Distress Gold swaps could suggest a last-resort measure because they are, after all, the equivalent of ‘pawning’ family treasure with the BIS. Central banks having to resort to swap their best performing monetary asset, ie, gold in order to raise funds is a further sign of the distressed state of the international financial and monetary system. If central banks — widely assumed to be from troubled Eurozone states — have had to resort to gold swaps and they may have been used by one or a combination of three of the PIIGS — Portugal, Greece and/or Spain — then the lack of clarification of the news may lead to weakness in the gold market as this creates uncertainty. Jittery traders may sell until clarity is gained. It is now clear that the gold bars which were supposed to have been taken off the market — perhaps for good — to gather dust in secure central bank basements, are instead gathering foreign exchange from the BIS. This is a new twist in the gold tale. What this tells us is that central banks are in need of additional cash for their commercial banks or in desperate need to settle emergency bills incurred by their governments. Psychology of Surprise The gold market continues to digest the surprising news of the 346 tonne gold swap with the BIS. The quantum surprised the market, which had assumed most central banks wished to retain their gold holdings. News of the swaps seems to have initially spooked gold markets, as some participants thought it could mean BIS might sell — or might have already sold — those 346 shiny tonnes. As a result, the yellow metal has touched price levels significantly below USD 1,200 per troy ounce in a continuation of its decline to new six-week lows. For now, the BIS reports, the 346 tonnes of gold it holds via the swaps remains at the central banks. But the BIS has more ability to liquidate those holdings than the central-bank owners post the gold swap arrangements. However, under the terms of the BIS gold swaps, “The Bank has an obligation to return the gold at the end of the contract.” So the metal would only be sold outright if the cash borrower — the central-bank pledging gold bullion as collateral — went bankrupt, and the BIS sought to cover its loss. What happens if the BIS decides to liquidate such collateral on the open market if the need arises due to a sovereign default? That could create a situation where investors would suddenly see an unanticipated glut of gold and a subsequently depressed gold valuation on the global market. Uncertainty There is a lot of uncertainty regarding the gold swap news which has not been confirmed or clarified by the BIS or the IMF. The Wall Street Journal said the swap was made by central banks while another respected financial newspaper said the sale was by commercial banks. If so, have European commercial banks begun using their holdings of gold to raise cash with the BIS via their central banks, in a further sign of strains in the money markets on which many rely for funding? Euribor, the rate at which Eurozone banks lend to each other has risen for 27 successive days, suggesting growing interbank lending stress. China In parallel, China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) currency-reserve managers have repeated their view that gold cannot replace US Treasury bonds as the “main channel” for holding Beijing’s massive foreign exchange reserves estimated at USD 2.4 trillion. This statement has added to the downward pressure on gold pricing. The reasons for SAFE’s view are obvious. They are the same reasons we have highlighted before: 1. Small market; 2. Limited availability of large amounts of gold to buy; and 3. Liquidity problems related to large scale disposals of gold. An Enigma Rudi Bogni, former chief executive of UBS private banking, who sits on the board of several financial institutions, said, “The truth is that we know absolutely nothing about the reasons for these swaps. There may be good technical or legal reasons why central banks refinanced themselves this way. As to distorting the gold market, I suspect that swapping gold rather than selling it was a more neutral way to refinance themselves, unless you mean that by not causing a further spike, distortion ensued.” Conclusion Pawning gold with the BIS, usually rare, is occurring at a record rate in 2010. The central banks plan to buy the gold back later in swap agreements, but if they don’t, the BIS would need to sell the gold, which could then flood the market. This flies in the face of conventional market wisdom that the gold rush has been a “flight to safety” by governments: their central bankers considered gold more trustworthy than holding foreign currencies. Yet, we have central banks offloading their gold, right in the middle of a sovereign debt crisis, to pay their governments’ bills or prop up their commercial banks. Is gold losing its charm given the dire necessity of possessing hard cash to pay for emergencies? If central banks are trading their gold in, it might be bad news for the price of gold, but looking deeper, it may be even worse news for the world banking system. For one, it means that central banks are actually having trouble paying their governments’ bills and are finding it difficult to raise sovereign debt by issuing IOU paper. For another, gold is well-known as a fallback in times of extreme crisis — and if central banks are selling gold, could they be leaving themselves and their national banking system wide open to an even more severe liquidity crisis? Key Question If some central banks are trading their gold for cash, what are those central bankers thinking? What do they know, that we don’t know yet?

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Janet Tavakoli: 2012: Voters Nix Incumbents, Demand Financial Reform and Fed Fraud Audit

July 1, 2010

The only part that needs to wait is the voting. Bloomberg News reported the ” Fed made taxpayers unwitting junk bond buyers ” (July 1, 2010) Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and then-New York Fed President Timothy Geithner told senators on April 3, 2008, that the tens of billions of dollars in “assets” the government agreed to purchase in the rescue of Bear Stearns Cos. were “investment-grade.” They didn’t share everything the Fed knew about the money. By using its balance sheet to protect an investment bank against failure, the Fed took on the most credit risk in its 96- year history and increased the chance that Americans would be on the hook for billions of dollars as the central bank began insuring Wall Street firms against collapse. The Fed’s secrecy spurred legislation that will require government audits of the Fed bailouts and force the central bank to reveal recipients of emergency credit. Congress’s proposed financial reform bill would not have prevented the last disaster, fails to address current problems, and will not prevent the next disaster (more on this in a future post). Among other things, lawmakers are leaning to a provision to allow an audit of the Federal Reserve Bank, but this should be a thorough fraud audit, and there should be ongoing audits. As for malfeasance at investment banks sheltered by the Federal Reserve Bank’s secrecy, in honor of Canada Day here’s my video interview from Canada CTV’s Lang and O’Leary Report (April 29, 2010) explaining there should be felony indictments for accounting fraud and securities fraud:

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